Re: How we were sold on patriarchal religion reason#316
Reply #15 - May 29, 2012, 06:21 PM
(holy shit I typed all this on my phone, and i didn't know how long it was on my tiny screen sry I make long winded posts)
I remember having a conversation with my Egyptian Muslim friend. She's one of those people who post 'Allah' and Islam is great Memes all
Over her Facebook. She tell me she is so impatient to get a husband and she wants to get married have many children and proudly where a niqab (she's 24) and I was asking her what the appeal to that was. And she seems really ghung-ho to get into motherhood and be absolutely obedient to her husband. While at the same time constantly reminding me that any thing I've heard about the mistreatment of women is a lie. Islam gives wife rights, a woman has freedom
To work and do what she wants. Islam allows divorce where other religions condemn it. Etc. Etc.
I'm worried as she gets lost in her perfect husband fantasy. She might end up like some of the ex-Muslims here with abusive husbands which impose their interpretations of Islam and then blame themselves, or say their husbands are mis-imterpretating things and Islam is not to blame.
I mean I don't really try to out anything in her head because then I would be no better than someone trying to impose their religious belief on me. maybe he might become dis-satisfied because while she talks about wearing a burqa, she says she has male friends, plays fighting games, wants to go sand surfing, loves to belly dance and so on. But she's willing giving up all those things. She no longer even listens to music, and I has to send her a specifically non-scented lotion because perfume is haram. She says she loves it but only wears it when she's at home. So sometimes there seems to be mixed messages, as Muslim women give up their hobbies for the sale of prayer and Muslim pride. Yet at the same token you wonder if this is genuine sacrifice, or if it comes with pain and doubt. I really hope she gets her 'perfect Muslim husband' she also likes to say Egyptian men treat their women like queens. (again the appeal
Of. Being pampered in exchange for 'simple' obedience.
***~Church is where bad people go to hide~***