Does Islam Discourage Woman from Attending
the Mosque ?
By
S.
M. Darsh
As Islam is a universal religion, its call is directed to
human beings generally. "O ye people" is the standard
call addressed to everyone who understands it. No distinction
whatsoever is made between the sexes. " So their Lord
accepted their prayers (saying), I will not suffer the work of
any worker among you to be lost, whether male or female, he (or
she) being a believer, these will enter the Garden and they will
not be dealt with unjustly." (Al-Nisa: 124). There are
countless Qur'anic verses stressing the essential fact that human
society is built upon the idea of the male and female pair and
that both are equal partners on their own merits in their own
fields. Where any distinction is made, it is a natural and not an
imposed one, as, for example, the rule relieving a woman of
certain religious duties during menstruation, thus lessening
her
distress.
The Mosque is for both Men and Women:
The general Islamic attitude is therefore that, if a mosque is
essential for Muslims, it is essential for both partners, male
and female. The Muslim community which attended the prayer at the
mosque during the lifetime of the Prophet (PBUH) included both
males and females. It is authentically reported that the Prophet
(PBUH) said, "On many occasions I start the prayer with the
intention of prolonging it and then shorten it on hearing the
crying of a baby for fear of keeping his mother away from
attending to him." The Prophet's (PBUH) Mosque had a number
of doors. One day, the Prophet said, "If we could only leave
this door for the ladies!" Ibn Omar, who was always very
scrupulous in following the way of the Prophet (PBUH), was
reported as not using this door from then on, leaving it for the
purpose mentioned by the Prophet (PBUH).
Bearing in mind
these incidents, together with the general Islamic attitude, it
is obvious that free mixing between males and females is not
encouraged in Islam. Islam stresses simplicity and decency in
dressing, walking and talking and indeed in every aspect of life.
Colorful or fancy kinds of dress, perfume or sexually attractive
things or modes of talking are not welcome in public places where
people gather, such as markets, offices or institutional
buildings. How much more must this apply to the mosque! In the
light of all this, Muslim jurists differ as to the desirability
of Muslim women attending the Jummah (Friday) prayer at the
mosque.
Al-Mughri, the standard Hanbali Fiqh, gives
his views on the matter of the congregational prayer. After
discussing the acceptability of the woman as imam for other
women, he says the following. "It is allowed that
they-women-attend the congregational prayers with men. For women
used to pray with the Messenger of Allah (PBUH)." Aishah
said, " Women used to offer their prayers with the Messenger
of Allah (PBUH) and then they dismiss, while wrapping their heads
in their scarf, without being recognized because of darkness."
And the Prophet (PBUH) said, "Do not stop the female
servants of Allah from attending the Mosques of Allah but let
them go there without applying perfumes." But prayer in her
own house is best for her according to Abdullah ibn Omar, who
reported that the Messenger of Allah said, "Do not prevent
your women from (going to) the Mosques, though their houses are
best for
them." (Abu Dawud).
The best scholarly
treatment of this subject is given in the voluminous book,
Al-Muhalla by Ibn Hazam, who was called the "literalist"
for his dependence upon the texts. He is described in his book of
biography as "The great Imam, the traditionalist, the
Faqeeh, the juror, the strong-in-argument, the renewer of the
fifth Islamic century, the pride of Andalusia." In volume 3,
problem or question number 321, he deals extensively with the
question of women's attendance at mosques, covering all points of
view and mentioning the weaknesses and strengths of each.
Modest dress: I will follow his method, with exception of listing
the chain of narrators which he, as a traditionalist, insists
upon. He says, "It is not lawful for the guardian of the
woman-father, husband, brother or whatever he may be-or the
master of a slave girl to stop her from attending the
congregation at the mosque once he knows that she wants to pray.
And it is not lawful for them-women-to go to the Mosque while
using perfume or in attractive clothes. If a woman does so, he is
to stop her. Their prayer in the jamaat (congregation) is better
than individual prayers. The Messenger of Allah (PBUH) said, "Do
not stop the female servant of Allah from (going to) the Mosques
of Allah." Ibn Omar said, "I heard the Messenger of
Allah say, "Do not prevent your women from (going to) the
Mosques if they seek your permission to do so." His son
Bilal said, "Surely we will stop them." He turned to
his son, abusing him in a way I have never heard him do and said,
"I tell you the saying of the Prophet (PBUH) and you say you
will stop them."
Imam Muslim reported from Ibn Omar
that the Messenger of Allah said, "Do not prevent women from
(going to) the mosques at night." Abu Hurayrah said that the
Messenger of Allah said, "Do not stop the female servants of
Allah from (going to) the mosques of Allah but let them go in
modest dress." Zaynab, the wife of Abdullah ibn Mas'ud said,
"The Messenger of Allah said to us, 'If any one of you
attends the Mosque, let her not touch perfume'." Jabir ibn
Abdullah said that the Messenger of Allah said, "The best
lines for men are the front ones and the worst are the back ones.
The worst lines for females are the front ones and the best are
the back ones. O ye Muslim women, if the male prostrate
themselves, lower your gaze so as not to see their private
parts." Omar ibn al-Khattab used to stop the males using the
door reserved for females.
From these traditions of
the Prophet (PBUH) and the attitudes of the companions, it is
clear that, during this period, the golden era in Islamic
history, it was natural for all the members of Muslim community
to participate fully in every aspect of Islamic life, so long as
it was a decent and constructive participation. This is clearly
shown in many of the biographies of the female companions of the
Prophet (PBUH). In their book, The Stories of Sahaba, of the
Tablighi Jamaat, the author writes, "Ladies in the Khaibar
Campaign; shoulder to shoulder with their men-folk, the ladies of
those times, imbued with the same spirit of sacrifice, were
striving heart and soul in the Path of Allah; and no service in
this connection was too much for them." Ummu Zyad says, "In
the Khaibar Campaign, I, along with five other women, reached the
battlefield. The Prophet (PBUH), having learned this, sent for
us. He said, with anger, "Who permitted you to come here?
Who brought you to this place?" We said, "O Prophet of
Allah, we know how to knit and we have medicines with us. We
shall help the soldiers by supplying them with arrows, by
attending them when they are sick and by preparing food for them.
The Prophet (PBUH) permitted us to stay." (Page 164). This
is just one example of how this first generation of Muslims
allowed male and female to work hand in hand to build the newly
formed Islamic society with the knowledge and encouragement of
the Prophet (PBUH).
Origin of idea discouraging
women attending the Mosque: Then how did the idea of discouraging
Muslim women from attending the mosque come about? We continue
with Imam ibn Hazam, who tell us who were the advocates of the
idea, what their arguments were and the refutation of such
arguments.
He says, "Abu Hanifah and Malik said,
'Their prayers in their houses are better for them'." Abu
Hanifah even disliked their going to the mosque for
congregational prayer, the jummah prayer and the two
feasts. He conceded for the elderly women the specific
permission, to attend the night, Isha, prayer and the dawn,
Fojr, prayer. It is also reported of him that he did not
dislike their going out for the two feasts.
Imam
Malik said, "We do not stop them going to the mosque"
and he allowed elderly respectable women to attend the feasts
prayer and the prayer for rain. He said, too, that the young
could go to the mosque from time to time. As for the elderly,
although they could go to the mosque, they should not go very
often. (Vol.3 page 178). The authority upon which these jurists
depend consists of three main traditions showing why it is
preferable for women to offer their prayer at home rather than in
the mosque. There is also another tradition prohibiting
attendance at the mosque if the woman applies perfume. Ibn Hazan
accepts the last point as he stated at the beginning when he
said, "It is not allowed for them to go out while using
perfume or dressed in fancy kinds of dress or bright colors."
This is in accordance with the traditions related by Abu
Hurayrah, "Any woman who touches perfume should not attend
our Isha prayer." And Zaynab, wife of Abdullah Ibn Mas'ud,
said: "If any one of you wishes to attend the mosque with
us, she should not touch perfume." (See Naylul-Awtar, Vol.3
pages 148-9).
But Ibn Hazam rejects very strongly the
authenticity of two traditions while arguing against the third
one, related to A'ishah. In discussing these with him, we shall
point out whether his criticisms are fair or otherwise in the
light of the comments in the text itself or through the criticism
in Naulul-Awtar.
Main traditions:
The three main
traditions in favor of women praying at home are as follows. Ibn
Hazam says, "Those who disliked women going to the mosque
depend on the saying of A'ishah, "If the Messenger of Allah
had seen what the women innovated after him, he would have
stopped them attending the mosques." The second is a
tradition of Umm Humaid that the Prophet (PBUH) said, "Surely
your prayer in your house is better than your prayer with me."
And the third is the tradition of Abu Hurayrah, who said that the
Prophet (PBUH) said, "For the woman to offer her prayer in
her chamber is of greater merit than to offer it in her
courtyard, in her courtyard than in the mosque of her people, in
the mosque of her people than in the congregational mosque and in
the congregational mosque than going out for prayer in Eid day."
(Pages 179-80).
The above are the three main traditions
mentioned by Ibn Hazam in favor of women praying at home. But if
we look at Sahih Muslim Chap.167, Vol. 1, pages 240-241, we find
that, of the three, only that of A'ishah is mentioned. The other
two fail to satisfy Muslim's conditions of Sahih. Ibn Hazm will
take up this point when he criticizes the authenticity of both of
them.
No Islamic Basis to Discourage Women Attending the
Mosque: But let us first listen to what he had to say about
A'ishah's judgement in this connection. It makes very interesting
reading as it shows great insight on his part. He lived in Spain
at a time when Islamic culture was flourishing and when that part
of what used to be the Islamic world was making great strides in
all aspects of scholarship. His literalistic attitude did not
obstruct his rational enlightened attitude in considering the
attendance of women at the mosque. He says, "What A'ishah
(RA) says is of no authority for a number of considerations."
"First that Prophet (PBUH) did not see what they
innovated, so he did not stop them. Anyone stopping them is
himself innovating and as such it is wrong to stop them. The
error is that it is an argument from a hypothetical case. "We
do not know any argument more silly than that of those who argue
that if such-and-such happened, then such-and-such would follow.
That is to make a fact out of something that did not happen.
"Second: Allah Most High certainly knew what the
women would innovate. Anyone who denies that is a disbeliever. He
did not at all reveal to His Prophet (PBUH) that he should stop
them from what they would innovate. Neither did He reveal to him,
"Tell the people that if women make innovations, prevent
them from going to the mosques." Since Allah Most High did
not do so, then clinging to such arguments is wrong and in bad
taste." (Vol.3 page181).
Shamsul-Haqq answered,
"It is really surprising for such eminent scholars to start
building up probabilities and claiming this or that as special
cases without sound proof for such probabilities. If everyone did
this, we could all claim that such-and-such a rule is confined to
such-and-such persons. We would end up in a very difficult
situation. As for their saying that it is allowed for the
predecessors but not for their successors, this is a claim
without proof, for all the Muslim ummah is equal in matters of
lawfuf (halal) and unlawful (haram) things, except those who were
exempted by the Prophet (PBUH).
It was this same
point which was not clearly appreciated by A. Siddiqi in his
translation of Sahih Muslim when he handled this issue in Vol.1.
Chap.167. Imam Muslim quoted the same hadith allowing women to go
to the mosque in a decent manner. In his commentary on these
hadith, (he quoted other hadith) and said, "Apparently there
seems to be some contradiction between these groups of hadith,
but the exposition given by the scholars of hadith, especially by
Shah Wali Ullah of Delhi, resolves it altogether. The actual fact
is that the women who had the good fortune to live during the
lifetime of Muhammad (PBUH) had a deep longing to say their
prayer under his Imamah as it was an enviable privilege for them.
They, therefore, sought permission to join prayer in the mosque.
Moreover, the moral atmosphere of that blessed period was quite
congenial to the coming out of women from their houses and there
was not even the slightest chance of indecency towards
them. Under such conditions the Holy Prophet (PBUH) did not like
to put any curb on their desire to join prayer in the mosque
before daybreak and during night. The Holy Prophet (PBUH) could
well visualize that moral conditions would change; therefore
women were advised to say their prayers in their houses when
there would be deterioration in the moral standards of the people
in general." He fell into the same intellectual trap of
taking the changing times as a reason for changing to religious
point of view. The imam Ibn Hazm answered his argument. Let us go
on with his arguments.
"Third: We do not Know
what women innovated or did not innovate at the time of the
Prophet (PBUH). There is nothing worse than adultery. This
happened during the time of the Messenger of Allah and he ordered
the lashing and stoning of those who committed this thing. But he
did not stop women on that account from going to the mosque. The
prohibition of adultery is equally enjoined on males and females,
without differentiating. What, then, could make its existence a
reason to stop women from going to the mosque but not men? This
is the type of reasoning that is not acceptable to Allah and His
Messenger (PBUH).
Fourth: Those who innovated were
some of the women while no doubt there were others who did not.
It is quite wrong to prevent good coming to those who did not
innovate for the sake of those who did, except when there is a
clear text either in the Qur'an or the Sunnah saying so, in which
case we listen and obey. Allah Most High says, "And no soul
earns (evil) but against itself. Nor does a bearer for burdens
bear the burden of another." (Al-An'am: 164).
Fifth:
If the innovation is the cause of stopping them from going to the
mosque, it would be more appropriate to stop them from going to
the market places or from visiting, but they did not stop them
from those things.
Sixth: It is one of the great sins to
abrogate a law-the Shariah-after the death of the Prophet (PBUH),
without himself having abrogated it. It is even pure disbelief.
Seventh: There is no authority in the saying of anyone
after the Prophet's (PBUH) saying.
As for the other two
traditions, he relied upon suspecting the authenticity of one of
the narrators in each hadith. In the first one, he says that
Abdul-Hameed Ibn Al-Munthir is not known. This point is not
accepted, as this tradition is one of many others on the same
point-that the prayer at home is preferable to the one at the
mosque. The same is said about Abdullah ibn Raja'Al-Ghudani the
narrator of the tradition
quoted earlier starting, "For
the woman to offer her prayer in her chamber is better than to
offer it in her apartment
." The criticism that these
two narrators are not known, therefore, does not affect the
authenticity of the traditions. The valid point here
is that the other traditions ordering Muslims husbands and
fathers to give the permission to women to go to the mosque are
more numerous, more authentic and more reliable than the opposing
one.
If we add to that the fact that Muslim women
used to offer their prayers in the mosques in the time of the
Prophet (PBUH) and the general agreement of all jurors that he
never stopped them from doing so at any time in his life, we can
feel quite rightly that the tradition practiced by the early
Muslim community was for Muslim women to attend the mosque.
The presence of Muslim women in the mosque, the
arrangement of the prayer times and the chapters written about
these facts are to be found in every religious book. In his book,
"Quamul-Layl" Al-Marwazi writes, "An-Nakhaie said,
"I used to call the Adhan and Iqamah and no one would be
present to offer the prayer with me except an elderly woman
(95)." Abu Malik Al-Ashuri said to his people, "Shall I
show you the prayer of the Messenger of Allah? Then he put them
in lines, men first, then the young children, then the women."
(101). The Prophet (PBUH) used to stay in his place in the
mosque for a little while after the prayer. The Companions who
reported it said that this was to give the women a chance to
leave first.
Omar ibn Al-Khattab, seeing a male and
female making their ablutions from the same basin, separated
them. Then he called the attendant and said, "Did I not
order you to prepare a basin for the use of the women?"
We all remember the incident when Omar was preaching and advised
people not to give a higher dowry for women or to ask for it. A
Muslim woman in the mosque said to him in front of the whole
gathering, "This is not for you." He said, "Why?"
She replied, "Because Allah Most High said, 'And you have
given one of them-as dowry-a whole treasure' (Al-Nisa- 20)
without putting a limit to the amount: how can you limit the
dowry? He answered, "All people are more judicious than you
Omar! The woman is right and the man is wrong."
In
the light of such reasoning, it would appear that the attitude of
one who insists upon the barring women from the mosque is the
attitude of a wholly ignorant and backward person, one who is
limited in his perspective because of the lack of education,
insight and understanding. He is clinging to a tradition of three
to four hundred years of decadence and stagnation in Muslim
ignorant, blind, retrogressive way of
life, which has no
sanction in Islam.
No differentiation:
But such a line of thought is not productive. After all, as
Muslims we reason in the light of preserved traditions; the
Qur'an and the Sunnah, not in the light of ever-changing
situations. The facts of the Qua'an are that its message is a
universal message without any differentiation between male and
female regarding piety, observance of religious duty and
religious obligations.
We have quoted enough traditions
of the Prophet (PBUH) and his companions and other authorities to
show clearly that women attended the mosque to the last minute of
the life of Allah's Messenger without restriction or hindrance.
The attitude of the vast majority of the Muslim jurors is not
against women's attendance at the mosque. What the Qur'an and
Sunnah enjoin upon women is a matter of conformity with the
Islamic point of view. Women, as a matter of course, are bearers
and rearers of children and suffer much physical distress. They
nurse the sick and the elderly.