Latest Updates: gender equality RSS

  • johnpi 3:56 am on February 9, 2010 | 0 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: , gender equality, , , , , , , , , , ,

    Love in Jordan: ‘Dress Western act Oriental.’

    In the corridors of the University of Jordan, young women sway their hips in tight jeans, embracing the latest fashion trend the West has to offer. Their male counterparts seem no less committed to showing off their looks, nor to a deeply rooted urge to catch the attention of flashy girls.

    This is one of the few places where young people can mix in a country built on strict gender segregation. Despite the superficially Western influenced culture, many young people express exasperation with the traditional mentality governing most people.

    But girls and boys, like in many oriental societies, often break the taboo and engage in a romantic relation. But the fate of most romantic adventures is in the end determined by family more than the lovers themselves.

    “This romantic relationship is veiled with secrecy, fear and deception,” admits Ehsan, a fourth year engineering student at the university of Jordan who says he must keep his family in the dark over this relationship if he wants to one day marry the girl.

    “My family does not know I have a girlfriend. Her family might kill her if they know,” he said.
    ….

    “Some of the young people refuse old tradition and want to make their own choices,” he said. “But this culture needs time to grow.”

    In Jordan, the majority of the 5.6 million population is made up of young people, with a ratio of two females to every male.

     
  • johnpi 12:39 am on December 18, 2009 | 3 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: gender equality, , , , , ,

    For the first time in Lebanon, a woman has been allowed to open a bank account.

    The change in banking policy that now allows women to open accounts comes after an advocacy campaign led by the Institute of Progressive Women and other groups.

     
  • johnpi 9:52 pm on September 30, 2009 | 0 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: coed, gender equality, ,

    Cleric denounces Saudi king’s university for coed classes.

    A prominent Muslim cleric has criticized a new Saudi university launched by King Abdullah for allowing men and women to take classes together.

    Sheik Saad Bin Naser al-Sheshri, who is a member of the powerful government-sanctioned Supreme Committee of (Islamic) Scholars, was quoted Wednesday in the Al-Watan daily as demanding an end to coed classes at the newly opened King Abdullah Science and Technology University.

    “Mixing is a great sin and a great evil,” al-Sheshri was quoted as saying. “When men mix with women, their hearts burn and they will be diverted from their main goal (which is) … education.”
    ….

    Al-Watan, which is owned by members of the royal family, accused al-Sheshri of trying to undermine Abdullah’s reforms and suggested such criticism breeds terrorism.

    “This is what al-Qaida awaits as a pretext and justification” for its actions, the paper’s editor-in-chief, Jamal Kashukshi, said in an editorial.

    Another pro-government daily, Al-Riyadh, also rejected al-Sheshri’s comments, describing them as “a creed which puts us behind the rest of the Muslim world.”

     
  • buzz 6:42 am on September 5, 2009 | 0 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: gender equality, , , , ,

    Something to bend Eliza’s mind a little…

    BAHRAIN:
    Seeking Gender Equality in Quran

    Suad Hamada

    MANAMA, Aug 25 (IPS) – For the first time, feminists in Bahrain are seeking new Islamic perspectives on gender and women’s empowerment, and asking for modern interpretations of the Quran.

    Through a series of four workshops, launched in May, the Bahrain Women Association for Development intends to engage the public in serious debate over the “true meaning” of Quranic verses that are used to assert male supremacy.

    “We aren’t against Islam and don’t want to promote our perspective,” explains Asma Rajab, an activist and member of its board of directors. “We want to make our society consider women as complete humans.”

    With the advances made by Muslim women in many countries including Bahrain, it is time to reinterpret the Quranic verses, she adds. “Islam is a renewable religion that fits all situations and periods, so its regulations should be re-interpreted to meet the advancements of Muslim women,” she says.

    Social practices that violate women’s rights include the law of male guardianship, unequal inheritance, domestic violence and testimony in Shariah courts. Also, the widespread belief that Islam forbids women from becoming presidents, judges and parliamentarians.

    These are against Islamic principles, the Association asserts, publicly throwing a challenge to religious scholars and others who insist that women are inferior to men.

    The workshops on “Woman, a Renewable Perspective” have been organised to correct centuries of misunderstanding that gender discrimination has religious sanction. The second workshop in the series was held on Aug. 15. The third has been scheduled for December.

    “To change the men-oriented societies, the Muslim world should accept the flexibility of the Quran and Islamic thoughts,” advises Rajab.

    Full article

     
c
compose new post
j
next post/next comment
k
previous post/previous comment
r
reply
e
edit
o
show/hide comments
t
go to top
esc
cancel