A good reference for non-muslims who are searching about islâm, this is a resource site for information on islâm, muslims, christianity, hinduism, atheist, buddism, jain, etc.[salaf] [islam]Learn about the fastest growing religion on earth... Islam but is now also the second largest religion in europe and in the usa! ! why not explore, discover & be convinced that islam is the true way of life [salaf] [islam]About islam and muslims is dedicated to bring to light the truth about islam. It aims to set out the misconceptions, provide the correct beliefs and practices of islam and serve as reference point for anyone interested in islam inshaallah [salaf] [islam]Islaam pure and clear, that is according to the Qur'ân and the authentic Sunnah the way of the Salaf [islam]An invitation to discover islam, the natural religion of man. Hundreds of articles covering topics such as: god, monotheism, and the purpose of life, christianity, refuting anti-islamic claims [salaf] [islam]No religion, political movement or social institution emphasizes more on taking care of one's own community than Islam [salaf] [islam]There is no compulsion for a person to accept the truth, but it is certainly a shame upon the Human Intellect when a man is not even interested in finding out what is the Truth! [salaf] [islam]

"As for those who Divide their Religion and Break up into Sects, thou hast no part in them in the least: their affair is with Allaah. He will in the end tell them the Truth of all that they did."(Holy Qur'aan 6: 159)

Video & Audio Cassettes  Vcd's and Dvd's

Search Allaahuakbar

Enter your Keywords

Allaahuakbar.net Now in Urdu Also 

Fundamentals
..Hajj
Knowledge Base

..True Scholars

   Purification

   Eid

   Muharram

   Muhammad (saws)

   House of Allah

   Women in Islam

Islamic-Banking

Islamic-Management

   Download Books

   Books Reviews

Islaam pure and clear, that is according to the Qur'ân and the authentic Sunnah the way of the Salaf [ http://www.allaahuakbar.net ]

Sign My Islamic Guest Book
 

View My Islamic Guest Book

 

Experiences of a Recently Converted Hindu Woman

by Sister Noor

This article was written by the author a few years ago, when she was in her second year at the University of Essex

I came from a purely Hindu family where we were always taught to regard ourselves (i.e. women) as beings who were eventually to be married off and have children and serve the husband-- whether he was kind or not. Other than this I found that there were a lot of things which really oppressed women, such as:
  • If a woman was widowed, she would always have to wear a white sari (costume), eat vegetarian meals, cut her hair short, and never re-marry.

  • The bride always had to pay the dowry (bridal money) to the husband's family.

  • And the husband could ask for anything, irrespective of whether the bride would have difficulty giving it.

Not only that, if after marriage she was not able to pay the full dowry she would be both emotionally and physically tortured, and could end up being a victim of "kitchen death" where the husband, or both the mother-in-law and the husband try to set fire to the wife while she is cooking or is in the kitchen, and try to make it look like an accidental death. More and more of these instances are taking place. The daughter of a friend of my own father's had the same fate last year!

In addition to all this, men in Hinduism are treated literally as among the gods. In one of the religious Hindu celebration, unmarried girls pray for and worship an idol representing a particular god (Shira) so that they may have husbands like him. Even my own mother had asked me to do this. This made me see that the Hindu religion which is based on superstitions and things that have no manifest proof [1], but were merely traditions which oppressed women could not be right.

Subsequently, when I came to England to study, I thought that at least this is a country which gives equal rights to men and women, and does not oppress them. We all have the freedom to do as we like, I thought. Well, as I started to meet people and make new friends, learn about this new society, and go to all the places my friends went to in order to "socialise" (bars, dance halls, ...etc.), I realised that this "equality" was not so true in practice as it was in theory.

Outwardly, women were seen to be given equal rights in education, work, and so forth, but in reality women were still oppressed in a different, more subtle way. When I went with my friends to those places they hung out at, I found everybody interested to talk to me and I thought that was normal. But it was only later that I realised how naive I was, and recognised what these people were really looking for. I soon began to feel uncomfortable, as if I was not myself: I had to dress in a certain way so that people would like me, and had to talk in a certain way to please them. I soon found that I was feeling more and more uncomfortable, less and less myself, yet I could not get out. Everybody was saying they were enjoying themselves, but I don't call this enjoying.

I think women in this way of life are oppressed; they have to dress in a certain way in order to please and appear more appealing, and also talk in a certain way so people like them. During this time I had not thought about Islaam, even though I had some Muslim acquaintances. But I felt I really had to do something, to find something that I would be happy and secure with, and would feel respected with. Something to believe in that is the right belief, because everybody has a belief that they live according to. If having fun by getting off with other people is someone's belief, they do this. If making money is someone's belief, they do everything to achieve this. If they believe drinking is one way to enjoy life then they do it. But I feel all this leads to nowhere; no one is truly satisfied, and the respect women are looking for is diminishing in this way.

In these days of so called "society of equal rights", you are expected to have a boyfriend (or you're weird!) and to not be a virgin. So this is a form of oppression even though some women do not realise it. [2]When I came to Islaam, it was obvious that I had finally found permanent security. A religion, a belief that was so complete and clear in every aspect of life. Many people have a misconception that Islaam is an oppressive religion, where women are covered from head to toe, and are not allowed any freedom or rights. In fact, women in Islaam are given more rights, and have been for the past 1400 years, compared to the only-recently rights given to non-Muslim women in some western and some other societies. But there are, even now, societies where women are still oppressed, as I mentioned earlier in relation to Hindu women.

Muslim women have the right to inheritance. They have the right to run their own trade and business. They have the full right to ownership, property, disposal over their wealth to which the husband has no right. They have the right to education, a right to refuse marriage as long as this refusal is according to reasonable and justifiable grounds. The Qur'ân itself, which is the word of Allaah, contains many verses commanding men to be kind to their wives and stressing the rights of women. Islaam gives the right set of rules, because they are NOT made by men, but made by Allaah; hence it is a perfect religion.

Quite often Muslim women are asked why they are covered from head to toe, and are told that this is oppression--it is not. In Islaam, marriage is an important part of life, the making of the society. Therefore, a woman should not go around showing herself to everybody, only for her husband. Even the man is not allowed to show certain parts of his body to none but his wife. In addition, Allaah has commanded Muslim women to cover themselves for their modesty: "O prophet! Tell your wives and your daughters and the women of the believers to draw their cloaks (veils) over their bodies (when outdoors). That is most convenient that they could be known as such (i.e. decent and chaste) and not molested." (Qur'ân 33:59) 

If we look around at any other society, we find that in the majority of cases women are attacked and molested because of how they are dressed. Another point I'd like to comment on is that the rules and regulation laid down in Islaam by Allaah (God) do not apply just to women but to men also. There is no intermingling and free-running between men and women for the benefit of both. Whatever Allaah commands is right, wholesome, pure and beneficial to mankind; there is no doubt about that. A verse in the Qur'ân explains this concept clearly: "Say to the believing men that they should lower their gaze and protect their private parts (i.e. from indecency, illegal sexual acts); that will make for greater purity for them. And Allaah is well aware of what they do. And say to the believing women that they should lower their gaze and protect their private parts (from indecency, illegal sexual intercourse); and that they should not display their beauty and ornaments...." (Qur'ân, Surah "Al-Nur" 24:31)

When I put on my hijaab (veil), I was really happy to do it. In fact, I really want to do it. When I put on the hijaab, I felt a great sense of satisfaction and happiness. Satisfied that I had obeyed Allaah’s command. And happy with the good and blessings that come with it. I have felt secure and protected. In fact people respect me more for it. I could really see the difference in behaviour towards me.

Finally, I'd like to say that I had accepted Islaam not blindly, or under any compulsion. In the Qur'ân itself there is a verse which says "there is no compulsion in religion"[3]. I accepted Islaam with conviction. I have seen, been there, done that, and seen both sides of the story. I know and have experienced what the other side is like, and I know that I have done the right thing. Islaam does not oppress women, but rather Islaam liberates them and gives them the respect they deserve. Islaam is the religion Allaah has chosen for the whole of mankind. Those who accept it are truly liberated from the chains and shackles of mankind whose ruling and legislating necessitates nothing but the oppression of one group by another and the exploitation and oppression of one sex by the other. This is not the case of Islaam which truly liberated women and gave them an individuality not given by any other authority.

Sister Noor has been a muslim for over a year and a half and is currently in her second year of undergraduate study in the Department of Biology

Notes

(1) In Islaam, strong emphasis is placed on proof and evidence. Superstition, conjecture and following the ways of ones ancestors is heavily censured. Allaah says: {Say : Bring your proof if indeed you are truthful} {Baqarah 2:111} {Inform me with knowledge if indeed you are truthful} [An’aam 6:143] {And they do not possess any knowledge regarding it. They do nothing but follow conjecture and conjecture avails nothing against the Truth} [Najm 53:28] {And when it is said to them: ‘Follow that which Allaah has sent down’, they say: ‘Nay! We shall follow that which we found our fathers following} [Baqarah 2:170] 

If the scientists among the non-Muslims were to follow this advice and research objectively many of the rulings regarding women in Islaam they would find that they are in perfect harmony with the biological/psychological knowledge they have arrived at regarding the nature of women. It is the reaction of the feminist movement to western hypocrisy that has led to the debasement of ‘perceived’ female roles in Islaam. That is why most of what is portrayed regarding women in Islaam is pure conjecture and distortion, not fact and truth.

(2) This is where Muslims consider the fallacy of the freedom and non-oppression of women lies. Under the name of ‘freedom’ women are told that they have complete autonomy to do as they wish. However, ‘do as they wish’ means that they are encouraged to conform to the trends and fashions that are set for them and imposed upon them by means of the media machine and by means of the multi-billion dollar film industry which makes, fashions, and nurtures the ideas of people and their principles, morals and conduct. As a result they are made the objects of the fantasies of men. who harass them, oppress them and reduce them to nothing but a source of temporary joy and pleasure. Men themselves have been made to let loose the reins of their desires due to the high exposure to naked women they receive, day in day out. This results in provocation, frustration and eventually - a deserving punishment - desensitization. Impotence is a widespread ‘disease’ in the West! This is the position of women in the west. The mere mention of the words sexual harassment, date-rape - which includes men deliberately getting women tipsy or drunk so that they can have their way with them - and slogans such as NO MEANS NO are sufficient as proof for this reality of the oppression of women in the west. These problems are unknown to the muslim world and are not issues in Islaam.

(3) {There is no compulsion in religion. The truth has been made clear from error} [Baqarah 2:256]

   Islam & Terrorism

Guard your Faith

. Ahmediyyah

   Nation of Islam

   Warith-deen

   Bahaullah

. Shi'ites

   Boharas

   Dawoodi Boharas
   Nusayris

   Agakhaani

   Jamaat-e-Islami

  Sufism
   Deobandism

Tableegi-Jamaat

   Bareilwiyat

   Naqshabandis 

. Hizb-ut-tahreer
   Ikhwani 
  Jihaadis
. Qur'ânites

  Qadariyyah

. Baatiniyyah

  Khawariji
. Jahmiyyah
. Ash'ariyyah
    Matrudiyyah
. Murji’ah
  Khalifites(19ers)
  Takfiris
  Habashis
   Deviated People
  What is Taqleed?
   Weak Ahaadeeth

   Shirk v/s Islam

   Bid'ah v/s Islam
 

Comparative Religion

   What is Islam?
..Christianity
..Jews
..Hinduism

..Jainism

..Sikhism

..Buddhism

..Atheist

..Zoroastrians

Freemasons

  Science & Religion
    Vegetarianism

Miscellaneous 

   Gays and Lesbians