In a controversial speech delivered at the Women and Justice Summit in Istanbul last week, Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan articulated these very misgivings.
While his assertion that “women and men are not equal” was received with shock in Western media, for many of us feminists here it was no more than an oft-encountered retort. How often have colleagues, mothers, friends and family reminded us, in words not very different from President Erdogan’s, of the absurdity and futility of the ‘equality debate’?
Gender equality, for its detractors, is a misplaced ideal. Women, defined by their biological distinctness to men, are born into difference. Each gender represents a different species with a specific set of needs, capacities and life purposes. In the words of Catherine MacKinnon, to then argue that two “unlikes be treated alike” is wholly illogical. As a consequence, President Erdogan’s call for “equality among women” and “equality among men” only seems more correct. To demand otherwise would unfairly subject women to arduous standards of behaviour expected of men.
A protectionist state, cognisant of such ‘difference’ and the ‘delicate nature’ of the female species, for instance must exempt women from compulsory manual labour or military service. However, the difference argument can very easily be turned on its head. Women are weaker, more vulnerable and bereft of the capabilities with which nature has endowed men. Not only must they be ‘protected’ from the rigours of manual work, but also from any other task unfit for their ‘nature’ — governance, medicine, legal practice, the police or even engineering. But who is to decide the appropriate scope of such protectionism? Who determines the question of ‘fit’?
Difference can then become the justification for the exclusion of, and denial to women of the right to self-determination, education, and access to the workforce. When defined in terms of their physical inferiority to men, the oppression and subjugation of women in familial relations, at times even expressed through violence, may also appear unexceptional.
The feminist claim of gender equality seeks to resist this very tendency to conceive of women and the hierarchy of gender relations as biologically determined. Feminists do not necessarily argue that men and women are the ‘same’. Neither do they renounce or denigrate the natural differences that exist between the two genders. Instead, the demand for equality entreats only that women ought not to be prejudiced or penalised by reason of their biological difference.
Feminism calls for an end to the worldwide differential in women’s access to health, education, economic opportunities, freedom of choice and security of life. To deny the widespread prevalence of these injustices would be sheer naivete. To categorise those who have struggled against these as fanatics is bigoted.
Yet the demonisation of feminists as a sacrilegious, aggressive, man-hating cult opposed to the valuable experience of maternity and matrimony is not uncommon. Such assertion is, yet again, essentialist. Is a mother, of necessity, precluded from adherence to a belief system that one may categorise as feminist? Can a man and wife wedded in a marriage not ascribe to the principles of gender equality?
Examples to the contrary, however, abound. To believe in the divine, to love and to raise a family are not antithetical to the feminist agenda. What feminism opposes, in my view, is the pre-determination by society (or men) of women’s life choices. When motherhood and marriage are termed the only true calling of a woman, she is denied the prerogative to decide the trajectory of her life, which may not necessarily conform to the expected paradigm. The freedom to make such choices is critical to feminism. Is such demand really that irrational?
Feminism as misconstrued would definitely suggest so.
The vilification of feminism and the ascription of sole explanatory force to the argument of biological difference are an exercise in ignorance and carry the potential to inflict great detriment to the cause of gender equality, which is otherwise just and warranted.
Published in The Express Tribune, December 2nd, 2014.
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COMMENTS (11)
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Thank you for this. Women need to update their definition of "Feminism"
@afnan ali: Please do not specultan ate negative; morality has no conflict with freedom which is regulated through legislations to protect the dignity of the individual. Islam guarantees the equality of men and women but the traditions and preIslamic practices do not. The people of Pakistan must rid itself of their hindu ancestoral practices which they inadvertently regard as Islamic. There is nothing Islamic about giving corporal punishment to petty thieves in a maidan or removing their lims or pronouncing death sentences. Love for the next and care for the old or sick and forgiveness of the guilt is imbedded in the Quraanic scriptures. Education and familiarity with the arabic language and arabic culture will bring enlightenment.
Rex Minor
It matters not what the President of the Turkish republic says about feminists, his personal opinion, it is the women themselves, with equal rights in a democracy, must decide about the choice of the profession and life style they want to have. The laws of the land must be tailored in the 21st century to facilitate it. We must not ignore the fact that under the law the turkish women wearing head scarfs were denied entry into universities, thereby the daughters of Mr Erdogan went over to foreign countries universities in pursuit of higher education.
Rex Minor
@afnan ali: Much better than living in 7th century.
@csmann. Surely,you are the people desperate to westernize the whole fabric of pakistani society.One day,this modernization will sweep away the moral principles that our religion expects us to follow.Actually,watching indian and international channels might have perverted your mind.This shows that they have largely thrived in promoting their corrupt culture of considering no barriers when it comes to the male-female socializing and interaction.Yours is the glaring example of this fact.I am sorry to say that people like you should not be beyond reproach when the incidences of pre-marital pregnancies come in the limelight.
yes man and woman are different!!!!!! does anybody have a problem with that......... cant you just see that!!!!
@afnan ali: Typical masochism.Just to keep women subjugated to men's whims.Giving equal rights doesn't mean families can not decide for themselves if woman needs to work to make ends meat,and give the children better facilities for advancement.Poor are the ones that suffer mostly from practices that your theory propounds."western" and "talking to male collegues" and other such medieval concepts can't hold women to ransom for ever.
The writer didn't provide the justification for reconciling feminism with gender equality.Let us assume for a moment that mothers and wives are accorded a similar status as that of men.For instance,the former are allowed to join labour force competition inspite of the fact that their husbands earn enough to make both ends meet,who will be responsible for proper upbringing of their children?Doesn't the country's future hinge on the newer generation?If both the parents aren't in a position to give their children adequate time,can we expect them to grow healthy,mature,and sensible without enough care and attention? It is therefore urged to stop the development of a new feministic narrative.Nonetheless women mustn't be denied their fundamental rights,Islamic norms expect women to restrict themselves to their homes except if they are in an urgent need-inc,in which case it do allow a women to touch the corridors of the outside world but not in a typical western style.Unfortunately,women are exploiting this very word of feminism to indulge in a western lifestyle with no shame in spending their recreational moments with male colleagues in a frank manner.
Think you are stereotyping feminism and feminists.Much of feminism is not anti-masculine,and just a fight towards equality.Guess some feminists do get frustrated on the slow progress towards that equality,and become extremists in their beliefs.They are an exception rather than a rule.
" However, the difference argument can very easily be turned on its head. Women are weaker, more vulnerable and bereft of the capabilities with which nature has endowed men. Not only must they be ‘protected’ from the rigours of manual work, but also from any other task unfit for their ‘nature’ — governance, medicine, legal practice, the police or even engineering. But who is to decide the appropriate scope of such protectionism? Who determines the question of ‘fit’?" Preferring rather protecting women from "compulsory manual labor" does not necessarily translate into considering females as unfit for " governance, medicine, legal practice, the police or even engineering." So arguments that follow and which are based on this premise are false and do not logically follow.
Women are free to do what they want. No State bars any kind of undertaking that women prefer. In some areas, men are preferred such as in digging the soil but nowhere are women barred from this toil. In no country women are barred from medicine, legal practice or police or engineering.
There is a lot of money to be made in the vocation of fighting for women's rights and it is a profitable venture, which mostly so called feminists can exploit and many of them do a good job at it.
Thank you for this Sahar. Feminism 101 needs to be argued for more than often in Muslim countries.