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An Introduction to Dr
Hassan Al-Turabi's pamphlet
On the
Position of Women in Islam and in Islamic Society
by Sean Gabb, Director of
the Sudan Foundation

Dr Hassan al-Turabi
Dr Hassan al-Turabi was born in 1932 in Kassala, a town
in Eastern Sudan. His father was a Judge and an expert in Islamic law.
After having received a traditional Islamic education at home, he studied Law at
Khartoum University, graduating in 1955. From here, he went to study for a
Master's Degree in London, which he completed in 1957, and then to the Sorbonne
in Paris, where between 1959 and 1964 he wrote his doctoral thesis on the place
of emergency powers within a liberal democracy.
On his return to Sudan, Dr Turabi was appointed Dean of the Law Faculty at the
University of Khartoum. He left this position within a few months, to become a
Member of Parliament and the Secretary General of the Islamic Charter Front, an
organisation that desired a political system in conformity with the teachings of
Islam. Electorally and intellectually, the Front's main rivals were the
Communists and other socialists, who wanted a completely secular state able to
modernise and develop Sudan along the lines then fashionable throughout the
world.
In 1969, Sudanese democracy was overthrown by a leftist coup. The Nimeiri
Dictatorship that resulted was unwilling to tolerate opposition, and so for the
next eight years, Dr Turabi was to suffer repeated arrest and imprisonment. He
was arrested again in March 1985, during the popular turbulence that preceded
the overthrow of President Nimeiri.
During the next four years, Dr Turabi was a senior figure in Sudanese politics.
He led the National Islamic Front, which emerged as the second largest party
after the 1986 General Election. As a member of various coalition governments,
he served as Attorney General, Minister of Justice, Minister of Foreign Affairs,
and Deputy Prime Minister.
After the coup of 1989, Dr Turabi was arrested again. However, as several
members of the new Government were spiritually close to him, he was soon
released, and was able to rise to a position of considerable eminence. Since
1991, he has been Secretary General of the Arab and Islamic Congress, an
organisation with branches in 55 Islamic and Western countries. Since 1996, he
has been Speaker of the Sudanese Parliament.
The precise extent of his influence is debatable. Some claim that he is the real
head of government in Sudan, others that his function is almost wholly
decorative. The truth probably lies somewhere between these extremes. Dr Turabi
does seem to have had a profound influence over many aspects of Sudanese state
policy - though the claims that he is behind every act of that State is almost
certainly exaggerated.
The Pamphlet
Dr Turabi wrote his pamphlet On the Position of Women
in Islam and in Islamic Society in 1973. Though short, it is held to be of the
highest significance. It is seen as part of Dr Turabi's attempt to overcome the
great crisis of the modern Islamic mind. It is a crisis that, to a greater or
lesser degree, has been felt by most educated Muslims, and that has at times
seemed able to overwhelm Islam as a living religion. Its cause is the collision
between Islamic and Western civilisation.
In Western Europe, there have been repeated crises of faith during the past 700
years. First, there was the introduction of Islamic Aristotelianism in the 13th
century. Though we now think of this as a fertilising influence that culminated
in the work of St Thomas Aquinas, it was seen at the time as deeply subversive
of the established faith. The religious authorities were unable to distinguish
between Algazali, Avicenna and Averoes and their very different approaches to
philosophy, seeing them all as a combined threat from an alien and
intellectually superior culture. The Condemnations of 1277 had almost no
intellectual effect, but were a political response from a threatened orthodoxy.
Then there was the Renaissance, with its rediscovery of the Greek and Latin
classics and its realisation of their true meaning. Again, religious orthodoxy
was troubled. No matter how long dead, here was a civilisation in which freedom
of thought and personal judgement had been raised up as the highest goals. There
was a stark contrast between the Socratic dialogues and the intellectual
conformity demanded by the Roman Catholic Church. The earlier introduction of
Islamic thought had only affected the intellectual lite of Western Europe. The
discovery of printing allowed the Renaissance to give a new colour to the whole
of Western civilisation.
The Reformation does not directly fit into our scheme, being as it was a dispute
between rival orthodoxies. Its result, however, was the Enlightenment - that
great rejection of orthodoxy itself that emerged from the clash of orthodoxies.
This saw the detachment of natural and moral philosophy from their religious
groundings. Its great precursors, Copernicus and Galileo, had already asserted
the independence of scientific thought from religious control. Locke, Newton,
Adam Smith and Darwin completed the movement.
Strong religious conviction remains possible in the modern West, but religion
itself has been influenced by the mental shocks of the past 700 years, and an
accommodation has been made between faith and the autonomous sciences. The
churches have nothing to say about the possibility of life on Mars. Either it
evolved their or it did not: the whole matter is in the realm of empirical
reasoning. On the other hand, science has nothing to say about why life exists
in the universe, or about the moral duties of intelligent beings: any scientist
who trespasses into these areas is quickly revealed as a fool and a charlatan.
But in Islam, there has not been this gradual process of accommodation. After a
long age of brilliance, Islamic civilisation went into a decline just as Western
civilisation was beginning to move forward. When the two civilisations came into
close intellectual contact during the 19th century, Islam was in every sense the
weaker party. Rather than gradually introduced, as had happened in Western
Europe, the whole body of Western scientific and social thought hit Islam all at
once. Concepts that had evolved over many centuries, and that had ceased to
shock as they had been incorporated into a coherent view of the world, were
suddenly revealed in their fullness to cultures that had no room for them - and
at the same time no answer to them.
The result was a mental division that has troubled Islamic societies all through
the present century. On the one hand, there are the modernisers. These are in
love with Western science, and have an often uncritical veneration for Western
political thought. For them, the past is dead. Government action is all a matter
of sweeping aside the remnants of the dead past and replacing them with a
legislated copy of Western civilisation - usually a highly authoritarian or even
Communist version of the West. Look at the Turkish and Iranian modernisation
projects of the early 20th century, in which men and women were forced by law to
adopt Western dress in the hope that, in looking Western, they might eventually
become Western.
On the other hand, there are the religious conservatives. These reject the West
in full, maintaining doctrines and customs that are either false in terms of
scientific reasoning or inappropriate to a modern society. Look at the highly
restrictive moral legislation of countries like Saudi Arabia, and the rejection
or even ignorance of much of biology and economics by some conservative Islamic
thinkers.
Relatively few educated Muslims have embraced either extreme. Even so, the
suspicion has been there, of an incompatibility between faith and reason. Few
people have been actively troubled by this apparent incompatibility: most have
come to a personal compromise. But the ability of the human mind to hold two
contradictory propositions at the same time is never exercised without cost. To
be stuck between two worlds can have a terrible effect on an individual's
creativity or personal development.
It is the closing of this division that seems to have been the main intellectual
concern of Dr Turabi. He begins with two propositions:
First, Western science and many other aspects of Western thought are
demonstrably true; and Second, Islam is a religion absolutely true in all its
essentials.
These propositions made, any contradiction between them must be due to a
misapprehension of one or the other that can be corrected by taking careful
thought. Sometimes, the mistake lies in Western thought. Sometimes, it lies in a
confusion between the essentials of Islam and the specific traditions of those
cultures in which Islam has developed.
We see this method at work in the work here republished. As in many other
societies, the position of Sudanese women was considerably improved during the
1960s and 70s. As never before, women were able to gain school and university
educations and to enter the workforce on terms roughly equal to those of men.
This was at first seen as a threat to the Sudanese Islamic movement. It was
trapped in a past where the position of women was unambiguously in the home. It
was confronted by a leftist, secular movement that appeared very friendly to the
advancement of women. Not surprisingly, the majority of educated Sudanese women
rejected the Islamic parties and voted instead for the Communists.
The first Islamic response to this electoral problem was to ignore it. When it
persisted, and even became more acute, some pragmatic softening of the
traditional line was tried. Meetings were held at the University of Khartoum. In
1964, the National Women's Front was set up to represent the views of Muslim
women. However, this strategy was flawed by an obvious incoherence. Its lack of
foundations was easily exposed; and it had little effect on the political
loyalties of Sudanese women.
Then in 1973, Dr Turabi set about solving the problem. He came down decisively
in favour of women's equality within Islam. There was for him no question of an
Islamic retreat in the face of economic and social modernisation. He instead
sought clearly to show that the inferior status of women within Islamic society
had nothing to do with Islam itself, but was a consequence of traditions that
were alien - and perhaps even hostile - to the true model of Islam as revealed
in its fundamental Scriptures.
Those of us who are Christians, and whose theological expectations derive from
the long chains of deductive reasoning used by the mediaeval scholastics, will
find Dr Turabi's method of argument unusual. It is based on a close examination
of the sayings of Mohammed as recorded in The Koran, and on his actual deeds as
recorded in the Hadith.
[Editor's note: Muslims actually
believe that the Koran is not the sayings of Mohammed (pbuh) but the direct Word
of God Himself revealed via the Angel Gabriel to Mohammed. The Hadith are
the sayings of Mohammed, his deeds are known as the Sunnah.]
This makes it very hard for non-Muslims to determine
whether Dr Turabi is right. The style of reasoning is similar in many repects to
that used in the English Common Law. To know whether St Anselm or Algazali
succeeded in demonstrating the existence of God, it is unnecessary to know
anything about Christianity or Islam - or even to be religious. The conclusions
either follow from the premises or they do not; and the test of whether they
follow is absolutely independent of faith. The arguments of Dr Turabi, on the
other hand, can only be evaluated by those who are already expert in the Islamic
Scriptures.
This being said, the work was extensively reviewed by the experts. It emerged
from discussions within Khartoum University, and was subjected to close
examination by Islamic scholars outside Sudan. Though not universally accepted,
it has gained sufficient acceptance for us to take it as a valid alternative to
the traditional views on the position of women within Islamic society.
In Sudan, its effect was rapid and complete. Without any rejection of or
compromise over essentials, Islam was transformed into a vehicle of women's
liberation. Hundreds of thousands of Sudanese women dropped the alien and
otherwise unattractive doctrines of Communism, and returned to their Islamic
roots. Educated women who in other countries were leading the revolt against
Islamic values were now to be found among the strongest advocates of Islam.
Other Aspects of Dr Turabi's Thought
Though the work here republished has been called the
most influential thing ever written by Dr Turabi, it does not stand alone. As
said, it proceeds from a clear view of the relationship between faith and
reason. Intellectually and culturally, he is outside the defensive
traditionalism that produced the late Ayatollah Khomeini in Iran and the
fundamentalist rebels in Afghanistan. In Islamic terms, he is a liberal. In a
recent interview, for example, he explained himself thus:
What would an Islamic Government mean?... The model is very clear; the scope of
government is limited. Law is not the only agency of social control. Moral
norms, individual conscience, all these are very important, and they are
autonomous. Intellectual attitudes toward Islam are not going to be regulated or
codified at all. The presumption is that people are free. The religious freedom
not just of non-Muslims, but even of Muslims who have different views, is going
to be guaranteed. I personally have views that run against all the orthodox
schools of law on the status of women, on the court testimony of non-Muslims, on
the law of apostasy. Some people say that I have been influenced by the West and
that I border on apostasy myself. but I don't accept the condemnation of Salman
Rushdie. If a Muslim wakes up in the morning and says he doesn't believe any
more, that's his business. There has never been any question of inhibiting
people's freedom to express any understanding of Islam. The function of
government is not total.
(Quoted in Milton Viorst, "Sudan's Islamic Experiment", Foreign
Affairs, Washington DC, Volume 74, Number 3, May/June 1995, p.53.)
"The function of government is not total." These are not words that we
should expect to hear from a man who has been characterised in much of the
Western media as a religious totalitarian who is directing Sudanese Islam into a
jihad against the Christian and Pagan minorities within the country, and against
Sudan's neighbours. When a man's constantly repeated words fail to correspond
with his reputation among his enemies, someone, somewhere, is guilty of
ignorance or perhaps of bad faith.
The Sudan Foundation has not the intellectual means of defending Dr Turabi
against his Islamic critics. Nor is it any part of our mission to propagate his
ideas in the West. However, it is part of our mission to promote understanding
and better relations between the British and Sudanese peoples; and we are
therefore proud to have the honour of publishing this highly influential work of
Dr Turabi on the position of women within Islamic society.
Sean Gabb
Director
The Sudan Foundation
London
July 1997

President Omar al Bashir of Sudan
(left) and Dr Hassan al-Turabi
Update March 2001
by Hussein Abdulwaheed Amin, Editor, Islam For
Today dot com
Sudanese President Omar al-Bashir seized power in a military coup in 1989
together with his close ally, Islamist ideologue Hassan Turbai, long thought to
be the power behind al-Bashir's regime.
Al-Bashir was elected in 1995 for a five-year term. In 2000, the president
ousted Turabi from his post as parliament speaker and stripped him of his
political power. Al-Bashir accused Turabi of undermining his power.
Turabi later formed the opposition Popular National Congress, which joined
other opposition groups in boycotting the presidential and parliamentary
elections of December 2000.
Al-Bashir comfortably won as president and his ruling National Congress Party
took an overwhelming majority in parliament. Opposition leaders complained of
widespread rigging in the elections and discredited the results. In
February 2001, Dr Turabi was detained and CNN quoted his wife as saying that he
was being held in solitary confinement in degrading conditions.
Turabi:
Sudan heading for revolt
Sudan's opposition leader Hassan Al-Turabi said he feared any uprising could
turn bloody and spread beyond the streets of the capital.
Arabia.com News, January 6, 2001
For latest BBC news on Dr. Hassan al-Turabi,
click here.
The features invariably portray Dr Turabi as an Islamic fundamentalist, which
makes his essay on Women in Islam all the more
remarkable. The fact that Dr Turabi has such a reputation gives his
championing of women's rights within Islam significant weight and
credibility. It's a case of "Only Nixon could go to China".
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