Talk:Islam and domestic violence/Archive 2

Archive 1 Archive 2 Archive 3

Credentials for two recently-incorporated sources

also, as requested, here is a third party published source for Robert Spencer on this subject.66.29.115.69 (talk) 11:39, 9 January 2008 (UTC)

James Arlandson isn't a reliable source on Islam, as was determined here and elsewhere. FPM too is widely accepted as being an unreliable source on Wikipedia as determined here. ITAQALLAH 18:38, 9 January 2008 (UTC)

Further,
Dr Hussain has been published by Academic Press who say of themselves "[we are] an independent scholarly press specializing in monographs, revised dissertations, primary sources, bibliographies, textbooks, and other books reflecting scholarship in the humanities and social sciences". Robert Spencer is published by Prometheus Books, which has been around since 1969, and which according to its WP article "publishes scientific, educational, and popular books, especially those of a secular humanist or scientific skepticism nature" and there's various reputable names on their roster including the odd Prize-winner here and there.66.29.115.69 (talk) 12:09, 9 January 2008 (UTC)

You raise a lot of red herrings. Prometheus books is likely a respected publisher in the area of secular humanism, but not particularly established or reliable on Islamic studies. Likewise... Spencer, whose qualification pertains to early Christianity, is neither an authority nor a reliable source on Islamic studies. Can you elaborate a little more on Hussain? What is his qualification in? And precisely what books has Academica press published of his (do note that he didn't author this 'Beyond Jihad' book that you attribute to him)? He seems to be more of a political commentator.
In any case, 66, you aren't likely to succeed in inserting unscholarly polemical material from sources like these. ITAQALLAH 18:38, 9 January 2008 (UTC)
66, you are continuing to insert unreliably sourced material of partisan flavour. Your latest source, who appears to be an unreliable and clearly untrained individual, says "Aisha, in the Qur'an states: "I have not seen any woman suffering as much as the believing woman" and that means a Muslim woman"!! The standard of sourcing is getting progressively worse. ITAQALLAH 03:17, 12 January 2008 (UTC)

Compromise proposal

Earlier, I inserted this text as a compromise (Itaqallah removed it without really discussing the substantive differences between this and what came before):

Critic of Islam Robert Spencer argues that Aisha's statement that "he struck me on the chest which caused me pain" in Sahih Muslim, 4:2127 constitutes evidence of domestic violence of Aisha by Muhammad.(Spencer, Robert. Religion of Peace?: Why Christianity Is and Islam Isn't. Regnery Publishing (2007), p182.[1] Critics of Islam have also argued that Aisha's statement "I have not seen any woman suffering as much as the believing women" in Sahih al-Bukhari, [] evidences abuse of Muslim women.[1](http://www.islam-watch.org/AlamgirHussain/islams-rebel-women.htm Secular Islam Summit: Islam’s Rebel Women Make Their Mark, by Alamgir Hussain (PhD))(http://www.frontpagemagazine.com/Articles/Read.aspx?GUID={B46F5A5D-E35D-4673-88D0-FBCF931ACAF8} "Muslim Feminism?" by Robert Spencer. FrontPageMagazine.com, April 24, 2005)

I think this is a fair compromise between the two sides here. This article is not solely about what Muslims say about the topic, it is about what others say as well. If people are notable for their criticism of Islam and are presented as such in the article, it is fair to present their views. Allowing only those with doctorates in Islamic studies to have their views presented in the article results in views mainly (or solely) with those sympathetic to Islam. In this compromise, Spence and Arlandson are presented as critics, not as scholars. I think their criticism is notable and should be included. Calliopejen1 (talk) 19:25, 12 January 2008 (UTC)

It's not about only having views of qualified individuals related (though it's important). If the specific criticism is really and truly noteworthy, it will have been reported by third party reliable sources (i.e. [1]), instead of us determining what critiques are most appropriate upon surveillance of polemical sources. The same goes for apologetic material, it wouldn't be acceptable to cite pro-Islam websites or Zakir Naik or Ahmad Deedat (who, like Spencer et al., are noted for their comments on Islam) on this issue either. I contend that Spencer is not a reliable source. In fact, he is a questionable source making some rather dubious claims... his views on this topic aren't worthy of discussion unless other appropriate sources have picked up on them. ITAQALLAH 19:52, 12 January 2008 (UTC)
As far as dubious claims go, I don't think that these claims are as crazy as a lot of the others Spencer et al make. How else, frankly, could the statement "he struck me on the chest which caused me pain" be interpreted? This is one where the primary text standing alone is nearly sufficient. Spencer's criticism does seem to be notable in this instance, because it was published by Regnery Press, which seems to be a reliable source for seeing what criticism is notable. The other stuff that has only been printed by polemical websites I understand may not be notable. I'll do some searching in Google Books and see if I can find any better sources for the Bukhari 72:715 statement. Calliopejen1 (talk) 20:00, 12 January 2008 (UTC)
Ok, the other statement can also be attributed to Spencer in that same book on the same page.

Critics of Islam including Robert Spencer have argued that Aisha's statement that "he struck me on the chest which caused me pain" in Sahih Muslim, 4:2127 constitutes evidence of domestic violence of Aisha by Muhammad. They have also argued that Aisha's statement "I have not seen any woman suffering as much as the believing women" in Sahih al-Bukhari, [] evidences abuse of Muslim women. (Both statements referenced to Spencer, Robert. Religion of Peace?: Why Christianity Is and Islam Isn't. Regnery Publishing (2007), p182.)

How about that? I would definitely be open to some scholarly commentary on the verses to rebut the criticism if you have any but I didn't see any in my Google and Google books searches. Calliopejen1 (talk) 20:07, 12 January 2008 (UTC)
The second sentence in my paragraph could also be sourced to Spencer, Robert. "When Islam Isn't Islam." Human Events (April 18, 2005). I'm not entirely sure how important a conservative magazine Human Events is because I know nothing about the world of conservative magazines. Calliopejen1 (talk) 20:18, 12 January 2008 (UTC)
Analysing primary sources is not as simple as you might imagine. Here's one example. Aisha said: "The Messenger of God never did hit any of his wives or any of his servants. Neither did he hit anything with his hand, but for God's sake, or for stopping maharim (prohibitions), or (in this case) his revenge is for God (not for himself)" [Muslim, Book of Virtues, no. 4296] (cited in Roald p. 149, also translated here) - note the narrator. Surely you can appreciate that it's not always an issue of just picking out narrations which depict things in a certain way.[2] I discussed your narration above. She uses the word lahada, which means push (not daraba, which means strike). Muslim scholar Gibril Haddad claims poor translation, saying that it is more appropriately rendered 'He pushed my chest with a push that made me sore'. I'm not advocating using these sources, just so you know. ITAQALLAH 20:30, 12 January 2008 (UTC)
As I mentioned earlier, I take issue with quoting Spencer or any questionable source directly. If there is a third party reliable source which says Spencer says such and such, then I think that's acceptable. ITAQALLAH 20:33, 12 January 2008 (UTC)
I don't see how a third party publishing Spencer's claims has less credence than a third party reporting on Spencer's claims. Surely a notable publisher giving views air time means that claims have some significance. (I'm open to being convinced that these aren't notable publishers because I really don't know.) In any case, I would prefer an explanation and a rebuttal of Spencer's views to nothing at all. If anything it allows readers to be able to discredit what Spencer is saying and see how critics' views differ from scholars' views. Maybe I'll work up another proposal when I have more time to think about it. Calliopejen1 (talk) 20:43, 12 January 2008 (UTC)
By the way do you have a citation for the daraba/lahada translation issue? Calliopejen1 (talk) 20:51, 12 January 2008 (UTC)
I provided one forum link above providing a fatwa from an IslamToday website, but I can't find the original page. Some forums connected to Gibril Haddad post his comments on the issue too. None of it is suitable for use here, though. I guess you can do a google search for lahada etc. to see what you can find. ITAQALLAH 20:59, 12 January 2008 (UTC)
Regnery press isn't a third party here (i.e. independent of Spencer), it's the publisher of Spencer's books. It is a publishing house which is reputed for its material on conservative politics (see its 'Politically Incorrect Guide' page), not Islamic studies, and is frequently used by Spencer. Hence it's not an independent source which actually discusses his views.
The point I'm making is that questionable sources themselves shouldn't be referred to directly. Some of Spencer's critiques are noteworthy - you'll see them mentioned in reviews, reports, articles (and so on), some really aren't. It's decided by whether independent reliable sources have deemed it significant enough to mention (irrespective of whether they are valid or not). ITAQALLAH 20:59, 12 January 2008 (UTC)
(Deindent) Ok I've been doing a bit more looking... It seems that both of these claims are also made by Spencer in the Politically Incorrect Guide to Islam, which does appear to be notable. It received a 1700-word review in the National Review, smaller discussions in other sources, and was on the NYT bestseller list for 3 weeks (#14 one week, #15 two more weeks for nonfiction paperbakcs). If any criticism of Islam is notable, I think this book surely is. (It's currently the 3rd-bestselling book on Amazon about the history of Islam, which I find shocking.) It seems like enough notable people are discussing this issue on both sides that it would be good to include balanced coverage of the claims and rebuttals. What do you think of this?

Critic of Islam Robert Spencer has argued that Sahih Muslim, 4:2127 offers evidence of evidence of domestic violence of Aisha by Muhammad. In Abdul Hamid Siddiqui's translation, Aisha narrates that "he [Mohammad] struck me on the chest which caused me pain". Other scholars, however, have translated this verse differently. Gibril Haddad's translation is "He gave me a push or slap on the chest which made me sore"; he interprets the gesture as "a Prophetic gesture associated with driving away evil influence (wasw?s) and conferring blessing." Anne S. Roald has offered Sahih Muslim, 30:5756 as evidence of a positive relationship between Aisha and Muhammad; in it, Aisha narrates that Muhammad "never did hit any of his wives or any of his servants."

(Cites: Spencer, Robert. The Politically Incorrect Guide to Islam. Regnery Press (2005), p70. Haddad, Gibril. "The Imposition of Hands in the Sunna." Roald, Anne S. Women in Islam: The Western Experience. Routledge (2001), p149. ISBN 0415248965.) The Haddad source is kind of questionable -- looks self-published and non-notable -- but could be good as a place-holder until better evidence is found. Calliopejen1 (talk) 21:52, 12 January 2008 (UTC)
I just found a better source than Haddad--it's where I'm guessing Haddad gets his translation from. Evidently in Al Minhaj bi Sharh Sahih Muslim, Imam Nawawi says "The word "lahada" according to the lexicographers means, "to push" (dafa'a)." I get this from a web forum[3] (which also shows the original Arabic), so hopefully someone who reads Arabic can confirm the translation and find the original citation in the online Sharh here. Here's what my new proposal looks like:

Critic of Islam Robert Spencer has argued that Sahih Muslim, 4:2127 offers evidence of evidence of domestic violence of Aisha by Muhammad. In Abdul Hamid Siddiqui's translation, Aisha narrates that "he [Mohammad] struck me on the chest which caused me pain". Medieval Islamic scholar Yahya ibn Sharaf al-Nawawi, however, wrote in his commentary on Sahih Muslim that the verb used by Aisha, lahada, is equivalent to dafa'a, meaning push rather than strike. Anne S. Roald has also offered Sahih Muslim, 30:5756 as evidence of a positive relationship between Aisha and Muhammad; in it, Aisha narrates that Muhammad "never did hit any of his wives or any of his servants."

(Cites: Spencer, Robert. The Politically Incorrect Guide to Islam. Regnery Press (2005), p70. Al-Nawawi, Yahya ibn Sharaf. Al Minhaj bi Sharh Sahih Muslim, [need precise citation]. Roald, Anne S. Women in Islam: The Western Experience. Routledge (2001), p149. ISBN 0415248965.) Calliopejen1 (talk) 20:00, 13 January 2008 (UTC)
Spencer's book being a best-seller (many controversial, patently unreliable books can be best-sellers) has no bearing on whether he should be used in this or other articles IMO. If these critiques are noteworthy, and I don't believe they are, they will have been noted by reliable sources. I appreciate your good-faith efforts... but I really feel the whole discussion should be avoided given the lack of reliable sources on both sides (Nawawi's statement, so you know, can be found here under ( ‏( فَلَهَدَنِي ). ITAQALLAH 20:32, 13 January 2008 (UTC)
  • The above discussion is continuously beating around the issue as to whether Spencer should be used. Everyone should realize that there is community wide consensus that Robert Spencer is an unreliable source. Unreliable source means no inclusion, and I haven't seen any exception to that policy. I can certainly ask the talk pages of WP:V and WP:RS, if you want.Bless sins (talk) 17:38, 17 July 2008 (UTC)

References

  1. ^ a b http://muslimhope.com/JamesArlandson/DomesticViolenceInIslam.htm Domestic violence in Islam - The Quran on beating wives, by James M. Arlandson)

Pakistan

Is this article correct in stating that there is no law against domestic abuse in Pakistan? Reading through Dawn newspaper, the perpetrators of abuse are always booked under the Womens Protection Act. Wouldn't that be a law against abuse? A quick search shows that Musharraf signed this bill into law in 2006 Inf fg (talk) 14:54, 18 February 2009 (UTC)

That appears to have to do with the punishment of women in cases of rape. There was a law proposed in early 2007 relating to domestic violence specifically[4], but as of early 2008 it hadn't been passed. I can't find anything more recent. Calliopejen1 (talk) 21:03, 26 February 2009 (UTC)

Syria

Could we add something about the idea of honor killing to the article? Common particularly in Syria, where the law is rarely enforced, and when it is only allows for 2 year prison terms for murdering a wife/sister/cousin who a man thinks is engaged in a sexual relationship. Fuzbaby (talk) 18:28, 3 July 2009 (UTC)

Namus

This whole section on Namus does not belong in this article, and none of the sources appear to connect this cultural notion to the topic at hand. I have removed it for now. ITAQALLAH 17:26, 19 September 2009 (UTC)

Revision

I was very surprised when I came across this page ‘domestic violence and Islam,’ for it is such a critical and significant topic, yet it does not encompass a lot of topics that are imperative, such as different interpretations of the Qur’an, definition of domestic violence and its implications on Muslim communities. I’m envisioning a major expansion of the article—which in my opinion much needed for an important topic like this—and have already finished writing the rough draft. This includes the definition of domestic violence in relation to Islam community that I mentioned, how Islam affects women in general, and different interpretations of Qur’an—conservative, feministic, and misinterpretation view—. Also, I want to expand and edit the exiting entry, such as treatment of the domestic violence in Qur’an because I think the actual paragraph of verse 34 of An-nisa, which is subjected to different interpretations is needed to be written down so that the readers know exactly what was referred. I also want to add Ahmed Ali’s translation, which translates differently from others, to offer the discrepancies of translations. Ahmed Ali’s translation of word Idribuhunna as ‘‘to forsake, to avoid, or to leave’ should be added under proper and improper occasion of beating to delineate the similar argument. Furthermore, ‘availabilities of remedies for abused wives’ title sounds awkward and I want to change it to ‘Solution.’ Lisa Hajjar in her article “Religion, State Power, and Domestic Violence in Muslim Societies: A Framework for Comparative Analysis” proposes to ask a series of questions in order to analyze if a country is working towards solution against domestic violence such as: Has the state signed and ratified the Convention to Eliminate All Forms of Discrimination against Women (CEDAW), and if so, is this authority used effectively to prohibit and punish domestic violence? Are there national laws and/or administrative sanctions prohibiting domestic violence? Also, I want to expand the divorce section under the ‘availabilities of remedies for abused wives’ which requires expansion by wikipedia. I found data of domestic violence in Morocco and Allah’s words in 2:231 from Qur’an about the divorce and how women should be respected and without revenge after the divorce. Also, I want to add the ‘legislature and law enforcement’ section under the ‘Solution’ and mention how it is re-enforced by King Hassan II in Morocco. I know I have a lot of reference to Morocco about the domestic violence, but that’s because it was mentioned a lot in a lot of literatures that I was reading. But it would be great if other people can look up case studies from different countries and add to it. Chloe.s.kwon (talk) 20:57, 19 October 2011 (UTC)

Discussion of merging two articles

Regarding merging this article with Islam and Domestic Violence, I'm a little confused why the articles wouldn't be merged (aside from needing to do some clean-up work.)

How about if I take a stab in User:CaroleHenson/Islam and domestic violence and see how that seems to come along? If it seems to be a problem for folks, or there is another issue against merging, no harm done.--CaroleHenson (talk) 00:28, 15 November 2011 (UTC)

I didn't see anyone weigh in with concern about merging the article, so I went ahead and copied in the merge article for folks input. I will still continue to work on the table of information about use - and law/remedies available for victims. If there's anyone who is Islamic, it would be great to have a set of eyes check over some of my copy-edits/merging of information, specifically in the Woman in Islam section. Any thoughts about the changes?--CaroleHenson (talk) 02:41, 16 November 2011 (UTC)

Reintroduction of summarized info

It seems that these edits are reintroduction of topics that are now summarized in the article, which:

  • means that there's duplication of points
  • the article is longer and less concise
  • the piece about Moroccan law is a complete duplicate, see this section, Morocco

To reintroduce the material:

  • can we get consensus that is a desired action?
  • rather than pasting the information in, merge the salient points and watch placement with the Quran section?

Thanks so much for the interest, it is definitely an interesting topic and I can see why there's interest in adding the additional information.

The question is, will people get lost in the material? And, what can be added to the existing article that is missing that will be helpful to the reader without making the content too long?--CaroleHenson (talk) 20:56, 7 December 2011 (UTC)

there is another issue i would like to point out. the huge "incidence of domestic violence among muslims"-section disrupts the flow of the article logically as the section has nothing to do with "islam and domestic violence", but rather "muslims and domestic violence", constituting coatrack. the section has to go. that would render the article more readable and open up space for further expansion.-- mustihussain  22:44, 7 December 2011 (UTC)
i removed the coatrack-content.-- mustihussain  17:06, 15 December 2011 (UTC)

"The best solutions for stemming the tide of domestic violence..."

The sentence starting with "The best solutions for stemming the tide of domestic violence..." at the end of the introduction section of the article is clearly a point of view, rather than a statement of fact. It could be argued that the "best" solution is education, reducing poverty, or any number of things not mentioned. Even the the most efficacious solution can't be called the "best" without some degree of bias, as there is bound to be opposition to any policy. There is no citation for this sentence. If this was a statement made by some organisation or notable person, it should be attributed to them. Without this, it is an opinion written as fact, regardless of whether it's true or not. I've labelled it with [neutrality is disputed] and [citation needed] tags for now. TimofKingsland (talk) 08:45, 5 March 2012 (UTC)

I am going to get rid of this sentence soon, unless someone disagrees or fixes it.TimofKingsland (talk) 22:03, 12 March 2012 (UTC)

New Addition