Ending Domestic Violence in
Muslim Families
Sharifa Alkhateeb
To every gathering of Muslim women, Maria*
added a smile. She came to Islam early, marrying a Muslim man and
accepting the religion at 13 years old. She embraced it wholeheartedly,
learning from the sisters as she went along. By age nineteen, she became
the mother of a much-beloved baby boy. She and her son attended Jumu'ah
prayers every Friday.
When the women decided to gather in one
another's homes two Saturdays a month, Maria made an effort to come to
each meeting. By this time, her son was nearly two years old, and Maria
was separated from her husband and living with her non-Muslim mother.
Often, the talk turned to the difficulties of marriage. Maria listened,
sympathized, and smiled. One day, the sisters decided to organize a
retreat to discuss family issues.
At the retreat, Maria and the 15 or so
other women talked, laughed, and shared a potluck brunch. They began to
discuss the topic of marriage. Maria had a question. She wanted to know
how a woman knows when her divorce is final. As the women focused on
Maria's question, she told them her horror story of suffering, abuse,
being divorced, taken back, divorced again, lied to, and finally stalked
by her husband. He told her the divorce was final one day, and the next
day that it was not final, and that it was her Islamic duty to obey him in
everything. She remained Muslim, but did not know enough of her new
religion to assert her rights. Her tires had been slashed, her home
watched, her peace threatened, and she was afraid.
The sisters were shocked. They should not
have been.
According to a survey of the 63 Muslim
community workers, leaders, and individuals done in 1993 by the North
American Council for Muslim Women, domestic violence (including everything
from hitting to incest) against Muslim women and children occurred in ten
percent of the population of Muslims. If verbal and psychological abuse
were added to this, the figure would rise considerably. By comparison,
seven percent of American women in general were physically abused, and 37%
were verbally or emotionally abused in 1993, according to the Family
Violence Prevention Fund. A comprehensive study in 1993 by the
Commonwealth Fund found that in one year alone nearly four million
American women suffered abuse at the hands of their husbands or male
friends, and that a woman is abused every nine seconds. The Family
Violence Prevention Fund also reports that 34% of men and women have
directly witnessed an act of domestic violence. This number is higher than
the combined numbers of adults who have witnessed robberies or muggings!
Maria continued to attend the sisters'
meetings as the sisters began to focus on the problem of domestic violence
in their community. She was not the only victim. The sisters protested to
their Imam when they discovered that a community leader involved with
their children had used violence against his wife. It became obvious to
them that some community education was in order. Meanwhile, Maria's
ex-husband had begun to frequent another Muslim community in the area, but
continued to alternately harass her and then to entice her to continue her
relationship with him. He began to use their son as a way to gain access
to her, and he continued to disturb her sense of security and to assess
his control over her.
Authoritarian Family Structures Lead to
Abuse and Violence
An authoritarian family structure
predisposes many Muslims in America to be abused in some way and possibly
to become the victims of violence. Generally, husband's dominance's in the
family structure, the more likely wife and child abuse become. In the most
abusive homes, the father believes and socializes his wife and children to
believe that whatever he wants the family to do is the same as what Allah
wants them to do. He, in effect, makes himself into something of a god.
Of the eight to ten million Muslims in
America, more than half are African-American, a small but growing number
are European American, and the rest are immigrants (first, second, or
third generation) from Middle Eastern, Southwest Asian, and other
countries.
African American Muslim families suffer
from the influence of the overwhelming incidences of abuse and violence in
the general society and from the historical experience of slavery, which
encouraged fractured families. While African-Americans who have been
Muslim for many years are as self-directed as any community, new Muslim
families who are searching for stability and morality often look to the
immigrant communities for leadership and mentoring. Unfortunately, the
most negative behavioral common denominator between the African-American
and the immigrant Muslim communities is a socialization process which
presents the parents, particularly the father, as having the last word on
everything, and teaches children to be unquestioningly obedient as part of
their devotion to faith.
The overwhelming majority of immigrant
Muslims come from repressive countries where political power is held by
officials who secure or maintain their leadership through unethical,
un-Islamic, and sometimes brutal means. These tyrannical governments tend
to produce extended families and societies where only the man at the top
can pronounce what is right or wrong, what is acceptable or unacceptable,
and who is good or bad. Muslim American immigrants fleeing oppressive
governments may not yet have realized that their own family dynamics are a
microcosm of the tyranny and despotism they so actively oppose, and
mistakenly think a tyrannical family structure is an Islamic one. The
atmosphere in too many of these families is repressive, non-communicative,
top-down, and male-dominated, where the leadership title that is worn is
primary and which never allows or plans for asking why or how the family
functions.
Surprisingly, in the homes of most Muslims,
focusing on the rules and desires of the parents almost always takes
precedence over any focus on Allah. Most Muslim parents do not give their
children any Qur'anic proof behind their opinions, do not allow themselves
to be questioned, and no not invite discussion or reflection on ideas even
though Allah continuously instructs Muslims to think and to reflect.
Parents rarely see the connection between parents (instead of Allah) as
the focus of the family structure, and shirk associating partners with
Allah.
What, Exactly, Constitutes Abuse or
Violence?
In order to end domestic violence, we must
understand what it is that we are dealing with. The Family Violence
Prevention Fund described abuse as "a pattern of purposeful
behaviors, directed at achieving compliance from or control over, the
victim." When these escalate to violence, creating "domestic
violence," the definition becomes, "a pattern of assaultive and
coercive behaviors, including physical, sexual, and psychological attacks,
as well as economic coercion that adults or adolescents use against their
intimate partner."
According to the US Department of Justice
report in 1991, men against women commit 95% of assaults on spouses or
ex-spouses. (Abused females may also abuse their children, and are
sometimes the primary abusers.)
Most of the control mechanisms used by
potential batterers that can escalate to violence are so common among
Muslim families that they are not seen as threats to the family's
existence; minimizing the victim's complaints, denying the abuse, and
blaming the victim, isolating the victim from family and friends,
intimidation, so-called "joking" about marrying a second wife,
and emotional abuse such as name calling and degrading remarks in the
presence of her children or guests. While none of this behavior is
consistent with the teachings of the Qur'an or the Sunnah of the Prophet
Muhammad, few parents ever make the mental connection between this
behavior and abuse. In fact, many abuse parents will say they are just
"maintaining the discipline of the family."
In most cases, after an episode of
violence, the abuser says he is sorry, may ask for forgiveness, and
promises not to repeat the behavior. Women may stay because they hope for
change, still love the person, or are afraid of losing their children;
they often leave only when they perceive imminent danger to their
children. Sadly, all research proves that children from abuse homes are
equally affected permanently whether or not they are victims themselves.
Maria continued to be confused about her relationship as she tried to sort
out her Islamic duties, what was best for her son, and her own feelings.
The Imam pointed out that Islamically she should stay away from her
ex-husband, and said that he did not know what she expected from him,
since she had not followed his advice.
When an incidence of abuse or violence is
reported to someone in the Muslim community, the general response is to
avoid "interfering" in family affairs. Some Muslims believe it
is the man's Allah-given right to abuse his wife and children in any way
he sees fit. Others, like the Imam in Maria's community, recognize the
behavior as Islamically unacceptable, but have no training in the areas of
domestic violence counseling, and do not know how to intervene effectively
and legally. Many Imams, though, blame the situation on the wife.
Most people just hope the problem will go
away. When it does not, the entire Muslim community suffers; the existence
of abuse convinces a community that they are ineffective and unable to
protect women. Maria fell back into silence about her own experiences, but
presented the sisters with information about Sisters of Peace, a group of
Muslim women in Philadelphia organized to combat domestic violence in
their community.
What is the Islamic Stance on Violence
Against Women?
Under no circumstances is violence against
women encouraged or allowed. The holy Qur'an contains tens of verses
extolling good treatment of women. Several specifically enjoin kindness to
women (2:229-237; 4:19; 4:25). These verses make it clear that the
relationship between men and women is to be one of kindness, mutual
respect, and caring. Some verses, where Allah calls men and women
"protecting friends of one another," refer to the mandated
atmosphere of mutual kindness and mercy in the marital home (30:21; 9:71).
Others show disapproval of oppression or ill treatment of women. Surah
two, ayah 231 condemns taking women back after a separation in order to
hurt them; Surah four, ayah 15 specifies taking an oath against a wife
rather than doing violence to her if a husband suspects adultery; Surah
four, ayah 19 prohibits forces marriages; Surah four, ayah 29 prohibits
deliberately causing a wife suspense or insecurity; Surah five, ayah 92
removes the legal effect from oaths against wives made in anger; and Surah
17, ayat 90-91 require the fulfillment of oaths, verbal agreements, and
commitments. Even in the case of divorce, spouses are instructed to bring
an arbiter from each side of the family to attempt reconciliation (4:35).
If this fails, the instruction is to get back together with dignity and
fairness, or to part on good terms (2:229 and 231). Anyone who violates
the limits set by Allah is labeled a "transgressor" in the
Qur'an.
Added to these verses is the inescapable
fact that the Prophet vehemently disapproved of men hitting their wives,
and that he never in his entire life lit any woman or child. In the
Prophet's last sermon, he exhorted men to "be kind to women-you have
rights over your wives, and they have rights over you." He also said,
"Treat your women well, and be kind to them, for they are your
partners and committed helpers," and at a different time, he said,
"The strong man is not the one who can use the force of physical
strength, but the one who controls his anger" (Bukhari).
Very important are those verses that give
women the right to self-supervision. Surah five, ayah 44 instructs
believers to, "Have no fear of people; fear Me." Surah 33, ayah
35 promises heaven to men and women who individually guard their chastity
(or modesty)."
In the abusive mindset, all of these verses
and hadith are ignored, and males misquote two specific verses and one
hadith to justify complete control of females. The worst interpretations
go so far as t assert that a woman is mentally, emotionally,
psychologically, and spiritually permanently disabled, and is prone to
immorality, putting her in constant need of male supervision.
The most abused verse is ayah 34 of Surah
four: "Men are the protectors and maintainers of women because Allah
gave them more to the one than the other, and because they support them
from their means. So devout women are extremely careful and attentive in
guarding what cannot be seen in that which Allah is extremely careful and
attentive in guarding. Concerning women whose rebellious (nushooz) you
fear, admonish them, then refuse to share their beds, then hit them; but
if they become obedient, no not seem means of annoyance against them. For
Allah is Most High, Great."
This translation charges men with the task
of financially and physically protecting and caring for their wives and
families, since Allah has made men physically stronger than women, which
is the interpretation of most scholars. Women, in return for that care,
should be careful in guarding their fidelity and morality at all times
when no one can see them in obedience to Allah. Instructions are then
given regarding women who rebelliously ignore Allah's commands about
sexual fidelity and become sexually disloyal to their husbands.
The husband is instructed first to admonish
his wife (talk to her), and then to refuse to share her bed. Should those
measures fail, the last instruction is often translated as "hit
her," (or "lightly tap her," when the sunnah of the Prophet
is considered). Some translators assert that it is incorrect to translate
the word "hit" at all, based on the Prophet's lifelong
abhorrence of hitting women, seen in his statement, "Never hit the
handmaids of Allah" (found in the hadith collections of Abu Daud,
Nasa'l, Ibn Hibban, and Bayhaqi), and in his instructions in his last
sermon where he restrict striking to a light tap (ghayr muharrib - without
causing pain) only if the wife has become guilty of nushooz, obvious
immoral conduct. The term nushooz is applicable to men as well (4:128).
The wording of this verse emphasizes the
woman's obedience to Allah's desires, and not to those of another human
being, but those who misinterpret this verse would assign men the duty of
being eternal surveillance police over their wives. This verse has been so
misunderstood that it is not uncommon for husbands to prevent their wives
from going to the corner store, to attend births, deaths, or marriages, to
see doctors, seek education, or even to visit their parents without
express permission. This verse has also been used to underpin the mistaken
belief that the qawwama of men as protectors and maintainers of their
wives not only implies unquestionable obedience to men as individuals but
also that only men may lead women in any aspect of life whatsoever on any
level. In short, this verse has been used as a tool of control and abuse
completely opposed to the Islamic foundation of marriage and family.
Another misused verse is ayah 53 of Surah
33: "O you who believe, enter not the dwellings of the Prophet for a
meal without waiting for the proper time...and when you ask of them (his
wives) anything, ask of them from behind a curtain. That is purer for your
hearts and their hearts...it is not for you to cause annoyance to the
messenger of Allah, nor may you ever marry his wives after him. That in
Allah's sight would be an enormity."
The verse is obviously directed at Muslim
men describing their property conduct only with the wives of the Prophet.
It continues, however, to the main reason that some Muslims believe that
men and women must be separate in all spaces, and an excuse for some men
to claim that all public space belongs to men alone. This is erroneous.
The instruction relates only to the wives of the Prophet, and to proper
behavior in the Prophet's house. Those who want to apply this verse to all
Muslim women never assert that all Muslim women may not marry after the
deaths of their husbands (although in practice, that is exactly what is
expected of women in some Muslim societies according to their un-Islamic
customs). Confining women to the kitchens of their houses during dinner
parties, relegating women to back rooms with inadequate or absent audio
hookup in most mosques, or worse, banning women from mosques, and bans by
political authorities in some countries against women going to school, all
come from warped interpretations of the previously mentioned verses.
A hadith often used in the control of women
reads: "Women, when they travel a far distance, should have a muhrim
with them." At the time of the Prophet, traveling even 40 miles could
be very dangerous since roads were full of bandits and law consisted of
each tribe's different rules and regulations. Rule of law that crossed
tribal boundaries, and was consistent with a new concept in 7th century
Arabia introduced by Islam. Today a women can travel halfway across the
world by airplane in 19 hours, and remain safely among large groups of
people at all times. Yet this hadith continues to be sued, even by a few
Muslim leaders in large US cities, to prevent Muslim women from going from
one city to another, from one part of the city to another, or from leaving
the doorways of their apartments, alone.
The real question is, did the Prophet
practice, encourage, or even condone surveillance and control behaviors
towards women? He never did. Knowing this, it is up to each individual
Muslim, as husband and wife, as extended family member, or as community
member, to shape morally, ethically, psychologically, and physically sale
and healthy society where families can raise happy and contributing
members of society.
Ending the Violence: Where Do Muslims
Begin?
Let there be zero tolerance for abuse and
violence against women! The words of a famous ad campaign state,
"There's no excuse for domestic violence." If we hold this in
mind, the future for battered women will be a positive one.
Research shows that the more we are exposed
to violence against women, the less we are upset by it. Muslim women need
to improve their knowledge of their own faith, and then reclaim their
right to define themselves in the light of the Qur'an and the Sunnah,
instead of by customary practices, traditions, extremist viewpoints, or
those who believe Muslim women need to be saved from themselves.
Families need to maintain open lines of
communication between all of their members; regular family meetings where
everyone is allowed to express themselves without any recriminations are
helpful. Marriage must be seen as a partnership, and marriage contracts
should specify a commitment to an abuse, free and violence-free family.
The parents must ask of their children only that which is good and which
conforms to Qur'anically based concepts. Extended families must stop
covering up abuse, violence, and incest in the name of "preserving
the family honor." Above all, the family, like the individual must
keep Allah as its focus.
The Family Violence Prevention Division in
Canada this year published a full report on family violence. Of great
significance to Muslims is the need they identified to "reconceptualize
power in a way that distinguished between creative and violating power and
that more directly expands the focus on power to move beyond power
dynamics in individual relationships to power structures." This
thinking should be taken from the personal level to the global level.
Communities need to see individual cases of family violence in the light
of the nature of the global power structure, and that of the community as
a whole, to discover whether the community power structure is actually
promoting a license to batter.
Imams must be protectors of women's safety
by example, avoid blaming wives, and recognize when they do not have the
expertise to truly help women who are battered. Community members should
be encouraged to obtain profession training and degrees in counseling. The
community is responsible to develop protocols for handling problems of
domestic violence, network with existing Muslim and non-Muslim agencies
that can provide training or referrals, and set up safe houses for
battered women and children.
At least twice a year, each mosque or
community center should present an Abuse and Domestic Violence Awareness
Program for Muslim Families that will teach risk identification, abuse and
violence identification, safety planning for possible situations, safety
planning for unsupervised visits by a batterer, problem solving
techniques, and information on counseling available for battered women and
their families. Muslim community activists, lawyers, and counselors should
meet in each city to develop protocols addressed to their specific
community which will allow for early identification of abuse and a
willingness to deal with the situation in order to protect the victims
from further abuse or victim blaming. Wherever possible, shelters and
Muslim family service agencies should be put into place.
In 1993, the North American Council for
Muslim Women was the first national Muslim organization of any kind to
discuss Abuse and Violence Against Women and Children during a national
convention. In 1995 in Plainfield, Indiana, and the following year in
Chicago, the Islamic Society of North America held conferences for social
service providers that addressed several subjects including family
counseling, divorce and children's issues, and the last one was attended
by over 200 providers. (Rafia Syeed coordinates this work, telephone
317-839-8157.) |