Lightly-Beaten Wives, Ready-to-eat Wives, No Alimony Wives, Triple Talaqued Wives!
The time had come when I had been pushed as far
as I could stand to be pushed, I suppose. I had decided that I would have to
know, once and for all, what rights I had as a human being, and as a citizen-Rosa
Parks
The challenge this time, to the way that the Sharia’h based
Muslim Personal Law is interpreted and practiced in India, has come from within,
from the 50% , or more, of the nearly 200 million strong Muslim population in
India.
This time, it is not about alimony alone, as in the infamous
betrayal of the Shah Bano case verdict of 1985.
It is, with specific reference to the manner in which the
provision of ‘triple talaq’ is used exclusively by Muslim men in India, mostly
in conjunction with polygamy. A younger wife is taken, and an older one retired
unceremoniously, sometimes along with all her children.
The present contention is probably encapsulated in the similar
sounding Shayara Bano petition of 2016, challenging the constitutionality of
‘triple talaq’, directly to the Supreme Court of India.
Shayara Bano is a post-graduate in sociology, 37 years old,
mother of two, who was also forced to undergo multiple abortions by her then
husband. She was divorced via a posted triple talaq, and separated from her
children.
The Supreme Court has taken suo moto notice of her
petition for justice, and there promises
to be a long-drawn legal battle with the patriarchal Muslim personal law
guardians.
In addition, highlighting the gender divide on the issue,
the first woman qazi of Uttar Pradesh, Hina Zahir Naqvi, has also called for an
immediate ban on the practice of triple talaq.
Another lawyer, activist and former lawmaker from Tamil
Nadu, the 70 year old Bader Sayeed, has also moved the Supreme Court challenging the largely oral or otherwise
instant triple talaq, impleading into
the Shayara Bano case.
Yet another Muslim woman advocate, Farah Faiz, who runs an
NGO Muslim Womens’ Quest for Equality in UP and is also the honorary national
president of the RSS associated
Rashtrawadi Muslim Mahila Sangh, has moved the Supreme Court asking for
codification of the Sharia’h based Muslim Personal Law, to end practices such
as polygamy and triple talaq.
Faiz has even cited
how instant talaq can sometimes be given on seemingly frivolous grounds, such
as the incensed Assamese man who just divorced his wife for voting in the
recent assembly elections, in a manner contrary to his wishes.
A simultaneous broad demand for change has come
spontaneously, from Muslim women themselves, and not just from the Sangh
Parivar, long demanding the establishment of a codified and transparent Uniform
Civil Code.
It has come, initially, from 50,000 Muslim women, who have
signed a petition sponsored by the Bharatiya Muslim Mahila Andolan (BMMA) via
its co-founders Safia Niaz and Zakia Soman, against the ‘unQuranic practice’ of
triple talaq.
The BMMA says it is striving for ‘equal citizenship…as
enshrined in the Constitution, as well as justice and equality for Muslim women
based on the Quranic tenets’.
The BMMA insists that: ‘the Quranic method calls for a 90
day process of dialogue, reconciliation and mediation’ before divorce can take
place.
The organisation has asserted 92% of Muslim women, per a
survey they have conducted involving nearly 5,000 respondents, want the
practice of ‘triple talaq’ to end forthwith.
Their petition has already been submitted to The National
Commission Of Women (NCW), for its intervention. The NCW, in turn, led by its chairperson
Dr. Lalitha Kumaramangalam, has already announced that it will support this
movement.
The BMMA, in the interim, has also launched a country-wide
signature campaign, in most of the states of the union, to enlist the support
of lakhs of Muslim women to its cause.
The BMMA has already received support also from the women’s
wing of the Rashtriya Muslim Manch (MRM), an RSS affiliated body. Its head,
Shehnaz Afzal has called for a registration of all Muslim marriages and divorces
to prevent the practice of instant ‘triple talaq’.
The Shayara Bano Case, though about the constitutionality of
triple talaq and custody of children, rather than alimony, does echo the 1985
Shah Bano case.
The hapless Shah Bano was divorced by triple talaq, at age
62, and thrown out by her husband, who had a new wife, along with her five
children, and without any means of support.
Shah Bano petitioned the lower courts in 1978, which granted
a measly pittance, and gradually the case went all the way up to the Supreme
Court, which also pronounced in her favour, in 1985.
But, the Indian parliament, and the government of Rajiv
Gandhi, cynically, and shamefully, upturned the Supreme Court verdict. This,
probably to protect its electoral vote banks, and under pressure from the
orthodox All India Muslim Personal Law Board (AIMPLB), and its affiliates, such
as the Darul Uloom Deoband, The Jamiat-Ulama-i-Hind,
and the Barelvis.
The government, which had an overwhelming majority, ended up
passing a retrograde law called the Muslim Women (Protection of Rights on
Divorce) Act, 1986, in support of the orthodox Muslim patriarchy, reversing
even the right to a modest alimony for divorced Muslim women.
This time around also, the AIMPLB, established in 1973,
during the Indira Gandhi government, to oversee the workings of the
pre-independence Muslim Personal Laws (Sharia Act) of 1937, enacted in 1939, that
remains uncodified to this day; is vehemently opposed to any change in the
prevailing practice of triple talaq.
So are all its affiliates, the predominantly male qazis, and
most of the other Muslim clerics.
The AIMPLB will, once again, aggressively and formally raise
the constitutional issue in the face of this fresh attack from Muslim women
though en masse. They will challenge the very jurisdiction of the Supreme Court
in matters concerning the Muslim Personal Law.
However, this issue in its various ramifications, raised
this time, not by the Sangh Parivar, or any other external agency, but by
Muslim women themselves, points to the possibility that the Muslim Personal Law
administration is ripe for reform.
The extremely patriarchal ways will have to go, and there
are some indications that the AIMPLB will prefer to change its ways, rather
than have the Supreme Court force/mandate changes. The Muslim vote bank
politics also, is not, after all, what it used to be, at present.
This shift in attitude may not come easily, or all that
soon, or even via the courts, but the Muslim Personal Law administration,
additionally, just cannot afford to ignore the wishes of 100 million daughters,
wives, and mothers amongst them.
Muslim women too are unlikely to be cowed down this time.
They are today more aware, and often much better educated, thanks to the quiet
intervention of their parents. They have come quite some distance from how they
were 1973, or even 1985.
Muslim women of India, are clearly not willing to be treated
as second-class citizens and chattel any longer. And many Muslim men,
particularly the educated ones, are tacitly standing with, and behind, them.
The women are, even if their male patriarchy is not, in
fact, clear that the Supreme Court is the final legal arbiter in the land, and
must therefore provide the justice that is being denied them so far from within
the community.
And the present government, no doubt, has no difficulty in
agreeing with them. A prolonged resistance from the Muslim menfolk, could drive
the women to even vote for BJP in larger numbers, becoming a windfall gain and
a thin end of the wedge to break the force of Muslim block-voting!
Besides, more than 20 Islamic countries including Egypt,
Sudan, Morocco, Iraq,, even Pakistan, Sri Lanka, and Bangladesh, are updating
Sharia’h laws, and have imposed an injunction against the use of ‘triple talaq’
by husbands. In Turkey and Cyprus, unilateral divorce even needs court
intervention.
In terms of Muslim Personal Law, this may therefore, indeed
be the Rosa Parks moment. For those who don’t readily recall the reference,
Rosa Parks was a black 42 year old seamstress, who defied segregation on buses
in Montgomery, Alabama, back in 1955;
thereby setting off the course of the American Civil Rights movement in the US.
Today, that piece of courageous and quiet civil
disobedience, began something that has culminated in putting in a two-term
black president in the White House.
The triple talaq alone, is not, by any means, the only
anachronism in contention, in the unreformed and uncodified Muslim personal law,
as practiced in India.
But it is certainly a blessing, that the AIMPLB and its
affiliates and associates, do not, for example, advocate a ‘light beating’ of
wives if necessary, or confirm that women are not quite human, or sanction
their consumption as food, if particularly hungry.
They also do not defend rape of infidel women, or sanctify
the marrying of female children. We read and hear about such horrors mostly
from Saudi Arabia and Yemen, though the one about the light beating, though
advocated first in Saudi Arabia too, alas, is from neighbouring Pakistan.
The good thing there is, however, that the more robust
amongst the Pakistani women have not taken kindly to the idea, and their
menfolk have reason to worry about a fierce feminine backlash, without being
able to label it as un-Islamic.
For: Swarajyamag
(1,544 words)
June 2nd, 2016
Gautam Mukherjee
No comments:
Post a Comment