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Discuss | Email | Print | Get latest news on your desktop Muslim women feel free, secure in Europe Prasun Sonwalkar in London | January 29, 2009 09:12 IST
Muslim women in Europe are proud to live in and belong to Europe, despite facing a daily struggle against prejudice from both within and outside their own communities, a new research suggests. It also reveals that an emerging generation of Muslim women are becoming increasingly independent and are determined to assert their right to a full education, a career and to follow their own dreams. The study, however, adds that many do so in the face of archaic patriarchal cultural traditions on the one hand, and discrimination and suspicion from the non-Muslim majority population on the other. These challenges, combined with the relatively poor family backgrounds of many European Muslim women, threaten to limit their social mobility, whatever their aspirations. It is the first academic study to investigate the topic of Muslim women in Europe in a comparative way, examining it beyond the questions of the wearing of the hijab (veil) and the migration experience. A total of 49 women from Belgium, Italy [Images] and the United Kingdom -- most of them European citizens -- were interviewed to provide a snapshot of the experiences, views and aspirations of Muslim women. Apart from the interviews, a wide range of academic reports, national statistics, government and EU reports, policy papers, speeches, media reports and blogs were also analysed. "The subject of Europe's Muslim women has been under-researched and under-considered," Silvestri said. "It has left a gap in our knowledge that can lead to misunderstandings, stereotyping and prejudice. The aim of this report was to find out about these women's daily lives, their thoughts, feelings and problems, and the contribution they are making to European society." The study found that European Muslim women are keen to assert their right to take charge of their own lives and that many see that as entirely compatible with retaining an Islamic identity. The study warns, however, that "not all Muslim women have the internal drive, strength, or have been exposed to sufficient stimuli to take such a step." Doing so not only involves breaking free of the narrow-mindedness, which still exists in some closely-knit Muslim communities, but ignoring assumptions that they are "oppressed and illiterate". "They are daily resisting and negotiating on two fronts," the report says: "With patriarchal norms and family structures in the community, and externally with prejudice coming from the non-Muslim environment." In spite of these disadvantages, however, the report found that many Muslim women are asserting their right to govern their own lives, seize opportunities and engage with wider society and civil organisations even in the face of occasional prejudice. The interviewees expressed an overall commitment to European values such as the rule of law, democracy, freedom and the respect of diversity. For that reason, they expected respect for their own religious views and felt frustrated when prevented from practicing their faith as they would like. None of the respondents expressed any desire to live under existing sharia law systems. The report says their recurring aspirations as European citizens are "unexceptionally ordinary" -- to live in peace and within the law, to feel integrated, to receive a good education and to have a decent job and a happy family life.
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