Javed Anand - Muslim women opposing triple talaq, polygamy face attack, but are fighting back
In the ten years I’ve
known her, she’s never been like this. Between her “Assalam-o-Alaikum, bhai”
and what follows, there’s barely a moment’s gap. “Main do teen din se bahut
pareshan hoon. Aap ko phone karne wali thee,” (I’ve been very disturbed over
the last few days. I was planning to call you), says Tahera Apa.
What’s causing her
pain is what’s causing pain to many Muslim women these days; the “Islam in danger”
cry raised by the All India Muslim Personal Law Board (AIMPLB). Just about
every Muslim religious body and Muslim leaders across the political spectrum —
left parties excluded — have joined the chorus. Be ready to sacrifice your life
to save the Shariah, Muslims are being enjoined inside mosques and in Muslim
mohallas across the country. Anyone opposing the countrywide signature campaign
launched by the Board to resist any “interference” in Muslim personal law is
projected as an “enemy of Islam”.
In the belief that
they’re defending “Allah’s law”, Muslim men and women are signing up. “They’re
even collecting signatures from young children,” report Muslim women activists.
Some Muslims who know their Islam better are refusing to sign, publicly
asserting that triple talaq, halala marriage and polygamy must be banned.
Tahera Apa is one of them.
No maulvi has it in
him to cow down Tahera Apa. So they conceive a devious scheme. They’ve been
working on her son, brainwashing him into believing his mother is anti-Islam.
In consequence, son, mother and the rest of the family have spent several
sleepless nights. “Kal ko aapki Islam mukhalif mahila mandal masjid tudwane ki
bhee baat karegi. Aap chodo yeh kaam.” (“Tomorrow your anti-Islam mahila mandal
will even talk of demolishing mosques. You leave this work)”, the anguished son
has been arguing with his mother. There is no way Tahera Apa will give up her
activism. But a threat her son hurls torments her, “If you don’t leave the
mahila mandal, I’ll immolate myself with my children.” What if, in some dark
moment, he acted on his threat?
What comes to the
rescue is a little pocket book, a compilation of verses from the Quran on
gender relations. Reading them gives the son an idea of Islam that is very
different from what the ulema have been telling Muslims. It cools him down, for
now at least.
Tahera Apa is not the
only Muslim woman facing the heat for demanding that the “inhuman, unjust,
anti-women and un-Islamic” Muslim personal law in India be reformed, as it’s
been in over 20 Muslim-majority countries. Burqa-clad Zeenat Apa, from another
basti in Mumbai, seethes as she narrates what Abu Asim Azmi, the Samajwadi Party MLA,
reportedly said at a public meeting, “Agar chaar shadiyaan nahi karenge to kya
hamari bewa auraton ko kothe pe bithayenge?” (If we’re prohibited from marrying
four women, should we send our widows to brothels?). Azmi later “clarified”
that he was only talking of women from his family, not Muslim women in general.
A few days later,
Muslim women from Zeenat Apa’s basti who were running a counter-signature
campaign supporting reforms were jostled and abused by a group of men. “Since
then, even women who want triple talaq, halala and polygamy to go have been
bullied into signing in the Board’s support,” she says.
But at a gathering of
25 Muslim women from across Mumbai, the mood is upbeat. “Deen aur dastoor dono
hamaare haq mein hai. Hum ladenge, hum peechay nahin hatenge.” (Both the Quran
and the Constitution are on our side. We will fight, we will not withdraw),
they asserted with confidence. Of course, Tahera Apa was there.
The writer is general
secretary, Muslims for Secular Democracy, and co-editor, ‘Communalism Combat’
http://indianexpress.com/article/opinion/columns/muslim-women-opposing-triple-talaq-polygamy-face-attack-3740726/
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