Re: I am writing a book about women in Islam
Reply #2 - June 21, 2012, 02:53 PM
You have made a great video there Klingschor . That is a very good resource, I just favorited it.
The only constructive tip I can think of is that the Muslim apologists will usually try to argue that, for it's time (7th century AD), Islam was progressive in terms of women's rights. So in your book you might want to address that issue to. I.e. present the case that the apologists use and then point out any flaws in it.
I believe that usually the case that Islam actually advanced women's rights when it first came out is centered around divorce rights and property owning rights which apparently they lacked in Pre-Islamic Arabia.
I do not know how much evidence there is specifically for these rights in Pre-Islamic Arabia, but the obvious flaw to this is that most of the areas where Islam came to dominate, in fact most of the areas that are known today as the "Muslim World" or the "Arab World" were not following the customs of Pre-Islamic Arabia anyway. For example in places like Syria, Egypt, North Africa, those areas were all part of the Christian / Byzantine World, and the laws in place under Byzantine rule already gave women property rights and divorce rights, so when Islam came to those areas there were really no advancements in women's rights.