Posted on December 8, 2010, in feminism, gender, sexism, violence against women, women and tagged Afghanistan, Aisha, consent to marry, culture, domestic violence, feminism, forced child marriage, gender, human rights, Islam, rape and sexual assault, religion, Saudi Arabia, sexism, sexual assault, violence against women, women, Yemen. Bookmark the permalink. 9 Comments.
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Since they had consensual sex, but it happened only after the boy gave him assurance that he would marry her. Otherwise no girl is so stupid that she will have consensual sexual intercourse with such a man whom she doesnt believes at all and become pregnant and spoil her image and prestige in the socitey. She only consented to it only when the boy gave her assurance of marriage not before. Since we all are living in the modern world where sex before marriage is very common between men and woman, but there should be some law for protecting the rights of the woman if she becomes pregnant. And months have passed and she cant go for the abortion also. In such a case there must be law for protecting her rights and dignity. I do agree its the fault of a girl that she is having such relationship before marriage but if she becomes pregnant and the boy continues to assure her that he would marry her and she dosnt opt for the abortion, in such a case she must be protected somewhere. Atleast there should be law for the punishment for such a man who cheated her, also there is breach of trust on his part, also who did fraud to fulfill his physical needs and desires and spoiled the girls life totally and living freely as if he had done nothing and for the girl that she had commited a very henious, cruel crime. And finding difficult to live or survive in a society where no one will marry her.
Thanks for your comment. You make some intresting points.
Based on your name, email address, and comment I’m guessing you’re from India. (You can let me know if I’m wrong.) A little different culture from the U.S. So I have a question about this part of what you said regarding a pregnancy: “its the fault of a girl that she is having such relationship.”
Just wondering why it would be more the fault of the girl, rather than equal responsibility. I’m curious to understand this perspective. Let me know your thoughts if you get a chance.
Just reading this just turns my stomach. How could a father do that to his little girl? Do they seriously not care for their child? And who these men think they are by beating this poor and defenseless girl? Other than that its good to know that there is something done to help these girls because this has literally gone too far and it needs to stop for good.
This new pretext for raping young children might as well be a new trick to the rule book. It’s repugnant how the Muslim community endorses such reasoning when they have a strong religious belief to live peacefully and righteously. Alas, I don’t think this kind of act will ever cease to exist because our society (regardless of cultures) is still patriarchy. Feminists can protest and reform all they want, but their efforts won’t go far as their dreams. Either obliterate all the men on earth or drug the men into submission (hahaha just kidding).
Actually, there is hope.
Violence against women is tied to patriarchy, but not all cultures are, or have been, patriarchal.
There was almost no rape or battering among egalitarian American Indians before contact w/whites.
In the U.S. as patriarchy has decreased, so has incest. Down 40% since early 1990s (Justice Department stats based on victimization surveys).
More on all this later.
A few days ago I read a piece of news saying that a 12-year-old Vietnamese was sold to a Chinese farmer as the farmer’s bride. This kind of thing happens everywhere every second. I commented yesterday saying there is still a long long road of pursuing more Women’s rights ahead us. Again, women are historically treated as “sex-object.”
Not only in the case like the poor Pakistani girl Assiya, but also in more cases happened in Yemen, Saudi Arabia, Afghanistan… We need more actions!
Would that it were different, everywhere. Hopefully, the magic power of openness will shed enough light on the practice that Muslims will begin to see the inhumanity of it and how much it costs their citixens and society. I do not expect fast changes; but sometimes, some particular set of circumstances can bring about rapid changes. Let us pray.
“Early Islam had a feminist air…”
That would take a very broad view of the word feminist. Although Muhammad might have in fact advanced the cause of women in some ways, Muslims were still horribly brutal towards women. Essays that say otherwise are mere political rhetoric.
True. I didn’t say early Islam was feminist. I said it had a feminist air. It was quite progressive for the time, giving women many rights that women in the rest of the world could not yet enjoy.
But that feminist air also gives Islamic feminists something to work with for the betterment of women in large parts of the world.