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Hanefî Çevreler Özelinde Kadınların Fıkıh İlmine İlgisi
From the past to the present, women’s involvement in social life and their preoccupation with science has been a problematic issue in most societies. The Prophet Muhammad gave importance to women, who were worthless in the period of Jahiliya, in a way that could not be found in the rest of the world...
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Published in: | Cumhuriyet ilahiyat dergisi 2022, Vol.26 (1), p.5-21 |
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Main Author: | |
Format: | Article |
Language: | Turkish |
Subjects: | |
Online Access: | Get full text |
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Summary: | From the past to the present, women’s involvement in social life and their preoccupation with science has been a problematic issue in most societies. The Prophet Muhammad gave importance to women, who were worthless in the period of Jahiliya, in a way that could not be found in the rest of the world. The Prophet gave them the right to access social life, mosques and intellectual assemblies. First, The Prophet Muhammad forbade women to be prevented from going to mosques and even requested that women who want to come to the mosque for worship be allowed at night. Emphasizing the education of women, the Prophet ensured that they were taught to read and write. He contributed to their education by allocating a special day for women’s education. He even opened a school called Ṣuffetu'n-Nisā – a space enabling women to receive an education. After the death of the Prophet, women’s access to mosques and intellectual assemblies was increasingly restricted due to the dominant character of Arab society and the poor understanding of the Prophet’s message by some. His wife Aisha said, “If Hz. Muhammad knew what women were doing in mosques, he would have forbidden them to come to the mosque.” Her testimony shows that some women of her time believed their behaviours were not in line with the requirements of Islam. However, women who understood the message of our Prophet correctly researched various Islamic sciences. It is known that until the fourth century Hijri, many women narrated hadiths, gave lectures in Damascus Umayyad Mosque, Masjid al-Aqsa, and Masjid al-Nabī, and many male students, including the caliph, attended these lectures. It is even stated in the sources that some women went on long journeys to collect hadiths. The fact that women were considered an element of sedition, especially since the third century, prevented them from going to mosques and intellectual assemblies in the name of piety. At the same time, as the works of Greek philosophers and logicians were translated and recognized in the Islamic world, their negative ideas about women had a partial effect on Islamic scholars. On the other hand, the fact that negative judgments of the Israelite narrations about women entered Islamic sources had a partial negative effect on the views of Muslim scholars towards women. In addition, since the fourth century of the hijra, the beginning of the dominance of the Shiite Fatimids in Egypt and the Shiite Buwayhids in Iraq brought about serious changes in the so |
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ISSN: | 2528-9861 2528-987X |
DOI: | 10.18505/cuid.1059898 |