Living The Quran
Individuality
Surah al-Mumtahana (The Tested Woman) Chapter 60: Verse 12
"O
Prophet! When believing women come to thee to take the oath of
allegiance to thee, that they will not associate in worship any other
thing whatever with Allah, that they will not steal, that they will not
commit adultery (or fornication), that they will not kill their
children, that they will not utter slander, intentionally forging
falsehood, and that they will not disobey thee in any just matter; then
do thou accept their allegiance, and pray to Allah for the forgiveness
(of their sins): for Allah is Oft-Forgiving, Most Merciful."
The individuality of a woman is a principle of religion. In Islam, a woman is an independent entity, and thus a fully responsible human being.
Islam addresses her directly and does not approach her through the
agency of Muslim males. A woman would assume full capacity and
liability once she has attained maturity and has received the message
of Islam.
Moreover no woman is said to have truly accepted the message of
Islam unless she does so out of her independent will. Admission to
faith is entirely a personal matter; indeed, faith cannot be adopted by
proxy. Women, just like men, would come to the Prophet (peace be
upon him) and pledge their own allegiance to Islam and the Prophet.
If embracing Islam by a woman is an entirely personal matter in
the Islamic tradition and cannot be done through proxy, so are all
obligations and duties, which Islam enjoins on her. No one else can do
them on her behalf. She performs her acts of worship purely on the
basis of her own intention; and as such these are treated in Islam as
her personal achievements.
On the basis of her own action, a woman earns reward or punishment. No man is allowed to plead or intercede for a woman, nor is he held responsible for her actions and their consequences. The
doctrine of ultimate accountability does not take the family as a
unit for collective responsibility; rather, each individual male or
female, is an autonomous unit of reckoning in front of God, and is
held directly responsible for his or her actions or his or her share
in joint acts.
Compiled From:
"On the Position of Women in Islam and in Islamic Society" - Hassan al-Turabi
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