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Women In The Middle East

Decent Essays

In the Middle East women have always been inferior to men. With the introduction of Islam with the revelation of the Quran in 610 CE; women are considered equal to men in the eyes of Allah but in society they remain inferior. This can be attributed to local cultural practices that have been ingrained into society. As of recent years, there has been a feminist push in the Middle East to gain more power in society. From the golden age of the Middle East during the Umayyad Caliphate to present with the many nations in the region today, the women have impacted the social, political, economical, and culture of Middle Eastern society.
Social and cultural beliefs are the central reason for the harsh discrimination of women in the Middle East. The …show more content…

As Muhammad's wife and Abu Bakr’s daughter Aisha was able to have a say in the Umayyad Caliphate and even take part in the Battle of Camel. After hearing about Uthman’s murder Aisha took to arms and fought Ali ,the caliph who replaced Uthman. Aisha did lose the first civil war in the Islamic Middle East, or the First Fitna. This battle is used by Islamic feminist to give women a reason to stand up and fight to become leaders, but it is also used by the opposition as an example of why women are not fit to rule because she lost the battle. Another case of women in power was the “Sultanate of Women” during the Ottoman Empire, where for three generations women transformed from slaves to the wives of sultans and influenced the rule of the empire. This started with Hurrem Sultan the only legal wife of Suleiman the Magnificent, she was originally born in Russia and became Suleiman’s favorite concubine. She was followed by Nurbanu Sultan who was born in Venice and was captured by the Turks; she pushed for a pro-Venetian policy and was hated by the Genoese traders. Lastly, the most powerful was Kosem Sultan, who was a native of Bosnia, and the wife of Ahmed 1 practically ruled the empire for her son Murad IV. Even though women were discriminated against they still were able to reach positions of …show more content…

Women have started to become more educated, with an increased amount of women attending universities each year. But everyone who has an education is not guaranteed a job, with women taking up fifty four percent of students in universities but only take up twenty six percent of jobs and eight percent of legislators in Lebanon. Most women did not always have an opportunity to receive an education,but the minority of women in higher classes have been given the opportunity to receive a higher education because of the wealth. This resulted in the power to ignore gender norms and become workers in the business and political worlds. Today women are encouraged to find jobs in government to insure them equal wages, treatments, and benefits which jobs in the private sector lack. In the Middle East, it is hard for a women to obtain property, since the sons in the family inherit the land and it is also discouraged to even purchase land. Without access to land it is nearly impossible for women to receive credit cards and take loans from the bank. This results in women being unable to start their own businesses because they lack startup capital. Organizations like the United Nations and the World Bank have been taking charge and are helping women receive an education in legal studies with hopes of bridging the gap between men and women in the job

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