Who is benefiting from her ongoing Saga?
Prophet Muhammad said: "The seeking of
knowledge is obligatory for every Muslim." (Al-Tirmidhi, Hadith #74) He also said: “One who treads a path in search of
knowledge has his path to Paradise made easy by God…” (Riyadh us-Saleheen, hadith #245)
He further said:
"A servant of God will remain standing on the Day of Judgment until he is
questioned about his (time on earth) and how he used it; about his knowledge
and how he utilized it; about his wealth and from where he acquired it and in
what (activities) he spent it; and about his body and how he used it." (Al-Tirmidhi, Hadith #148)
The Prophet
also said: "Knowledge from which no benefit is derived is like a treasure
out of which nothing is spent in the cause of God." (Al-Tirmidhi, Hadith #108)
He also said:
"God, His angels and all those in the Heavens and on Earth, even ants in their
hills and fish in the water, call down blessings on those who instruct others
in beneficial knowledge." (Al-Tirmidhi, Hadith #422)
Then he said:
"Acquire knowledge and impart it to the people." (Al-Tirmidhi, Hadith #107)
In Sunan Abdu Dawood, one reads the Prophet explains, "If anyone travels on a road in search
of knowledge, God will cause him to travel on one of the roads of paradise. The
angels will lower their wings in their great pleasure with one who seeks
knowledge. The inhabitants of the heavens and the earth and (even) the fish in
the deep waters will ask forgiveness for the learned man. The superiority of
the learned over the devout is like that of the moon, on the night when it is
full, over the rest of the stars. The learned are the heirs of the Prophets,
and the Prophets leave (no monetary inheritance), they leave only knowledge,
and he who takes it takes an abundant portion. (Hadith #1631)
The statement that seeks knowledge, even if you have to travel to China is
often attributed to the Prophet, but these are the words of Imam Ali, the
fourth Caliph of Muslims.
Read these sayings of the prophet again and again. Repeat them to
yourself and to others and notice something very simple that can be summarized in
the following words.
“Knowledge is indivisible and regardless of one’s gender and age, it is obligatory
upon everyone.”
Throughout our Islamic history, we have tried to define and redefine
knowledge in our image, an image conditioned by our politics, culture, gender, ethnicity, society,
economics and personal interests. We are the ones who have bifurcated it into worldly
and religious sciences. We are the ones who have closed its doors whomsoever we
wanted out. We are the ones who have tried to limit its acquisition whomever we
wanted to exclude and we are the ones who have often tried to contaminate the purity of education
with our biases and absurdities. We often presented our viewpoints like that of God because we claimed that we are created in His image.
The Prophet did not do it. His message is simple and direct.
But most of us failed to recognize that it was not the intent of God and the Prophet to limit the access of education to
girls and women. It was not their intent to deprive those born in a state of
bondage of knowledge. It was not their intent to dictate to others
what to study and what not study as long as one understands the responsibilities that come with the knowledge.
Taliban in Afghanistan and Pakistan and those who are like them and have behaved like them throughout human history, have argued that they have the knowledge and authority to overrule God and the Prophet and set the limits on nature and
type of education girls, women, children, and even men should acquire.
A 10-year-old child, in her innocence, stood up against this idea based on her common sense
not fully aware of the true dimensions of the divine directions of education.
The logic was simple. How could God be unjust to His own creation by giving one more access to education than to another of His creation on the basis of one's gender? She was critical of them. She condemned their tactics as she saw them
playing it in her small village. She even called them terrorists and unjust zealots.
The mighty Taliban was upset. How could a 10-year-old child question their understanding of religion and culture? After all, this is not the role of a woman or children in their religious society. They are meant to be quiet and subservient.
They were angry and they forgot in this anger the basic Islamic principle. They did not return to the divine to seek guidance by taking account of their own attitudes.
Rather than reviewing their own attitudes or trying to educate their perspectives to the child, they became furious. Thus, she became their target. Finally, they assaulted her and tried
to kill her. This is how they had learned to deal with their opponents. Shoot those who oppose you and you would be blessed by the one in whose name you kill. But the one who gives life and death saved her. She got injured and even though she was in danger of losing her life, He inspired physicians, mostly non-Muslims, to save her.
There were
several countries in the world including those with Muslim majority who could have offered medical help to her including Saudi Arabia, Malaysia, or India, but
Britain took the lead to offer her the treatment. Since then, she is being
projected by the so-called western media as a symbol of resistance and an icon for women's education. This gesture of Britain is seen as a symbol of white supremacy over uneducated Muslims.
The Muslim media could also have taken up her case,
but it preferred not only to ignore her but to cast doubt on her story. Some even suggested that she was not attacked and she faked her injury. Among those who questioned her integrity were those Muslim theologians who have spent their lives teaching their followers the Quranic message that says: "don't assume things."
The so-called western campaign
to project her as a role model for girls regardless of their religion and ethnicity has angered many pious Muslims. After all, not many 10-year-old kids question the authority of a coercive group in a small village in a remote area of the world. How could a child's question a religious practice in a culture where even adults are not allowed to speak in front of a religious elder?
The
projection of a girl in a position of prominence does not sit well with them. A
woman should spend her time in the home getting ready to produce children and then
rear and nurture them. She is not supposed to talk about education or to offer
a leadership role. Children are not the teachers of their adults, so they are upset.
Religion is the prerogative of men only. A woman's voice in public is unacceptable in their understanding of Islam. Since they are the defenders of Islam and its gatekeepers, how could they let her be used or abused by the West to make a mockery of genuine Islamic teachings?
They see in
her rise a conspiracy on the part of the West to exploit her situation to serve
their agenda secular against Afghanistan, Pakistan and the Muslim world. They suspect
that the West is using her to impose upon the Muslim world its educational values, devoid of morality. They also see in her projection a well-conceived plot to
strip the Muslim world of its religious identity.
Ironically,
none of those, especially the ones living in the West, would agree with what
the Taliban have done or have been doing. Even the most anti-Western among them
have serious issues with the thinking and logic of Taliban in implementing a
version of Islam that is contaminated with male-chauvinism, tribal jingoism,
and feudal parochialism. Even many religious scholars are in doubt of the Taliban understanding of Islam. Many clean shaved clerics of Azhar or short, bearded religious scholars of the Americas would be treated as criminals and sinful in a Taliban run state for improperly trimming their beard. They fully understand that if they land in a Taliban run Islamic Afghanistan, they would immediately be taken into prison or given some lashes. Only a few US Muslim religious leaders can escape this wrath of the Taliban's Islamic will. Yet, these clerics and leaders have chosen to be silent on these issues.
The critics of the 16-year-old girl tend
to ignore the fact that the girl they are accusing of playing in the hands of
the West is echoing the ideas of their Prophet on education to the world in an atmosphere
of understanding and recognition. Their logic is interesting. "Don't speak the truth if it serves the political interests of others." In other words, the truth has no value of its own and cannot stand on its own strength. She is quoting the Quran. They do not like it. After all the Quran is their monopoly. How could she or her secular father quote or use the Quran in their arguments? Her dress does not
fall outside the parameters of Islamic norms. But they are still not convinced because the two inches of her hair closer to her forehead are still exposed to a male eye. Her language is soft and her
style is decent, but it does not matter. She is not talking about revenge, even against those who tried to
kill her and they think she cannot decide on her own whom to forgive and whom to declare an enemy. She is repeating what every sensible Muslim has repeated and would
like to repeat about education, but they argue that being a woman, she has no validity to do so.
Seemingly, they can’t rejoice the rise of one of their daughters and sisters to a position of dignity
in front of a world audience in a climate that is filled with admiration
towards her? To them, as soon as a girl reaches the age of puberty, she is a source of test for men regardless of their age. They are so much obsessed with the sexuality of women in their own context that they are not willing to treat others as their own daughters and sisters.
Let us come to other issues in raising her case. The critics argue that the west is exploiting her situation. Even if the
West is exploiting her, so what? The message she is delivering is worth
repeating from every channel. She is not questioning Islam or challenging the
Quran or the Prophet. She is simply following what every Muslim should have
followed.
How many of
those people who are critical of her were raising their voices in support of
education for all when they were about her age? How many of them took the bullets
for their stand? How many of them persisted in their mission even after being
hit by a bullet? How many of them were seen as a symbol of hope by adults and non-Muslims when they were in their teens.
The argument
that the West is hypocritical in its policies towards the Muslim world needs to
be analyzed on its own merit. The West has double stand standards towards its own values. Yes, the West has used its drones to kill
innocent people, yet it has played politics and havoc with the lives of the people, and
yes it is not honest when it deals with Islam in general. But the same analysis can easily be applied to those countries that claim to be Muslims.
Let us
also remember, that many others, including the citizens of the Western world, have also
suffered at the hands of its brutal policies. The US destroyed its own economy
in indulging itself in wars that were not necessary. The tug of war between Republicans and Democrats is ruining the economy of the country. The foreign policies of the West are problematic even to its own declared principles. But those policies need to be challenged on the basis of their absurdities and not on the
basis of how the 16-year-old girl is being projected. If the critics look beyond their myopic
perspectives, they would discover a new image of Islam emerging in the words of
this girl, an image that none of them was able to create as most of them were
busy and are still busy in infighting and destroying each other.