In many ways I admire religious pioneers -- those people who, ahead of the curve, challenge traditional religious teachings that frankly need to be challenged.
I think, for instance, of William Wilberforce, whose understanding of Christianity led him to lead the opposition to slavery in England.
There are many other examples from different faiths and different cultures, but the one I learned about most recently was a late 19th century Albanian Muslim who, though arguably patriarchal, had started to push for equal treatment of women.
A Baylor University historian recently has uncovered information about Semseddin Sami Frasheri, a novelist and playwright, that suggests he was pushing women's equality in Islam long before it became more popular to do so in our era.
The Baylor history professor, George Gawrych, has written an article about this. It will appear in the January 2010 issue of Middle Eastern Studies, a British academic journal.
A Baylor press release about this says: "In his research on Albanians under Ottoman rule, Gawrych stumbled across Semseddin Sami's bold ideas, written in a treatise entitled Women, published in 1879. Intrigued by his findings, Gawrych then read the Albanian's novel on arranged marriages and studied the entries about women in Semseddin Sami's six-volume encyclopedia on the world. Those three sources formed the foundation of Gawrych's analysis of Semseddin Sami's thoughts on women, Gawrych said."
By highlighting Gawrych's work, I don't want to leave the impression that Islam from the beginning until Semseddin Sami's time considered women second-class citizens always and everywhere. Not at all. A book to read on this subject is 'Believing Women' in Islam: Unreading Patriarchal Interpretations of the Qur’an, by Asma Barlas.
Modern scholars of Islam say that the Qur’an is the only sacred text to give women rights to inheritance, to own property, to keep their own wages, to create marriage contracts beneficial to themselves and to receive material and physical support from husbands. So Islam in the beginning was in many ways liberating to women, despite some problematic verses in the Qur'an and despite the fact that in many ways the patriarchal cultures into which Islam moved soon overwhelmed Islam's liberating impulses for women.
But I found it intriguing to find this liberating impulse expressed in the late 19th century by Semseddin Sami. One can hope that the more positive views he expressed about the equality of women eventually will become normative everywhere.
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OPPRESSING RELIGION AROUND THE GLOBE
A new study outlines the ways in which country after country limits religious freedom. I'll have more to say about this subject next week, but I wanted to alert you to the Pew Research Center's new study, "Global Restrictions on Religion." This has to do with a fundamental human right, and Americans cannot stand by silently while that right is being so wantonly violated.
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P.S.: Two Episcopal priest friends of mine sustained no serious injuries this week when the car in which they were riding together was struck by a suspect involved in a high-speed chase. For the story and a TV interview with them, click here. It makes my knees weak to think of how close they came to serious injury or worse.
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ANOTHER P.S.: Time for choosing holiday gifts is running out, and I want to recommend that you give my new book, They Were Just People: Stories of Rescue in Poland During the Holocaust, co-written with Rabbi Jacques Cukierkorn. To read about it and find several ways of ordering it, click here. And remember, all the royalties go to Holocaust-related charities, so feel good about buying lots of copies.