Author: Khalid Hasan
Publication: Faith Freedom International
Date:
I first went to Iran during the
Shah?s time. Several years later, there was another opportunity to do so.
By then the Shah had been gone nearly ten years and the Mullahs were in
control. Of course, a great deal had changed ? none for the better ? but
that is another story better left for another day. Any shop or store that
you entered had a prominently displayed notice in Persian that warned women
visitors in stern terms that it was the law that they be fully covered
and, except for the face, no part of their anatomy, hair included, should
be visible. Any violation of that dress code set by the government of the
Islamic republic, the notice reminded them, would be severely dealt with.
What the notice betrayed was the
mindset of those who had put it there. It was they who felt threatened
by women who did not look like walking mummies. Why could men who felt
it was sinful to look at a woman who was not covered according to a dress
code that they, the men, had drawn up in the first place, not turn away
their gaze? Why was it the woman?s responsibility, in fact her legal and
?religious? duty, to dress not in accordance with her wishes but those
of men in authority? If there was sin, it lay with those who had issued
such orders. It was they whose minds were sick. It was they whose imaginations
were morbid.
If I had entertained any doubt before
that the Mullah hates woman and holds her in contempt, Iran cured me of
it. Let me now travel from the Tehran of the 1980s to Washington DC of
the year 2003. On my weekend visit to a Pakistani convenience store, I
found a set of audio tapes manufactured in Pakistan and, by all accounts,
selling well in the United States. These tapes, which consisted of the
khutbas of a cleric by the name of Dr Fazal Elahi Zaheer, had been produced
and distributed by the Al-Kareemia Trust, People?s Colony, Gujranwala ?
the land of wrestlers and house flies the size of a Fokker Friendship aircraft.
The themes taken up by Dr Zaheer for the enlightenment and spiritual edification
of his congregation were diverse, one being ?the place of woman?.
I picked it up, threw it in with
my groceries, came home and put it on, keen to know what Dr Zaheer thought
the place of a woman in the world might be. After listening to him, I was
left in no doubt that quite a few of those Pakistani-Americans who counted
themselves among Dr Zaheer?s overseas flock would, upon hearing his message,
rush home and lock up their wives and daughters. The spread of bigotry
and religious ignorance is obviously a global phenomenon, a feat for which
the credit goes to Dr Zaheer and his righteous and rather angry brothers
in designer beards, self-styled head dresses and outlandish gowns.
This is what he told his congregation
the day the recording was made and this is what his overseas congregations
are being told today. The real place (the word he used was ? thikana?)
of a woman is her home. She is only allowed to leave home as an ?exceptional
case? (said in English). He quoted a hadith which stated that if a woman?s
home had four rooms, the prayers she offered in the innermost one would
gain her more merit than the prayers she offered in the next one, with
the merit earned going down the farther she ventured from her inner sanctum.
Even the merit earned by her being in a congregation led by the Holy Prophet
himself (peace be upon him), would be less than the merit that would come
her way were she to pray in her own home. In other words, Dr Zaheer was
telling women not to leave their homes, even if they wanted to pray in
a mosque. He also said that a child, a slave, a sick person and, to complete
the list, a woman were not required to offer their prayers as part of a
congregation.
Dr Zaheer told the faithful that
an adult Muslim male should not enter a house without due notice, even
if it were the house of his mother and she was there alone. ?Would you
want to see your mother in a naked state?? he asked. He said the increase
in incidents of rape and adultery was due to men entering homes where women
were by themselves. He said most such ?incidents? involved family members.
?Brothers in law and sisters? husbands are like death to a woman,? he declared.
Nephews, both maternal and paternal, fell in the same dangerous category.
He said he was personally aware of cases where nephews had committed incest.
When a man and woman were alone ? and they were not husband and wife ?
the devil?s was the third presence. Dr Zaheer left his congregation in
no doubt as to what a man and woman would do if left alone.
Dr Zaheer then moved to household
help. He castigated those who employed cooks because they could spare the
money. ?For all they care, the sanctity of the home and the modesty of
its women can go to hell,? he thundered. He said when the cook was alone
with the woman of the house, the two of them would cook something other
than food. He also had strong words for parents who let the young daughter
of the house venture out in a car with a driver. At this point in his sermon,
he asked the congregation, ?And who is the third person riding with those
two?? ?Shaitan,? they answered in unison. He conceded, however, that God
was the only One who could save ?your daughter?s honour?.
Dr Zaheer said here was a girl studying
to be a doctor but driving around with her chauffeur. A ?million times?
preferable to her was the illiterate girl who stayed inside her home with
her honour intact. He said it was against Islam to permit a woman to be
alone with her cook, her driver or her tutor. He also had stern advice
as to how women should dress. They were only allowed to wear make up if
the sole beholder was to be the husband. They were also not to speak in
a suggestive voice to anyone, except the husband. To all others, they should
speak in a plain voice with no intonations. He also denounced women who
answered phone calls. ?They ask who the caller is, why he is calling and
much else. I ask you, what is the purpose of such questions? It is utterly
un-Islamic and it has ruined many families. The phone is a curse. Can we
even count the number of filthy scandals it has caused?? he asked emotionally.
Women, he further declared, should not describe the looks of other women
to their husbands because it will give their husbands ideas. He closed
his sermon by lamenting the moral collapse of the West because of the licence
it had given to its women who had neither shame nor modesty, one of their
pastimes being giving birth to illegitimate children.
I have no doubt the Good Lord has
set aside a special corner of hades for men such as Dr Fazal Elahi Zaheer.