Pakistan
The
Status of Women and the Women's Movement
Four
important challenges confronted women in Pakistan in the early 1990s:
increasing practical literacy, gaining access to employment
opportunities atall levels in the economy, promoting change in the
perception of women's roles and status, and gaining a public voice
both within and outside of the political process.
There have
been various attempts at social and legal reform aimed at improving
Muslim women's lives in the subcontinent during the twentieth
century. These attempts generally have been related to two broader,
intertwined movements: the social reform movement in British India
and the growing Muslim nationalist movement. Since partition, the
changing status of women in Pakistan largely has been linked with
discourse about the role of Islam in a modern state. This debate
concerns the extent to which civil rights common in most Western
democracies are appropriate in an Islamic society and the way these
rights should be reconciled with Islamic family law.
Muslim
reformers in the nineteenth century struggled to introduce female
education, to ease some of the restrictions on women's activities, to
limit polygyny, and to ensure women's rights under Islamic law. Sir
Syed Ahmad Khan convened the Mohammedan Educational Conference in the
1870s to promote modern education for Muslims, and he founded the
Muhammadan Anglo- Oriental College. Among the predominantly male
participants were many of the earliest proponents of education and
improved social status for women. They advocated cooking and sewing
classes conducted in a religious framework to advance women's
knowledge and skills and to reinforce Islamic values. But progress in
women's literacy was slow: by 1921 only four out of every 1,000
Muslim females were literate.
Promoting the education of women
was a first step in moving beyond the constraints imposed by purdah.
The nationalist struggle helped fray the threads in that socially
imposed curtain. Simultaneously, women's roles were questioned, and
their empowerment was linked to the larger issues of nationalism and
independence. In 1937 the Muslim Personal Law restored rights (such
as inheritance of property) that had been lost by women under the
Anglicization of certain civil laws. As independence neared, it
appeared that the state would give priority to empowering women.
Pakistan's founding father, Mohammad Ali Jinnah, said in a speech in
1944:
No nation can rise to the height of glory unless your
women are side by side with you; we are victims of evil customs. It
is a crime against humanity that our women are shut up within the
four walls of the houses as prisoners. There is no sanction anywhere
for the deplorable condition in which our women have to live.
After
independence, elite Muslim women in Pakistan continued to advocate
women's political empowerment through legal reforms. They mobilized
support that led to passage of the Muslim Personal Law of Sharia in
1948, which recognized a woman's right to inherit all forms of
property. They were also behind the futile attempt to have the
government include a Charter of Women's Rights in the 1956
constitution. The 1961 Muslim Family Laws Ordinance covering marriage
and divorce, the most important sociolegal reform that they
supported, is still widely regarded as empowering to women.
Two
issues--promotion of women's political representation and
accommodation between Muslim family law and democratic civil
rights--came to dominate discourse about women and sociolegal reform.
The second issue gained considerable attention during the regime of
Zia ul-Haq (1977-88). Urban women formed groups to protect their
rights against apparent discrimination under Zia's Islamization
program. It was in the highly visible realm of law that women were
able to articulate their objections to the Islamization program
initiated by the government in 1979. Protests against the 1979
Enforcement of Hudood Ordinances focused on the failure of
hudood (see Glossary) ordinances to distinguish between adultery
(zina) and rape (zina-bil-jabr). A man could be convicted of zina
only if he were actually observed committing the offense by other
men, but a woman could be convicted simply because she became
pregnant.
The Women's Action Forum was formed in 1981 to
respond to the implementation of the penal code and to strengthen
women's position in society generally.The women in the forum, most of
whom came from elite families, perceived that many of the laws
proposed by the Zia government were discriminatory and would
compromise their civil status. In Karachi, Lahore, and Islamabad the
group agreed on collective leadership and formulated policy
statements and engaged in political action to safeguard women's legal
position.
The Women's Action Forum has played a central role
in exposing the controversy regarding various interpretations of
Islamic law and its role in a modern state, and in publicizing ways
in which women can play a more active role in politics. Its members
led public protests in the mid-1980s against the promulgation of the
Law of Evidence. Although the final version was substantially
modified, the Women's Action Forum objected to the legislation
because it gave unequal weight to testimony by men and women in
financial cases. Fundamentally, they objected to the assertion that
women and men cannot participate as legal equals in economic
affairs.
Beginning in August 1986, the Women's Action Forum
members and their supporters led a debate over passage of the Shariat
Bill, which decreed that all laws in Pakistan should conform to
Islamic law. They argued that the law would undermine the principles
of justice, democracy, and fundamental rights of citizens, and they
pointed out that Islamic law would become identified solely with the
conservative interpretation supported by Zia's government. Most
activists felt that the Shariat Bill had the potential to negate many
of therights women had won. In May 1991, a compromise version of the
Shariat Bill was adopted, but the debate over whether civil law or
Islamic law should prevail in the country continued in the early
1990s.
Discourse about the position of women in Islam and
women's roles in a modern Islamic state was sparked by the
government's attempts to formalize a specific interpretation of
Islamic law. Although the issue of evidence became central to the
concern for women's legal status, more mundane matters such as
mandatory dress codes for women and whether females could compete in
international sports competitions were also being argued.
Another
of the challenges faced by Pakistani women concerns their integration
into the labor force. Because of economic pressures and the
dissolution of extended families in urban areas, many more women are
working for wages than in the past. But by 1990 females officially
made up only 13 percent of the labor force. Restrictions on their
mobility limit their opportunities, and traditional notions of
propriety lead families to conceal the extent of work performed by
women.
Usually, only the poorest women engage in work--often
as midwives, sweepers, or nannies--for compensation outside the home.
More often, poor urban women remain at home and sell manufactured
goods to a middleman for compensation. More and more urban women have
engaged in such activities during the 1990s, although to avoid being
shamed few families willingly admit that women contribute to the
family economically. Hence, there is little information about the
work women do. On the basis of the predominant fiction that most
women do no work other than their domestic chores, the government has
been hesitant to adopt overt policies to increase women's employment
options and to provide legal support for women's labor force
participation.
The United Nations Children's Fund (UNICEF)
commissioned a national study in 1992 on women's economic activity to
enable policy planners and donor agencies to cut through the existing
myths on female labor-force participation. The study addresses the
specific reasons that the assessment of women's work in Pakistan is
filled with discrepancies and under enumeration and provides a
comprehensive discussion of the range of informal- sector work
performed by women throughout the country. Information from this
study was also incorporated into the Eighth Five-Year Plan
(1993-98).
A melding of the traditional social welfare
activities of the women's movement and its newly revised political
activism appears to have occurred. Diverse groups including the
Women's Action Forum, the All-Pakistan Women's Association, the
Pakistan Women Lawyers' Association, and the Business and
Professional Women's Association, are supporting small-scale projects
throughout the country that focus on empowering women. They have been
involved in such activities as instituting legal aid for indigent
women, opposing the gendered segregation of universities, and
publicizing and condemning the growing incidents of violence against
women. The Pakistan Women Lawyers' Association has released a series
of films educating women about their legal rights; the Business and
Professional Women's Association is supporting a comprehensive
project inside Yakki Gate, a poor area inside the walled city of
Lahore; and the Orangi Pilot Project in Karachi has promoted networks
among women who work at home so they need not be dependent on
middlemen to acquire raw materials and market the clothes they
produce.
The women's movement has shifted from reacting to
government legislation to focusing on three primary goals: securing
women's political representation in the National Assembly; working to
raise women's consciousness, particularly about family planning; and
countering suppression of women's rights by defining and articulating
positions on events as they occur in order to raise public awareness.
An as yet unresolved issue concerns the perpetuation of a set number
of seats for women in the National Assembly. Many women activists
whose expectations were raised during the brief tenure of Benazir
Bhutto's first government (December 1988-August 1990) now believe
that, with her return to power in October 1993, they can seize the
initiative to bring about a shift in women's personal and public
access to power.
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