Showing posts with label juristic rulings. Show all posts
Showing posts with label juristic rulings. Show all posts

Monday, July 2, 2012

JEANS NOT FOR WOMEN: FURORE OVER PANTS RULING, Islam, Women and Feminism, NewAgeIslam.com

Islam, Women and Feminism
JEANS NOT FOR WOMEN: FURORE OVER PANTS RULING

Aceh’s Morality Police (Wilayahtul Hisbah) have taken to hauling up women for wearing tight trousers. In one district, they plan to make women hand over their tight trousers and cut the offending attire up on the spot.

CLAD in dark jeans, a long-sleeved top and headscarf, Henny is exasperated.

“Why is it that it is always the woman’s body that is subject to this or that regulation? It’s a pity our freedom on how to dress is being taken away from us.

“And what about the men? What regulations do they have to shield their eyes?” she adds pointedly.

Henny who works at Beujroh, a woman’s NGO, believes that the focus on personal matters like a woman’s style of dressing is actually to take attention away from urgent issues like corruption.

Most would agree that Henny, who is covered from head to toe with only her face, hands and feet exposed, is dressed in proper attire for a Muslim woman.

But not, apparently, for the Wilayahtul Hisbah or “WH” (pronounced “wee ha”) – in short, the Acehnese Morality Police.

For them, Henny’s jeans – or for that matter any jeans for women – is a no-no. Jeans, they say, are “men’s clothing”.

So women in Aceh should only wear trousers made of non-jeans material and these have to be loose and not made of thin fabric.

Those wearing fitting trousers or tight tops can expect to be hauled up and scolded by the Morality Police.

In Meulaboh, West Aceh, it goes a step further.

From Jan 1, women caught wearing fitting trousers will be given long skirts (for free) by these Morality Squads and the “offending” trousers will be cut to pieces.

http://newageislam.com/jeans-not-for-women--furore-over-pants-ruling/islam,-women-and-feminism/d/2332


Sunday, June 17, 2012

A Forward-looking Ijtihad in the Modern Era: fighting for women’s rights in Muslim society on the basis of Allah’s compassion and justice in the Quran

A Forward-looking Ijtihad in the Modern Era: fighting for women’s rights in Muslim society on the basis of Allah’s compassion and justice in the Quran

By: Farzana Hassan-Shahid

Though the need was widely felt to undertake ijtihad in the form of juristic rulings, earlier tensions among emergent juristic schools suggest there were differences in methodology over how such rulings were to be derived. There were some who insisted all rulings would have to conform to the text of the Quran and Sunnah, thereby discarding the notion that Ijma (Consensus) or Qayas (analogy) could be considered legitimate sources of Shariah. However, what crystallized as the Usul-ul- Fiqh or the classical theory of jurisprudence, positioned the Quran and Hadith as the primary, and Ijma and Qiyas as secondary sources of Islamic law. The secondary sources would have to conform in principle to the two primary sources.

http://www.newageislam.com/a-forward-looking-ijtihad-in-the-modern-era--fighting-for-women%E2%80%99s-rights-in-muslim-society-on-the-basis-of-allah%E2%80%99s-compassion-and-justice-in-the-quran--/ijtihad,-rethinking-islam/d/864