Boys
Will Be Boys*
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Shaikh
Abdal-Hakim Murad
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I
have been asked to offer some comments on gender identity issues as
these impact on Muslims living in post-traditional contexts in the
West, and particularly as they affect people who have traded up to
the Great Covenant of Islam after an upbringing in Judaism or
Christianity. The usual way of doing this is by examining issues in
the classical fiqh, and explaining how Islam’s discourse of
equality functions globally, not on the micro-level of each fiqh
ruling. That method is legitimate enough (although as we shall see
the concept of “equality” may raise considerable problems), but
in general my experience of Muslim talk on gender is that there is
too much apologetic abroad, apologetic, that is, in the sense not
only of polemical defense, but also of pleas entered in mitigation.
What I want to do today is to bypass this recurrent and often
tiresome approach, which reveals so much about the low serotonin
levels of its advocates, and suggest how as Western Muslims we can
construct a language of gender which offers not a defense or
mitigation of current Muslim attitudes and establishments, but a
credible strategy for resolving dilemmas which the Western thinkers
and commentators around us are now meticulously examining.
What
I want to do today is to bypass this recurrent and often
tiresome approach, which reveals so much about the low
serotonin levels of its advocates, and suggest how as Western
Muslims we can construct a language of gender which offers not
a defense or mitigation of current Muslim attitudes and
establishments… |
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Let
me begin, then, by trying to capture in a few words the current
crisis in Western gender discourse. As good a place as any to do
this is Germaine Greer’s book The Whole Woman, released in
1999 to an interesting mix of befuddled anger and encomia from the
press.
This
is an important book, not least because it casts itself as a
dialogue with the author’s earlier, more notorious volume The
Female Eunuch, published thirty years previously. Throughout,
Greer, who is one of the most conscientious and compassionate of
feminist writers, reflects on the ways in which the social and also
scientific context of Western gender discourse has shifted over this
period. In 1969, liberation seemed imminent, or at least cogently
achievable. In 1999, with states and national institutions largely
converted to the cause which once seemed so radical, it seems to
have receded somewhere over the horizon. Hence Greer’s anger
descends upon not one, but two lightning-rods: the old enemy of male
gynophobia is still excoriated, but there is also a more diffuse
frustration with what Greer now acknowledges is the hard-wiring of
the human species itself. Most feminism in the 1960s and 1970s was
“equality feminism,” committed to the breakdown of gender
disparities as social constructs amenable to changes in education
and media generalization; feminism in the 1990s, however, was
increasingly a “difference feminism,” rooted in the growing
conviction that nature is at least as important as nurture in
shaping the behavioral traits of men and women. Most politicians,
educators and media barons and baronesses are still committed to the
old feminist idea; however, as Greer’s book shows, the new
feminism is growing and promises to take the world through another
social shakedown, whose consequences for Muslim communities will be
considerable.
Several
factors have been at work in securing this sea-change. Perhaps the
most obvious has been the sheer stubbornness of traditional
patterns, which most men and women continue to find strangely
satisfying. Radical feminist revolution of the old Greer school has
not found a demographically significant constituency. Most women
have not properly signed up to the sisterhood.
Moreover,
the world which has been increasingly shaped by secular egalitarian
gender discourse has not proved to be the promised land than the
younger Greer had prophesied. As she now writes
When
the Female Eunuch was written our daughters were not
cutting or starving themselves. On every side speechless women
endure endless hardship, grief and pain, in a world system that
creates billions of losers for every handful of winners. (p. 3)
She
goes on to suggest that the sexual liberation that accompanied the
gender revolution has in most cases harmed women more than
men. “The sexuality that has been freed,” she writes, “is male
sexuality.” Promiscuity harms women more than men: women continue
to experience the momentous consequences of pregnancy, while the
male body is unaffected. When the USS Acadia returned from
the Gulf War, a tenth of her female crewmembers had already been
returned to America because of pregnancy aboard what became known as
the Love Boat. The number of men returned was zero.
…the
gender revolution has in most cases harmed women more
than men. “The sexuality that has been freed,” she writes,
“is male sexuality.” |
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Another
consequence of the sexual revolution has been an increase in
infidelity, and a consequent rise in divorce and single parenthood.
Again, it is women who have shouldered most of the burden. “In
1971, one in twelve British families was headed by a single parent,
in 1986 one in seven, and by 1992 one in five” (p. 202). Another
consequence has been the pain of solitude. “By the year 2020 a
third of all British households will be occupied by a single
individual, and the majority of those individuals will be female”
(p. 250). One of the most persistent legends of the sexual
revolution, that “testing the waters” before marriage helps to
determine compatibility seems to have been definitively refuted.
“Some of the briefest marriages are those that follow a long
period of cohabitation” (p. 255).
Another
consequence of the sexual revolution has been an increase in
infidelity, and a consequent rise in divorce and single
parenthood. Again, it is women who have shouldered most of the
burden… |
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A
further area in which women seem to have found themselves degraded
rather than liberated by the new cultural climate is that of
pornography. This institution, opposed by most feminists as a
dehumanization and objectification of women (Otto Preminger once
called Marilyn Monroe a “vacuum with nipples”), has not been
chastened into decline by the feminist revolution; it has swollen
into a thirty billion pound a year industry, populated by armies of
faceless Internet whores and robo-bimbos. As Greer remarks, “after
thirty years of feminism there is vastly more pornography,
disseminated more widely than ever before.” Pornography blends
into the fashion industry, which claims to exist for the
gratification of women, but is in fact, as she records, largely
controlled by men who seek to persuade women to denude or adorn
themselves to add to a public spectacle created largely for men.
(Many fashion designers, moreover, are homosexual, Versace only the
most conspicuous example, and these men create a boylike fashion
norm which forces women into patterns of diet and exercise which
constitute a new form of oppression.) Cellulite, once admired in the
West and in almost all traditional societies, has now become a sin.
To be saved, one “works out.” Demi Moore pumps iron for four
hours a day; but even this ordeal was not enough to save her
marriage.
Greer
and other feminists identify the fashion industry as a major
contributor to the contemporary enslavement of women. Its leading
co-conspirator is the pharmaceuticals business, which, as she says,
deliberately creates a culture of obsession with physical flaws: the
so-called Body Dysmorphic Disorder which is currently plumping out
the business accounts of doctors, psychiatrists, and, of course, the
cosmetic surgeons. As Dolly Parton says, “It costs a lot of money
to look as cheap as I do.” The world’s resources are gobbled up
to service this artificially-induced obsession with looks, fed by
the culture of denudation. And perhaps the most repellent dimension
is the new phenomenon of hormone replacement therapy, billed as an
anti-aging panacea. The hormone involved, estrogen, is obtained from
mares: in America alone 80,000 pregnant female horses are held in
battery farms, confined in crates, and tied to hoses to enable their
urine to be collected. The foals that are delivered are routinely
slaughtered.
Greer
and other feminists identify the fashion industry as a major
contributor to the contemporary enslavement of women. Its
leading co-conspirator is the pharmaceuticals business… |
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The
consequences of the new pressures on women are already generally
known, although no solutions are seriously proposed. Women, we are
told by the old school of feminists, today lead richer lives.
However, it is also acknowledged that these lives often seem to be
sadder. “Since 1955 there has been a five-fold increase in
depressive illness in the US. For reasons that are anything but
clear women are more likely to suffer than men,” (p. 171) while
“17 percent of British women will try to kill themselves before
their twenty-fifth birthday.” This wave of sadness that afflicts
modern women, which is entirely out of keeping with the expectations
of the early feminists, again has brought joy to the pharmaceuticals
barons. Prozac is overwhelmingly prescribed to women. (This is the
same anti-depressant drug that is routinely given to zoo animals to
help them overcome their sense of futility and entrapment.)
Greer
concludes her angry book with few notes of hopefulness. The
strategies she demanded in the 1960s have been extensively tried and
applied; but the results have been ambiguous, and sometimes
catastrophic. What is clear is that there has not been a liberation
of women, so much as a throwing-off of one pattern of dependence in
exchange for another. The husband has become dispensable; the
pharmaceutical industry, and the ever-growing army of psychiatrists
and counselors, have taken his place. Happiness seems as remote as
ever.
Later
in this talk I will attempt an Islamic critique of all this. But
before doing so I think it would be useful to take a brief look at
the science which is now providing Western social analysts
with a context in which to frame an interpretation of what has gone
wrong.
The
most obvious area in which science has reverberations among
feminists is in the differentials of physical strength which divide
the sexes. In areas of life demanding physical power and agility,
men continue to possess an advantage. Attempts have, of course, been
made to overcome this proof of Mother Nature’s sexism through
legislation. The most notorious attempt in the United Kingdom was
the 1997 Ministry of Defense directive that female recruits would
not be subject to the same physical tests as men. This excursion
into political correctness foundered when it was discovered that the
women being admitted to the army were not strong enough to perform
some of the tasks required of them on completion of their training.
As a result, the 1998 rules applied what were called
“gender-free” selection procedures to ensure that women and men
faced identical tasks. The result was a massive rise in female
injuries when compared with the men. Medical discharges due to
overuse injuries, such as stress fractures, were calculated at 1.5%
for male recruits, and at anything between 4.6% and 11.1% for
females. Lt. Col. Ian Gemmell, an army occupational physician who
compiled a report on the situation, noted that differences in
women’s bone size and muscle mass lead to 33%-39% more stress on
the female skeleton when compared to that of the male. The result is
that although social changes have eroded the traditional moral
reasons for barring women from active combat roles, the medical
evidence alone compels the British army to bar women from the
infantry and the Royal Armoured Corps.
The
army is an unusual case, and the great majority of professions to
which women seek access require no great physical ability. But the
differences between the sexes are at their most profound where they
are least visible. The gender revolutionaries of the 1960s,
popularizing and also radicalizing the earlier, gentler calls for
equality led by the likes of Virginia Woolf, were working with a
science which was still largely unequipped to assess the subtler
aspects of gender difference. Modern techniques of genetic
examination, the reconstruction of genome maps, and the larger
implications of the DNA discoveries made by Crick and Watson, were
unimaginable when Greer first wrote. Since Marx and Weber, and also
Freud, it had been assumed that gender roles were principally,
perhaps even entirely, the product of social conditioning.
Re-engineer that conditioning, it was thought, and in due season
fifty percent of those doing all jobs, composing symphonies, and
winning Nobel Prizes, would turn out to be women.
In
retrospect this seems an odd assurance. The intellectual climate
was, after all, thoroughly secular. There was no metaphysical or
moral imperative that obliged the Western mind to conclude that the
sexes were different only trivially, or, as one trendy bishop put
it, simply “the same thing but with different fittings.” And yet
so overwhelming were the egalitarian assumptions that had shaped
Europe and America since at least Thomas Paine and David Hume, that
everyone assumed that the sexes must be equal, in the way
that the classes must be equal, or the races, or the nations.
One
of the first large-scale social experiments based on the new theory
of gender equality was the kibbutz scheme in Jewish-settled
Palestine. This was founded in 1910 on the assumption, still
eccentric in that time, that the emancipation of women can only be
achieved when socialized gender roles are eliminated from the
earliest stage of childhood.
The
kibbutzim were collective farms in which maternal care was
entirely eliminated. Instead of living with parents, children lived
in special dormitories. To spare women the usual rounds of domestic
drudgery, communal laundries and kitchens were provided. Both men
and women were hence freed up to choose any activity or work they
wished, and it was expected that both would participate equally in
positions of power. To ensure the neutral socialization of children,
toys were kept in large baskets, so that boys and girls could choose
their own toys, rather than have gender-stereotyped toys and games
pressed upon them.
The
results, after ninety years of consistent and conscientious social
engineering, have been disconcerting. The children, to the anger of
their supervisors, unerringly choose gender-specific toys.
Three-year-old boys pull guns and cars out of the baskets; the girls
prefer dolls and tea-sets. Games organized by the children are
competitive-among boys-and cooperative-among the girls.
In
the kibbutz administration, quotas imposed to enforce female
participation in leadership positions are rarely met. Dress codes
which attempt to create uniformity are consistently flouted. In
Israel today, the kibbutzim harbor sex-distinctions which are
famous for being sharper than those observable in Israeli society at
large. The experiment has not only failed, it seems to have
backfired.
Most
scientists and anthropologists who have documented the failure of
such projects of social engineering today locate the gravitation of
males and females to differing patterns of behavior in the context
of evolutionary biology. Darwinism and neo-Darwinism are of course
under attack now, particularly by philosophers and physicists,
rather more seriously than at any other time over the past hundred
years. And as Sheikh Nuh Keller has shown, a thoroughgoing
commitment to the theory of evolution is incompatible with the
Qur’anic account of the origins of humanity. We believe in a
common ancestry for our kind; the neo-Darwinists insist in multiple
and interactive development of hominids from simian ancestors.
This
does not mean, however, that all the insights of modern biology are
unacceptable. Keller notes that micro-evolution, that is to say, the
perpetuation and reinforcement over time of genetically successful
strategies for survival, is undeniable, and is affirmed also in the
hadith. The breeding of horses, for instance, presupposes principles
of natural selection in which human beings can intervene. Heredity
is true, as a hadith affirms. Categories such as the
“Israelites,” or the ahl al-bayt, have real significance.
What
do the biologists say? The view is that biological success amounts
to one factor alone: the maximal propagation of an organism’s
genetic material. A powerful predator which dominates its habitat
is, however outwardly imposing, a biological failure if it fails to
reproduce itself at least in sufficient numbers to ensure its own
perpetuation.
Biologists
point out that males and females have different reproductive
strategies. The burden of what biologist Robert Trivers calls
“parental investment” is massively higher in the case of females
than of males. This has nothing to do with social conditioning: it
is a genetic and biological given. The human female, for instance,
makes a vast investment in a child: beginning with nine months of
metabolic commitment, followed by a further period before weaning.
The male’s “parental investment” is enormously less.
Trivers
shows that “the sex providing the greater parental investment will
become the limiting resource.” The sex which contributes less will
then necessarily be in a social position involving competition,
“because they can improve their reproductive success through
having numerous partners in a way that members of the other sex
cannot.” Hence, for modern biologists, the genetic and hormonal
basis of male competition and aggression. Competition and aggression
are traits which may be found in females, but typically to a greatly
reduced degree, simply because they are not traits vital to those
females’ reproductive success. The aggression which is vital to
male biological survival is directed primarily against other males
(the vast, physiologically-demanding racks of antlers on stags, for
instance); but aggression also serves to make the male more equipped
for hunting. Male parental investment is hence physiological only
indirectly, insofar as it is directed to providing food or defense
for the young.
Hence,
for modern biologists, the genetic and hormonal basis of male
competition and aggression. Competition and aggression are
traits which may be found in females, but typically to a
greatly reduced degree, simply because they are not traits
vital to those females’ reproductive success. |
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Biology
also helps us understand why the female hormonal pattern, dominated
by estrogen and oxytocin, generates strong nurturing instincts which
are far less evident in the male androgens and in adrenaline, which
is useful for huntsmen and warriors, but of considerably less value
in the rearing of children. Simply put, mothers have a far greater
investment to lose if they neglect their children. A child that
dies, through lack of care resulting from insufficient hormonal
guidance, represents a greater potential failure for the mother than
for the father. During gestation and lactation, the mother is
infertile or nearly so; whereas during the same period the father
may become a father again many times over. Hence, again, the genetic
programming which generates nurturing and convivial instincts in
women far more than it does in men. Men have less of the
‘nurturing’ neurotransmitter oxytocin than do women. Androgens
ensure that men choose mates for their youth and their apparent
childbearing abilities, estrogens impel women to choose mates who
are assertive and powerful, as more likely to provide the food and
protection that their offspring will need.
Hence
also the prevalence of polygyny in traditional societies, and the
extreme rarity of polyandry. To have many wives is a genetically
sensible strategy, to have many husbands is not.
The
aggressive instincts fostered by the male physiology, flushed even
before birth with androgens, served our ancestors tens of thousands
of years ago, and a few generations of very different lifestyles
have not been sufficient to bring about any substantial alteration
to the male hormonal balance. This is why ninety percent of prison
inmates are men, in almost every society. Psychologists have shown
that around the world, murderers and the murdered are usually young,
unmarried men. A further factor is that males are far more attracted
to competitive forms of behavior. As Kingsley Browne notes, “While
competition significantly increases the motivation of men, it does
not do so for women. The more competitive an academic programme is
perceived by women, for example, the poorer their performance, while
the correlation is reversed for men.” Studies also show that men
are more likely than women to opt for difficult tasks.
The
origin of this gender differential is again to be sought in
primordial patterns of survival. Aggressive, competitive males
became “alpha males,” and maximized their chances of
reproductive success. (Males have ten times more testosterone than
women; and it produces aggression as well as the sex drive.) Weaker,
more cooperative males were pushed to one side, and rarely if ever
found a mate. Successful hunting brought status, and status brought
greater opportunities for genetic transmission.
Biologists
like Camilla Benbow have recently assessed the implications for
modern social differentiation of our genetic inheritance. Her study
shows that “boys are much more likely to choose careers in maths
and science even though girls are fully aware of their own abilities
in these areas.” Again, the conclusion is not that women are less
intelligent than men-the new biology clearly rules that out-but that
they prefer to exercise it in specific fields. At Harvard, for
instance, there is a seven to one male preponderance in the science
faculties, and a female preponderance, or equivalence, in arts
subjects. Subjects like languages and art history are consistently
oversubscribed by female students. And while there is no evidence
that women are less intelligent than men-and in general they show
themselves much more articulate-more than seventy percent of
first-class degrees at Oxford are obtained by male students.
A
variety of university committees have been set up to investigate
this, initially with a view to eliminating it. However the
differential is very stubborn. The reason may be partly to do with
socialization, but an awareness is growing that heredity is also a
factor that refuses to be ignored. The male endocrine system carries
the memory of thousands of years of hunting, an activity which
requires a kind of focused attention on a single quarry to the
exclusion of all else, coupled with an adrenaline rush at the
finish. Such a metabolism, it is now being argued, is better
equipped to cope with university-style examinations (as distinct
from secondary-school styles of assessment), than the female
metabolism, which has historically flourished, that is, been
reproductively successful, in nurturing and cooperative tasks.
The
response at universities like Harvard and Oxford has been to
question the primacy of the examination system. If the
competitiveness and focus of males are unfairly served by
examination assessment, then alternative modes of assessment must be
sought. And so we see alternative assessment procedures: continual
assessment of teamwork, and other schemes which enable women to work
consultatively on projects and hence develop their full potential.
Already the results are encouraging, and it may be that the male
bias which seems to be inherent in the examination system will one
day be eliminated.
This,
however, raises a larger and more troubling question. The new
science has established that men and women have comparable
intelligence quotients, but that the nature of male and female
intelligence, and the context in which it flourishes, can be quite
different. Hence Capucine La Motte, another researcher, has
documented how from the age of about three most children prefer to
play with children of their own gender. They can accomplish their
goals in their play activities more reliably in this way. Boy’s
games are competitive and often aggressive; girl’s games are
collaborative and involve more sophisticated forms of discourse and
conceptualization. Another child psychologist, Janet Lever, notes
that 65% of boy’s games are formal games, while only 35% of games
played by girls have rules. Boys, it seems, are more
“rule-oriented” than girls. (This is why the contemporary Muslim
interpretation of Shari`ah in ways which diminish haqiqa is
so often accompanied by a diminished respect for women. The sexes
are only regarded with equivalent esteem when batin and zahir
are spoken of with equal frequency by believers.)
A
further aspect of inherited gender difference is presented in the
issue of risk-taking. Primordial humanity allocated willingness to
take risks differently among the sexes, not for constructed
“social” reasons, but for reasons of biological survival. To
achieve the power and status requisite for transmitting his genetic
material, the male had to take risks. In the historically very few
years that have elapsed since such times, this norm does not appear
to have changed. Consistently the figures show that risky activities
and sports attract more men than women. Gambling, motor racing and
bungee-jumping continue to be overwhelmingly male activities. Men
are statistically more likely to ignore seat-belt laws. Despite the
popular stereotypes of women as dangerous drivers, the great
majority of lethal road accidents are the fault of men, because they
indulge in hazardous and aggressive styles of driving. More than
twice as many boys as girls die through playing dangerous games, and
this statistic is remarkably consistent throughout the world.
A
further aspect of inherited gender difference is presented in
the issue of risk-taking. Primordial humanity allocated
willingness to take risks differently among the sexes, not for
constructed “social” reasons, but for reasons of
biological survival. |
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The
precise mechanisms in the brain which generate this behavior are
only now being understood. The mechanisms are called
neurotransmitters, hundreds of different varieties of which activate
emotions and bodily movements. One of the most important is
serotonin, which has as one of its functions the task of informing
the body to stop certain activities. When the body is tired, it
generates the desire to sleep; when we have eaten enough it tells
the body to stop eating; and so on. It does this by linking the
limbic system (which is the kingdom of the nafs, and which
generates primal impulses to attack, be sad, or make sexual
advances), with the frontal cortex at the front of the brain, where
our ability to assess and plan our actions is thought to be located.
Studies indicate that men typically have lower serotonin levels than
women, and conclude that the higher risk-taking behavior
characterizing successful Formula One drivers, for instance, is
likely to make that choice of career an almost entirely male
preserve, whatever the amount of social engineering that feminist
societies may attempt.
Universities
can reduce gender disparities by adopting alternative modes of
assessment, but after graduation, the real world is often less
amenable. Risk-taking is a necessary ingredient of success in many,
perhaps most, high-flying professions. Psychologist Elizabeth Arch
has recently shown that the “glass ceiling” in many professions,
which supposedly excludes women from further promotion because of
prejudice, may in fact have a biological foundation. Conspicuous
success in business, for instance, demands the taking of risks that
do not always come instinctively to women. As she says, “from an
early age, females are more averse to social, as well as physical,
risk, and tend to behave in a manner that ensures continued social
inclusion”; and this is largely innate, rather than socially
constructed.
One
expert who has devoted his research to the implications of
neurotransmitters for gender behavior is Marvin Zuckerman. He
divides the serotonin-related human quest for sensation into four
types. Firstly, there is the quest for adventure and the love of
danger, which is associated with the typically low serotonin levels
of the male. Secondly, the quest for experiences, whether these be
musical, aesthetic or religious. Zuckerman detected no significant
difference between male and female enthusiasm for this quest.
Thirdly, disinhibition. The neurotransmitters of the typical male
allow the comparatively swift loss of moral control over the sex
drive, when compared with women. Fourthly, boredom. The male brain
is more susceptible to boredom when carrying out routine and
repetitive tasks.
What
are the religious implications of this? There are feminists who
point to these factors as evidence for the categoric moral
inferiority of men. Islamically, however, they can all be
understood, and addressed, in ways that again demonstrate the
conformability of the fitrah, as understood by Islam as a
quasi-metaphysical quality, with the purely physical processes and
geography of the human brain. The first of Zuckerman’s
distinctions is not necessarily to the discredit of men. Courage is,
after all, a Prophetic virtue; and without emotional surges the
Muslim would make a poor horseman, or warrior, or risk-taking
builder of an Istanbul mosque. Secondly, with regard to the category
to which the lubb, the inner core of humanity, most fully
relates, it is clear that scientific evidence exists for the
spiritual “equal opportunities” of the sexes. The Qur’an
locates the source of religious faith in the lubb’s ability
to experience the divine origin of God’s signs in nature. Men and
women are clearly equally good at this. Likewise, faith-sustaining
aesthetic achievements such as music, literature, crafts, and
architecture, are likely to be no less effective for women than for
men. The Qur’an itself is perceived as beautiful and true by both
sexes without distinction. It is on this level, then, (and only
here) that we can meaningfully speak of the equality of the sexes.
The
Qur’an locates the source of religious faith in the lubb’s
ability to experience the divine origin of God’s signs in
nature. Men and women are clearly equally good at this.
Likewise, faith-sustaining aesthetic achievements such as
music, literature, crafts, and architecture, are likely to be
no less effective for women than for men. |
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The
third of Zuckerman’s categories appears to place men at a
disadvantage; but in reality this applies only to the secular. In
the believer, the virtue described in the Qur’an as taqwa,
which is produced from the faith generated in the second category,
overcomes this shortfall. The spiritual technologies of Islam allow
a compensation for the serotonin lack and a proper disciplining of
the darker passions which dwell in the limbic system. The actualized
Shari`ah is, in a sense, the victory of the frontal cortex, and
allows the male to retrieve the balance which is already implicit in
the female metabolism. No doubt this is why “women are deficient
in intellect and religion.” It is not that the Creator has given
them innate disadvantages in the quest for understanding and
salvation, but rather that He requires men to make more effort to
reach their degree of fitrah.
The
fourth (the quest for novelty, and the dislike of repetitive tasks)
privileges women over men in the duties of the home. Insofar as
modern office jobs are repetitive and tedious, women are clearly
also gifted with more stamina in the workplace as well. Whether the
biologists can demonstrate that men should, or are likely to, occupy
fifty percent of jobs requiring attention to repetitive tasks, seems
unlikely.
A
further explanation of the “glass ceiling” phenomenon may be
located in the primordial female tendency to nurture. Consistently
through the pre-modern world, women were primarily involved in care
for the young, the sick, and the elderly. As the feminist writer
Carol Gilligan observes, “women not only define themselves in a
context of human relationship but also judge themselves in terms of
their ability to care.” Girls are “more person-oriented,”
while boys tend to be more “object-oriented.”
Historical
biology, and anthropology, can help us to understand why these key
behavioral differences should exist. How they exist is also now
discernable, thanks to the molecular biologists and the
endocrinologists. The male and female fetuses begin life in the womb
almost identical. The key difference is the XY chromosome couple
which signify the male, where the female has an XX pair. The
function of the Y chromosome is to trigger the release of androgens
which approximately two months into pregnancy initiate the
development of the male gonads. (Hence the view of many biologists
that the female is in fact the basic human shape, and the male a
divergence from it-the opposite of the Aristotelian view.)
These
androgens, however, do more than shape the reproductive organs of
the unborn child. Between the sixteenth and the twenty-eighth week
of pregnancy, they also trigger fundamental divergences in the male
and female brains. At this point, congenital deficiencies can
produce not only forms of hermaphroditism of the kind recognized by
classical fiqh, but can also affect the behavior of the subsequent
person. A well-studied example is the problem known as CAH:
“congenital adrenal hyperplasia.” This results from an abnormal
secretion of androgens in an XX fetus, that is, a child that is
genetically female. The child suffering from this condition, which
in its classical form may affect one in every 20,000 births, is
typically born with both male and female reproductive organs; and
the male ones are routinely removed by surgery. Although the females
appear normal and are fertile they display very distinct behavioral
patterns, because of being bathed in male hormones while still
unborn. The numerous papers published on this phenomenon conclude
that the CAH females may be characterized as “tomboys.” They are
more aggressive, they like games with rules, and they are ready to
take more risks than girls who have been born without this defect.
Mirroring
the CAH girls are the boys who suffer from the genetic abnormality
of an additional X hormone. These XXY boys are superficially normal
males, but their behavior is typically feminine, lacking competitive
and risk-taking impulses, and showing a preference for play with
girls in cooperative and non-aggressive games.
CAH
and XXY studies are increasingly cited as evidence of the immense
influence which hormones exert on gender behavior. Further proof is
now emerging from studies on women who were given hormones to
overcome difficulties during pregnancy, an increasingly common
practice and one which is thought to be responsible for producing an
increasing number of children whose behavioral traits do not tally
with their bodily gender features. Female criminals, for instance,
frequently suffer from abnormally high testosterone levels, and
these are often the consequence of earlier medical interventions.
I
want now to move on, and deal with some of the consequences of these
discoveries for our understanding, as Muslims, of the society to
which we aspire, and whose guidelines are set out in revelation.
Clearly, older feminist polemic against Islam on the grounds of its
“essentialism,” its belief in the inborn nature of male and
female traits, will no longer hold water. In the Muslim world
itself, the new science, and the new feminism, are not yet known,
and secularists, from the Turkish government to Taslima Nasreen in
Bangladesh, continue to insist that gender differences, and
inequalities in the workplace, can be wished away through social
engineering and the inculcation of new attitudes. This was the
mentality invoked by the Turkish government in preparing its 2001
gender equality legislation.
Clearly,
older feminist polemic against Islam on the grounds of its
“essentialism,” its belief in the inborn nature of male
and female traits, will no longer hold water. |
|
Living
in the West, and being more in touch with contemporary trends in
science and social theory, we can easily see how thin such polemic
has become. Intelligent thinkers such as Greer are no longer
demanding “equality.” It is not that they are demanding
inequality or injustice instead: far from it. Instead, they are
recognizing that our awareness of the categoric difference between
the sexes makes the whole concept of “equality” rather too
simpleminded. Men and women are neither equal nor unequal. We can no
more say that men are better than women than we can say that “the
rain is better than the earth.” To use the old language of
“equality” is in fact to be guilty of what the philosopher
Wittgenstein called a “category mistake.”
We
can no more say that men are better than women than we can say
that “the rain is better than the earth.” To use the old
language of “equality” is in fact to be guilty of what the
philosopher Wittgenstein called a “category mistake.” |
|
Modern
Muslim theologians who have assimilated the new insights insist that
the demand for “equality” is less helpful than the demand for
opportunity and respect. Here there is clearly a congruence between
Islamic discourse and the new difference feminism of Greer, Gilligan
and a growing number of others.
It
remains for us now briefly to sketch some of the ways in which the
Shari`ah and science now vindicate each other. Equality is no more
envisaged by nature than it is by the law of God; indeed, the law of
God, for us, is commensurate with natural law. Since we reject ideas
of the radically fallen nature of our kind, we acknowledge nature,
that is the fitrah, as inherently good. Christianity,
wherever it followed Augustine, believed until the eighteenth
century that unbaptized infants, and miscarried fetuses, would be
tormented forever in hell since their unregenerate nature, stained
by original sin, could only lead to damnation. Jansenists and some
evangelicals still hold to this disturbing belief.
Islam
is non-sacramental; or rather, we acknowledge that the remembrance
of our Lord is the only sacrament necessary. And the natural order,
as the Qur’an richly documents, is a world of signs which point to
its source, and to ours. Hence the fitrah of our kind,
discernable we may say through consistent patterns maintained in Homo
sapiens across the globe and the generations, cannot be
displeasing to Allah subhanahu wa ta`ala.
Perhaps
one of the most interesting questions which modernity poses to
traditional religion has to do with divine providence amid a world
which is now unimaginably more ancient than our ancestors suspected.
There is no dating by numbers in the Qur’an or the Hadith, but
medieval Muslims typically thought that the world was about five
thousand years old. Now, whatever view we may take of Darwin, we
must accept that our species is tens of thousands of years old.
Recognizably human remains have been recovered, and reliably dated
by radiocarbon methods, which show the antiquity of humanity-unless
we are, by misunderstanding the logic of piety, to deny scientific
evidence entirely. In 1997 the world’s oldest cricket bat was dug
up in the county of Essex (of course). It is recognizably a bat,
designed for some form of game, and is apparently 40,000 years old.
Our theological question would therefore be: If Essex Man, in time
out of mind, had the self-awareness and the humanity and the
sophistication needed to play cricket, surely he was also a creature
accountable to his Maker. In other words, the story of salvation is
much, much older than we ever suspected. To claim that humanity had
to wait for most of its history before learning about its source and
destiny requires an intolerable interrogation of the divine justice.
Now,
this antiquity of our species fits in with Islamic salvation history
very elegantly. The hadith indicates that there have been 124,000
prophets. The Qur’an says, Wa-li-kulli qawmin had-[for
every nation there has been a guide.] The existence of cricket
matches in Chelmsford thirty-eight thousand years before the hijrah
is not a problem for us: Homo religiosus existed then, just
as did Homo ludens, and presumably had access to a chapter of
revelation which has since disappeared.
For
Christianity, of course, the problem is more acute. Medieval
theologians struggled with the fact that millions lived before the
coming of Christ, and hence died without receiving the sacraments or
accepting him as savior. Complicated theories of post-mortem
evangelization, or of the harrowing of hell, were developed to make
this challenge to the divine moral coherence less scandalous. Today,
with our awareness of humanity’s antiquity, the theology is harder
still: Why should a loving God have waited for a million years
before sending His Son to redeem humanity?
For
us, as I have said, this is a non-problem. For every nation there
has been a guide. And, as Surat Al-Insan says, [Has there ever
come upon man a time when he was not something remembered?] And a
necessary concomitant of this acceptance of the dramatic, splendid
length of prophetic history, so commensurate with the grandeur of
God and the universe, has to be that recurrent and
biologically-grounded patterns of human society must be considered
as in some sense normal, and hence as divinely sanctioned. Moreover,
our conviction, as Muslims, that the human being has been created
“in the best of forms,” that “we have ennobled the children of
Adam,” makes any attempt to decry the natural endocrinology of our
bodies blasphemous. We are as we have been created, and Allah,
blessed is He, is the best of creators.
our
conviction, as Muslims, that the human being has been created
“in the best of forms,” that “we have ennobled the
children of Adam,” makes any attempt to decry the natural
endocrinology of our bodies blasphemous. We are as we have
been created, and Allah, blessed is He, is the best of
creators. |
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This
is why we say, respectfully ignoring the protests of old-fashioned
feminists, that men and women, in a God-fearing society, will tend
towards different concerns and spheres of activity. Our aim, after
all, is human happiness, not political correctness. Any attempt to
impose a crudely egalitarian template on the data of the Qur’an
and Sunnah, and of the seerah, and the recurrent patterns of
Islamic social history, will underestimate them drastically. Walaysa
al-dhakaru ka’l-untha, says the Qur’an: [the male is not
like the female.] Egalitarianism is reductionism, and diminishes the
bivalence of our kind, whose fertility is apparent in many more ways
than the merely reproductive.
We
insist, therefore, that our revealed law, confirmed so magnificently
in its assumptions by the new science, upholds the dignity and the
worth of women more reliably than secularity ever can. A
materialistic worldview, which measures human worth in terms of
earning power and status and access to sexual plenitude, will
inexorably glorify the male. For the male, conditioned by the
androgens from the time he was almost invisibly small in the womb,
is assertive: his metaphors are projection, conquest,
single-mindedness. As the facts of science trickle down into popular
culture, and as old-style equality feminism breaks down, the male is
going to be magnified as never before in history. Materialistic
civilizations will, in the longer term, favor and revere male
traits. In the shorter term women may appear to be overtaking the
men, because of the energy generated by the congratulations of
modernity, and because of the reciprocal atrophy of male identity
and self-regard. But in the longer term, unless the logic of Adam
Smith’s capitalism is mysteriously terminated, the future belongs
to the androgen.
This
is why we say, respectfully ignoring the protests of
old-fashioned feminists, that men and women, in a God-fearing
society, will tend towards different concerns and spheres of
activity. |
|
As
Muslims, we refuse such a favoritism. Inevitably, given the nature
of the fitrah, there must be aspects of Shari`ah which favor
the male in functional, material terms. Ours is a religion of
absolute justice. But because we reject any identification of human
worth with conspicuous functionality, or power, or status, or
consumption, we are able to insist on the worth of women in a way
that is not possible outside a religious context. For we have not
been created for the idols worshiped in the pages of GQ or Loaded
magazine. The biological advantages of the male, which, unless one
day a massive reconstructive surgery and hormonal reprogramming is
carried out on every one of us, do not for us denote superiority, as
they must for the secular mind when it follows its own arguments
through.
The
key to understanding this is supplied by our rich theology of the
Ninety-nine Names of Allah. And these reveal what the biologists
describe as gender dimorphism. That is to say, just as procreation
bears fruit through the shaping received from androgens and
estrogens, so too creation itself is bathed in androgens and
estrogens. The entire cosmos is gendered; in fact, it comes into
being, and attains the complexity of manifestation after the
experience of undifferentiated unity, through the interaction of the
divine Names, where the supreme and governing category is the
polarity of Jalal and Jamal. I have attempted some
further reflections on this principle of a hormonally-coded cosmos
in another place. (<www.masud.co.uk/ISLAM/ahm/gender.htm>)
The
key to understanding this is supplied by our rich theology of
the Ninety-nine Names of Allah. And these reveal what the
biologists describe as gender dimorphism. |
|
The
gender issue ramifies massively into every other area of religion,
and far more could be written. What I have tried to do in this essay
is show that an opposition to the Shari`ah is an opposition to
science, inasmuch as science is currently affirming an innate
distinction between the sexes, a distinction that Allah ta`ala
clearly calls us to celebrate rather than to suppress. The social
architecture of Islam is very different to that of the modern
secular West: That should be a source of pride to us. We are
permitted to speculate, however, that the disastrous social problems
now overcoming the West, and westernizing classes elsewhere, will
combine with the new science to provide a revised definition of
gender and social roles which will, in the longer term, convince our
critics of the superior wisdom and compassion of the Prophetic
social model.
Wa-akhiru
da`wana ani-l-hamdu lillahi rabbi-l-`alamin. (Our
final prayer is all praise to Allah Lord of all the worlds.)
*
Article first appeared at <http://www.masud.co.uk,>
reproduced with kind permission.
A
celebrated Muslim scholar, and a translator of traditional
Islamic texts. He is currently Secretary of the Muslim Academic
Trust (London) and Director of the Sunna Project at the Centre of
Middle Eastern Studies at Cambridge University.
Further Reading
- Kingsley Browne,
Divided Labours: An Evolutionary View of Women at Work.
(London, 1998).
- Germaine Greer, The
Whole Woman. (London, 1999).
- Anne and Bill
Moir, Why Men Don’t Iron: The New Reality of Gender
Differences. (London, 1998).
- N. Koertge,
”How Feminism Is Now Alienating Women from Science,” Skeptical
Inquirer (March/April 1995), 42-43.
- Carol Gilligan, In
a Different Voice. (London, 1990).
- K. Hoyenga and
K. Hoyenga, Gender-Related Differences. (London, 1993).
- A. Booth,
“Testosterone and Winning and Losing Human Competition,” Hormones
and Behavior (1989), 556-72.
- E. Maccoby,
“Gender and Relationships,” American Psychologist
(April 1990), 513-20.
- D. Halpern,
Sex Differences in Cognitive Abilities. (New York, 1992).
- Nuh Keller
<http://www.masud.co.uk/ISLAM/nuh/default.htm>, Evolution
Theory and Islam
<http://www.masud.co.uk/ISLAM/nuh/evolve.htm>.
(London, 1999).
- N. McCrum,
“The Academic Gender Deficit at Oxford and Cambridge.,” Oxford
Review of Education (1994), 3-26.
- Jared Diamond, Why
Is Sex Fun? (London, 1998).
- A. Burgess, Fatherhood
Reclaimed. (New York, 1997).
- www.tylerforlife.com/Disorders/cah.htm
<http://www.tylerforlife.com/Disorders/cah.htm> [kindly
please note that the link has changed]
(<http://www.savebabies.org/diseasedescriptions/cah.php>)
- Ian Gemmell,
“Injuries Among Female Army Recruits,” Journal of the
Royal Society of Medicine (January 2002), 23-27.
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