"Just Tell Them...
I have worked 40 years to make the Women's Suffrage platform broad enough for Atheists and Agnostics to stand upon, and now if need be I will fight the next 40 to keep it Catholic enough to permit the straightest Orthodox religionist to speak or pray and count her beads upon."
Susan B. Anthony
Susan B. Anthony
Showing posts with label Shari'a Law. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Shari'a Law. Show all posts
Tuesday, September 20, 2011
On The Serious Implications of a Dying Secularism in Europe (and the U.S.)
Via Maryam Namazie.
There are many ways to approach the question of fundamentalist religion in the modern world. But none quite so clear as Maryam's.
Wednesday, July 1, 2009
Women in Middle Eastern Music, Part Six: Morocco, Nigeria, Afghanistan and Beyond.

I will be traveling for the next several days. I am taking a pilgrimage to Boston, Seneca Falls, the Elizabeth Cady Stanton House, and the Susan B. Anthony House in Rochester. To celebrate Independence Day, and bring my oldest son back from Harvard.
I have decided NOT to take a computer. As I really do need a break from the politics of the hour. So, this is my final blog entry for a while. Thus ends my series on the Women of Middle Eastern Music. When I return I will probably do a series on Unitarian Universalist Feminists, here in the U.S. During the "First Wave." (Cady-Stanton and Anthony would happen to be two of them.)
This series that I am completing now leaves me saddened. Alas, it appears that the influence of radical Islam is making life very difficult for woman musicians in a variety of countries. The crackdown seems to be deepening and spreading. Many professional female performers find themselves in exile ... in places like France or Norway. Either that or dead.
But what of the millions of women who just want to sing for their own sake? To teach their daughters lullabyes, or celebrate a wedding with a rousing Miserlou?
I was able to find this little bit of encouraging news from Morocco:
During an era of galloping globalization where cultural distinctions and nuances are flattened out, the Beyond Harmony project seeks to dispel the ubiquitous stereotype of oppressed, infantilized Muslim women who are constrained from contributing to society. Women like Rahuoum El-Bekkali have become international musical heroines, proving that musical and poetic expression can be a truly empowering female experience. Not only do these songs depict religious poems, invocations and popular songs, but they shed light onto important cultural traditions that have been passed down from grandmother to mother to daughter. With each successive generation these incredible women strengthen their identity as women, Moroccans, and Muslims.
But was immediately returned to some disappointing news out of Nigeria:
A lower Shari'ah Court in Shira Local Government Area of Bauchi State has sentenced a 34 year old female singer, Talatu Mai-Gurmi, to two months imprisonment or N5,000 fine for staging a traditional musical concert.
and
I should add that if the sharia enforcers are going to try to suppress music in Nigeria they have their work cut out for them: even the Wikipedia article is enough to indicate that the peoples of Nigeria, both the Islamised tribes and the non-Muslims, have an enormous, rich, deeply-rooted and endlessly mutating musical practice and tradition.
The situation in Afghanistan appears tenuous at best:
Music is opening a new world to 18 Afghan girls and young women enrolled in a cultural program in northern Afghanistan. The United Nations, which is helping to implement the program, says it is aimed at strengthening the voice of women in society. But conservative Islamic clerics in Mazar-e Sharif say the Koran forbids women from singing or learning to play musical instruments.
There are many other stories. And I am sure there will be more. For now, though, I want to end my journey into the world of middle eastern music by thanking all of the women who put their lives on the line, daily, so that we may all be enriched.
Peace,
SYD

Monday, April 6, 2009
Phyllis Chesler and Marcia Pappas TONIGHT on No We Won't Radio

Dr. Chesler's thirteen books and thousands of articles and speeches have inspired people on many diverse issues. Her books include: Women and Madness; Women, Money and Power; About Men; With Child: A Diary of Motherhood; Mothers on Trial: The Battle for Children and Custody; Sacred Bond: The Legacy of Baby M; Patriarchy: Notes of an Expert Witness; Feminist Foremothers in Women's Studies, Psychology, and Mental Health; Letters to a Young Feminist; Woman's Inhumanity to Woman; Women of the Wall: Claiming Sacred Ground at Judaism's Holy Site; The New Anti-Semitism. The Current Crisis and What We Must Do About It; and The Death of Feminism. What's Next in the Struggle for Women's Freedom. A revised and updated edition of her classic, best-selling work, Women and Madness, was published in 2005. Her work has been translated into more than ten languages.
No radio needed Our show is online- If your computer is down no problem call on the phone and hear the entire show right on the phone- Please come ! Monday 10 PM eastern/ Bring your questions.
Call-in 347 539-5420 .
Event: Free Us Now Radio Show
What: Performance
Host: BettyJean Kling
Start Time: Monday, April 6 at 10:00pm
End Time: Monday, April 6 at 11:30pm
Where: BLOGTALK RADIO
Call-in: 347 539-5420

These are two very outspoken critics of Shari'a law for women. I HIGHLY recommend tuning in. (And I sure hope I can stay up this late.)
Links to recent essays on the subject are HERE and HERE
Saturday, March 14, 2009
If A Woman Gets Beaten Senseless (or Has Her Head Cut Off) It is Her Own Fault

So, apparently, think 46% of Boston area teens. (WTF? I thought Bostonians were "progressive.")
TGW covers the story HERE.
Of note:
• 46% said Rihanna was responsible for the (beating) incident
• 51% said Chris Brown was responsible for the incident
• 52% said both individuals were to blame for the incident, despite knowing at the time that Rihanna had been beaten badly enough to require hospital treatment
• 35% said the media were treating Rihanna unfairly
• 52% said the media were treating Chris Brown unfairly
Oh poor Chris! The media is unfair to him!! Wah, wah. (Can I puke now?)
Meanwhile....
Muslims Against Shari'a would like you to know that they are standing with Marcia Pappas against Muzzamil Hassan and the brutal honorcide of his wife, Aasiya.
Good for them!
Now... how do we get them teaching in Boston's schools?
ADDENDUM: On occasion, I crosspost my ideas across the blogosphere. I maintain three blogs ... each appealing to different populations. The most socially liberal of those blogs is at Tribe.net, where I have blogged for three to four years.
It's always interesting to see which reader group "bites" on which blog entry. I was surprised to see Tribe taking up this discussion with such deep thought and vigor.
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