Monday, September 05, 2005

Sharia Protest

Sharia is the dance of death for women. Thursday, Sept. 8 we have a chance to tell our governments that we refuse to accept it in our nations. Will they listen?

We have a duty to stop Islamic fascism from spreading further in the West to engulf even those who have already fled it. A woman's legal equality is as important to all of us as it is to her. There cannot be exceptions to the rule of law, not for reasons of Islamic purity or racial distinctions or matters of wealth or privilge. The law must be the same for the tall as well as the short, for the beautiful and the ugly. There cannot be sharia law in a free nation. It's up to you to make sure it does not come to the lands of the West to further oppress women here today, you tommorow.

Stand up for equality under the law, for legality itself. No Sharia. No Islam. No fascism.

Then we'll dance in the streets, men and women together.
***

Life under sharia, in Canada?
By Margaret Wente
Saturday, May 29, 2004

Homa Arjomand knows what it's like to live under sharia law. In Iran, she endured it until someone tipped her off that she was about to be arrested and imprisoned. Many of her activist friends had already been tried and executed. She, her husband and two small children (the youngest was barely one) escaped on a gruelling trip by horseback through the mountains. That was in 1989.

Today, she lives in a suburb northeast of Toronto. Her job is helping immigrant Muslim women in distress. And now she is battling the arrival of sharia law in Canada.

"We must separate religion from the state," she says emotionally. "We're living in Canada. We want Canadian secular law."

Sharia law in Canada? Yes. The province of Ontario has authorized the use of sharia law in civil arbitrations, if both parties consent. The arbitrations will deal with such matters as property, marriage, divorce, custody and inheritance. The arbitrators can be imams, Muslim elders or lawyers. In theory, their decisions aren't supposed to conflict with Canadian civil law. But because there is no third-party oversight, and no duty to report decisions, no outsider will ever know if they do. These decisions can be appealed to the regular courts. But for Muslim women, the pressures to abide by the precepts of sharia are overwhelming. To reject sharia is, quite simply, to be a bad Muslim.

Ms. Arjomand's cellphone is constantly ringing — with calls of support, or calls for help, or updates on various crises. A client of hers has just that day died of cancer, leaving behind a nine-year-old daughter. The husband was brutally abusive, and now the dead woman's family is terrified that he's going to take the daughter, who was born in Canada, and go back to Iran. Ms. Arjomand has been trying to get Children's Aid to intervene.

In the burgeoning Muslim communities around Toronto, it's customary to settle family disputes internally, by appealing to an imam or an older person in the family. "I have a client from Pakistan who works for a bank," Ms. Arjomand tells me. "She's educated. She used to give all her money to her husband. She had to beg him for money to buy a cup of coffee. Then she decided to keep $50 a month for herself, but he said no."

They took the matter to an uncle, who decreed that because the wife had not been obedient, her husband could stop sleeping with her. (This is a traditional penalty for disobedient wives.) He could also acquire a temporary wife to take care of his sexual needs, which he proceeded to do. Now the woman wants a separation. She's fighting for custody of the children, which, according to sharia, belong to the father.

The law permitting a sharia court was passed in 1991, when Ontario sought to streamline the overloaded court system (and save money) by diverting certain civil cases to arbitration, including arbitration conducted on religious principles. Jewish courts have operated in the province this way for many years. "People can agree to resolve disputes in any way acceptable," said Brendan Crawley, a spokesman for the Ontario attorney-general. "If they decide to resolve disputes using principles of sharia and using an imam as an arbitrator, that is perfectly acceptable under the arbitration act."

Promoters of Islamic law in Canada have been working toward this goal for years. Last fall, they created the Islamic Institute of Civil Justice, which has already chosen arbitrators who have undergone training in sharia and Canadian civil law. The driving force behind the court is a lawyer and scholar named Syed Mumtaz Ali, who was quoted last week saying "to be a good Muslim," all Muslims must use these sharia courts.

Many Muslims, including many women, are enthusiastic about giving Islamic law an official place in Canada, and they emphatically deny that it will harm women's interests. On the contrary. They insist that under Islam, a woman's rights are protected. "We follow the Islamic law, secure with a perfect sense of equality between the sexes," wrote Khansa Muhaseen and Nabila Haque in a letter to the Toronto Star, where the sharia debate has been raging fiercely.

Opponents of the new tribunals argue that the government's imprimatur will give sharia law even greater legitimacy. Sharia law is based on the Koran, which, according to Muslim belief, provides the divine rules for behaviour. What is called sharia varies widely (in Nigeria, for example, it has been invoked to justify death by stoning). The one common denominator is that it is strongly patriarchal.

Alia Hogben is president of the Canadian Council of Muslim Women, a pro-faith group with members from every Muslim culture. But the council was never consulted about the new sharia courts, and it strongly opposes them.

"This is a very difficult position for us to be in because we are believing women," says Ms. Hogben. "But to apply Muslim family law in Canada is not appropriate." In Britain, she adds, the government has flatly rejected councils for sharia law.

Both Ms. Hogben and Ms. Arjomand — the former an observant Muslim, the latter not — are lobbying hard for Ontario to change the arbitration law.

(Ms. Arjomand has launched a petition, which you can find through a web search for "International Campaign Against Sharia Courts in Canada.")

more: http://www.youmeworks.com/sharia_canada.html

Author: Margaret Wente (mwente@globeandmail.ca)
Reprinted from the globeandmail.com in Canada.

Saturday, September 03, 2005

Islam: It's a Man's World

In the world of Islam there are those who submit, and there are those who submit and are beaten anyway. The latter are women.

Some Muslim women are stupid, some are timid. Some are desperately poor, insanely acculturated, or simply locked up and unable to escape from those who beat, rape, sexually mutilate, and murder them. They don't need sharia law. They need protection. They need their own rights protected by the government, not given away to those who would beat them further.

A man who hits a woman is a coward and a bully and a piece of garbage. But those who stand back and excuse that behavior on the grounds that it's Islamic culture, that it's racist to interfere in other people's customs that might differ from ours: those men are evil. When dhimmitude becomes whimmitude the line is crossed into a moral wilderness where a man is no longer a man at all. The man who won't stand up against a woman-beater is filth. There is no excuse. There can be no forgiveness. There is only punishment.

This Thursday you can make a stand for those who can't stand up for themselves. You can say no to sharia in Canada. You can say yes to universal Human rights. Human rights for everyone. Human rights for women. No Sharia.

Toronto: Queen's Park, Ontario Legislature, (time, 12–2 Pm)

Contact: Homa Arjomand, 416-737-9500

Ottawa: Parliament, (time, 12-2 PM)
Contact: Soheila Bayani (soheila_d@hotmail.com)

Vancouver: 800 Hornby (in front of Family Court) downtown
Contact: Zari Asli, 604-727-8986

Victoria: Parliament

Contact: Abass Mohammdadi (vicc22@hotmail.com

Montreal: devant le complex Guy Favreau Bd Rene Levesque O Montreal

Date: September 8th , time: 12 – 1 PM

organisee par L,Association des Femmes Iraniennes de Montreal

Appuyee par : La Federation des Femmes du Quebec.

Contact: Elahe Machouf, elahem@sympatico.ca

Waterloo: 100 Rittenhouse Dr. Kitchener (time, 7-9 PM)

Contact: Heidy Schmidt, heha@porchlight.ca at 518-291-5480

England: London , Canadian High Commission, 38 Grosvenor Street , ( Bond Street Tube)

Contact: Sohaila Sharifi at 447719111738,


Germany: Dusseldorf In front of Canadian Consulate

Contact: Mina Ahadi, at 4917775692413, minaAhadi@aol.com

Sweden: Stockholm, In front of Canadian Embassy,

Contact: Mahin Alipour at 0046707777313,


mahin_alipour@yahoo.se

Sweden: Gutenberg: Brunnsparken K1

Contact: Shahla Nori at 0046737262622, shahla.n@bredband.net

Holland: Canadian Embassy, Sophialaan 7, 2514 JPS-Gravenhage, ( DENHAAG)

Contact: Sorosh Ebrahimi, at 0031-(0) 61324331, soroshebi@yahoo.com


France: Canadian Embassy, 35 avenue Montaigne 75008, Paris


Contact: Michèle Vianès, at 06 10 39 94 87, michelevianes@chello.fr


www.nosharia.com

homa wpi@rogers.com