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  1. misogynistic pre-Islamic (or jahiliyah) practices regarding women. It points out that the Qur'ān’s patriarchal exegesis ascribes male domination and discrimination against women to the Qur'ān, which implies that God either didn’t notice or didn’t care about the injustices involved in male privilege. To that end, chapter 2 pro-

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  2. the last two decades, Western observers of the plight of Muslim women have portrayed Islam as uniquely patriarchal and incompatible with women’s equality. Most scholars now see Islam as no more inherently misogynist than the other major monotheistic traditions.

  3. Apr 1, 2012 · This research reveals that Islam does not deprive women of their rights, dignity, or status, but that this is due to a lack of basic Islamic knowledge and awareness, as well as the dominance...

  4. The Muslim woman, like the Muslim man is called upon to believe in Allah, the Day of Judgement, the Book, the Angels, and the Prophets, etc. She is also asked to perform prayers, pay out the Zakat duty, fast in the month of Ramadan and perform Pilgrimage to the Holy Places if she can do so.

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  5. This paper examines the question of women rights in Islam based on ‘public’ and ‘private’ sphere of life and its impact on the question of women empowerment. Drawing on hermeneutic–relativist approach, the article reveals the dialectical nature of interpretation of rights of women in Islam. The article also examines the question of ...

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  6. Womens Rights in Islam By Dr Farida Khanam According to Oxford dictionary, “Women’s Rights are the rights that promote a social and legal equality of women to men”. In Islam, a woman enjoys the same status as that of a man, regarding rights and blessings, both in this world and in the hereafter.

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  8. treating women as the Other? Does it view men and women as binary opposites? To address these questions, Barias lays out her arguments with respect to reading the Qur'an, reading patriarchy, reading liberation, and entering the hermeneutic circle/spiral. Arguing that the Qur'an is a polys?mie text and hence open to variant

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