The Place of Muslim Women in Islamic Space

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Zafirah, Z. (2015). The Place of Muslim Women in Islamic Space. Solutions 6(5): 37–39. https://thesolutionsjournal.com/2015/5/the-place-of-muslim-women-in-islamic-space

Perspectives The Place of Muslim Women in Islamic Space by Zafirah Zein

Zafirah Zein

Women’s prayer area in Suleymaniye mosque in Istanbul, Turkey.

T

he amount of space afforded to women in Islam has long been a topic of debate. Traditionally, men lead prayers at home and outside. Men raise the call to prayer, preach during sermons, and take up more space in mosques. There are far less female imams, and women typically pray in separate, more modest quarters allocated to them. In 2011, Istanbul’s former deputy mufti, or Muslim jurist expert Kadriye Avci Erdemli implemented the “Beautification of Mosques for Women” campaign, which strove to improve the facilities and conditions

of women-designated areas in the city’s mosques. In a city that is home to more than 3,000 mosques, including a few of the world’s most majestic, Erdemli had found that many betrayed Islam’s message of equality in spaces of worship. While men are more obliged to attend mosques within Islamic tradition, the conditions of female spaces in Istanbul were turning away women from visiting these sacred places at all. Inspections under the campaign revealed that many mosques lacked female toilets, and that the areas reserved for women were either unkempt or used for storage purposes.

The walls and curtains that carve out these spaces also limited the view women had of the mosque from where they were situated—at the back. Under Erdemli, massive clean-ups and structural changes ensued, and imams were advised to educate their congregations on the roles of women in mosques. At an event co-hosted by Women in Islam, Inc and the Organisation of Islamic Cooperation (OIC) to the United Nations held last year, Erdemli said that there was a rise in women’s attendance in mosques by 70 percent as a result of the campaign.1 Turkey has also made other strides aimed at greater inclusion and gender equality in its religious spaces. Sakirin Mosque in the conservative area of Uskudar is the first in the country to be designed by a woman. Zeynep Fadillioglu and other female artists oversaw the construction of Sakirin, where women now pray on its second-floor balcony. From this location, women are granted an unobstructed view of the dome, chandelier, and the area below where the imam leads prayers. At the mosque’s inauguration in 2009, Emine Erdogan, wife of Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan, said, “This art is the proof that there is no distance between women and mosque in Islam.”2 While Turkey has tackled this issue by enhancing the spaces allocated to women, women in other parts of the world are taking matters into their own hands. In January 2015, the first women-only mosque opened in the United States. Located in Los Angeles, the Women’s Mosque of America was founded by two women who sought to improve the place of Muslim women who are often relegated to second-class status in their communities. In China, the women of the country’s minority Hui Muslim community have been symbols of female leadership and empowerment for over 300 years. Nusis are women-run

www.thesolutionsjournal.org  |  September-October 2015  |  Solutions  |  37


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