- Riffat Hassan
Riffat Hassan (born 1943) is a
Pakistani-American theologian and a leadingIslamic feminist scholar of theQur'an .cite book|last=Cahill|first=Susan N.|title=Wise Women: Over Two Thousand Years of Spiritual Writing by Women|date=1996|url=http://books.google.com/books?id=bsloJXMS2fwC&pg=PA329&lpg=PA329&dq=riffat+hassan&source=web&ots=JdG4Ij0itB&sig=mU-yPE3jeDbm_hptvah40ORP7OM&hl=en|publisher= W.W. Norton and Company]Early life and career
Hassan was born in
Lahore, Pakistan to an upper-classSayid Muslim family. (The Sayids, being the descendants ofMuhammad , are regarded as the highest "caste" of Muslims, even though Muslims decry the idea of a caste system.) Her grandfather was Hakim Ahmed Shuja', a Pakistani poet, writer and playwright. She lived a comfortable childhood, but was affected by the conflict between her father's traditional views and her mother's nonconformism. For most of her life, she hated her father's traditionalism because of his views of sex roles, but she later came to appreciate it because of his kindness and compassion. She attended Cathedral High School, anAnglican missionary school, and later St. Mary's College atDurham University , England, where she studied English andphilosophy . She received herPh.D. fromDurham University in 1968 for her thesis onMuhammad Iqbal , who she has written about frequently.She taught at the
University of Punjab at Lahore from 1966 to 1967 and worked in Pakistan's Ministry of Information and Broadcasting from 1969 to 1972. In 1972, she immigrated to theUnited States with her daughter. [cite web|url=http://stderr.org/pipermail/tariqas/2001-May/000583.html|title=Tariqas - Dr. Riffat Hassan|accessdate=2008-03-04|date=2001-05-16] . She has taught at schools includingOklahoma State University andHarvard University , and is currently a professor of Religious Studies at theUniversity of Louisville .Theology and activism
Hassan's theology is an example of
Progressive Islam ; she was one of the first to accept the Islamic feminist label.cite web|url=http://www.feministezine.com/feminist/international/Islamic-Feminism-04.html|first=Caryle|last=Murphy|title=Islam and Feminism: Are the Barriers Coming Down?|accessdate=2008-03-04] She says the Qur'an is the "Magna Carta of human rights," prescribing human rights and equality for all, while the inequality of women in many Muslim societies today is due to cultural effects. Hassan claims the Qur'an upholds rights to life, respect, justice, freedom, knowledge, sustenance, work, and privacy, among others. [cite web|url=http://www.religiousconsultation.org/hassan2.htm|first=Riffat|last=Hassan|title=Are Human Rights Compatible with Islam?|accessdate=2008-03-04] [cite web|url=http://muslim-canada.org/emory.htm|title=Religious Human Rights in the Qur'an|date=1996|accessdate=2008-03-04|last=Hassan|first=Riffat]She supports a non-rigid interpretation of the Qur'an, arguing that while it is the word of God, words can have different meanings, so there are theoretically countless possible meanings of the Qur'an. She believes the meaning of the Qur'an should be determined through
hermeneutics , examination of what its words meant at the time it was written. She also speaks of an "ethical criterion" that rejects the use of the Qu'ran to perpetrate injustice, because the God of Islam is just.cite news|url=http://www.crescentlife.com/heal%20the%20world/hijackers_of_islam.htm|title=The Hijackers of Islam|publisher=The Friday Times |date=2003-02-14|accessdate=2008-03-04|first=Hasan|last=Khalid]Hassan supports
abortion rights and access tocontraceptives for Muslim women, saying that the Qur'an does not directly address contraceptives, but that Islam's religious and ethical framework leads to the conclusion that family planning should be a fundamental right.cite paper|first=Riffat|last=Hassan|title=Members, One of Another: Gender Equality and Justice in Islam|url=http://www.religiousconsultation.org/hassan.htm|accessdate=2008-03-04] She says a review of Muslim jurisprudence indicates that abortion has been considered acceptable within the first 120 days of pregnancy, when the fetus has not yet been ensouled.In February 1999, she founded The International Network for the Rights of Female Victims of Violence in Pakistan, which works against
honor killings . She has argued that honor killings are a distortion of Islam, and in fact that the whole idea of women being inferior is a result of the incorrect belief among Muslims that Eve was created from Adam's rib; in fact, in the Islamic creation story, they were created at the same time.References
External links
* [http://ecumene.org/INRFVVP/ The International Network for the Rights of Female Victims of Violence in Pakistan]
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