Why do Muslim women
cover their heads? Isn't this a sign of subjection of women?
Muslim women cover their heads because God so
directed in His final book, the Glorious Qur'an. The head cover is
specifically mentioned in 24:31. This instruction from God is only one
aspect of a wider context of purity of thought and action for men and
women.
Islam has very strict rules against adultery and
fornication, and introduces many cautious measures to ensure the
prevention and avoidance of such sins. One measure is the prescription
that men and women should avoid intermingling as far as possible (see
Qur'an 33:53). This is why men and women pray in separate areas or
separate rows in the mosque. Another measure is that men and women should
cover the specified areas of their bodies the sight of which arouse sexual
desire in others (see Qur'an 7:26; 33:59). Yet another measure is that men
and women should lower or turn their gaze away from looking at a person of
the opposite sex (see Qur'an 24:31).
The idea that the head
covering is a sign of subjection of women is found not in the Qur'an but
in another religious book with which the Qur'an does not always agree.
That other book teaches that women should have a sign of authority over
their heads because man was not created from woman, but woman from man.
The same book says that a man should not cover his head because he is the
image and glory of God; and a woman should cover her head because she is
the glory of man. The Qur'an does not identify with any of these ideas.
The Qur'anic prescription of head cover does not in any way imply the
subjection of women.
People often confuse the Islamic prescriptions
with ideas they are already familiar with. Therefore when they see Muslim
women covering their heads they hastily conclude that it is for the same
reasons mentioned in some other religious book. But to gain a better
understanding of Islamic prescriptions, they have to be viewed within the
framework of Islamic thought.
Another mistake made by many is as
follows. When they hear that the Qur'an includes the story of Adam and Eve
they conclude that the Qur'an also upholds the idea that Eve was
responsible for the fall of man, and that the subjection of women is a
necessary result of God's curse on them. On the contrary, the Qur'an is
free of such ideas. In the Qur'an, Adam and Eve were both approached by
the Devil. The Devil did not approach Adam through Eve. Adam is therefore
specifically blamed in the Qur'an 20:121. In other verses they are both
blamed; but in no verse is Eve alone singled out to be blamed for the fall
of man. Although men are charged with the responsibility of leadership in
Islam too, this is in view of the practical dynamics of human interaction
as prescribed by God. It is not because of a curse on women.
It
would be a mistake to take the prescriptions of Islam and associate them
with ideas held outside of Islam. Within Islam, women are capable of as
much good as men, and they stand before God equally
honored. |