Campaign of men dressed up as women to support the women of Marivan, Iran.

Credit: Courtesy of Maryam Namazie.

(WOMENSENEWS)– The famously atheistic evolutionary biologist Richard Dawkins and the Tunisian activist Amina Tyler, who recently posted a picture of herself topless on the Internet, are just two of the well-known people who have signed the online petition supporting the formation of a group that describes itself as fighting the oppression of women in Islam.

Maryam Namazie, an Iranian-British political campaigner who is part of Fitnah, which launched in mid-April, describes it as a protest movement “calling for an end to misogynist cultural, religious and moral laws and customs, compulsory veiling, sex apartheid, sex trafficking and violence against women.”

Namazie, a spokesperson for the One Law for All Campaign Against Sharia Law in Britain, talked about the new group in a brief interview.

Q: What are you planning on doing with this campaign?

A: Our movement plans to bring an end to Islamism. While misogyny will not end with Islamism, the situation of women will improve greatly across the world as one of the leading proponents of femicide is brought to its end.

Q: Your petition reads, “Women are seen to be the source of fitnah or affliction.” Please elaborate?

A: In one Hadith (the sayings and actions of Mohammad, Islam’s prophet), Mohammad said: “I have left behind no fitnah more harmful to men than women.” This is a recurring theme in all major religions. There is a Jewish prayer that says: “Blessed are you, Lord, our God, ruler the universe who has not created me a woman.” In the Bible, there is one verse that says: “Her filthiness is in her skirts” (Lam.1:8-9). There are of course many examples of religion’s misogynist perception of women. In practice, this translates into an obsession with the control and restriction of women in order to maintain everything from family honor to societal order. This is most visibly experienced for women living under Islamic laws because of Islam’s access to political and state power via Islamism or political Islam. To the extent that Islamism has power, veiling is enforced by morality police and women are imprisoned for escaping forced marriages or stoned to death for adultery. The extent of hatred towards women runs deep. Recently in Marivan, Iran, a judge ordered a young man to be dressed in women’s clothing and a hijab and paraded around the city by security forces in order to humiliate him. Being a woman is considered the greatest of humiliations. While the term fitnah is perceived to be a negative one, if one looks at it from the perspective of religion and Islamism, it represents something very different when looked at from another viewpoint. It is always the woman who transgresses norms that is deemed to be “fitnah.” It is the woman who refuses to submit; the one who resists and is disobedient. In that sense, the women’s liberation movement is a source of fitnah for those who insist on women’s oppression.

Q: What sparked this campaign? Who are you specifically targeting?

A: Fitnah represents a new movement for a new era. Today is an era of the 99 percent movement and revolutions and uprisings in the Middle East and North Africa, many of them female-led. While it may still be hard to see the perceived “gains” by Islamists in the region, the change of an era is palpable. Fitnah is a movement of women and men defending freedom, equality and secularism and calling for an end to misogynist cultural, religious and moral laws and customs, compulsory veiling, sex apartheid, sex trafficking and violence against women. While our focus is on Iran in particular, and the Middle East and North Africa in general, it’s an international movement. We don’t see women’s rights as being Western. As women’s rights campaigners opposing compulsory veiling in Iran said during a mass demonstration in 1979, “women’s rights are not Eastern or Western but universal” . . . Also, while all religions are anti-woman, our focus is on Islam and political Islam, given its impact on our region and the world. U.S. suffragist and abolitionist Elizabeth Cady Stanton said, “the Bible and the church have been the greatest stumbling blocks in the way of woman’s emancipation.” This is true in particular with regards to Islam and Islamism today. When speaking of Islam or any religion, we are not referring to religion as a personal belief. Everyone has a right to religion and atheism, but Islam today is not a personal matter but an industry. Fitnah represents our era, our time to shine. It is we who are now on the offensive. Fitnah is a warning to Islamists: It will be our women’s liberation movement that will bring it to its knees.

Q: Do you consider Islamism as a form of radicalism?

A: Radicalism means going back to one’s roots. While Islamism sees Islam as a tool for the far-right restructuring of power structures, the movement is not fundamentally about going back to Islam as an ideology but about political Islam; gaining power and ruling via Sharia, Islamic law. That is why different states and groups impose different rules and norms depending on their access to power and in an effort to maintain power. Some see these differences as evidence that this movement has nothing to do with Islam but this is because of political expediency rather than ideology. Also, depending on the strength of the women’s liberation and secular movement in the specific geography they operate, their version may seem more moderate though they are all fundamentally the same. The other point that is important to make when discussing Islamism is that this movement is a contemporary one and resulted from abandoned modernization efforts and the decline of the secular-left. Islamism, however, would have remained marginal had it not been an integral part of U.S. foreign policy during the Cold War, i.e. to create a “green” Islamic belt around the then-Soviet Union. Islamism’s coming to power in Iran via the suppression of a left-leaning revolution helped to strengthen this movement and make it into a global power source.

Q: Some Muslim women believe they would have plenty of rights if religious laws were properly interpreted. What is your take on this point?