Path: utzoo!censor!geac!torsqnt!news-server.csri.toronto.edu!cs.utexas.edu!swrinde!zaphod.mps.ohio-state.edu!usc!jarthur!nntp-server.caltech.edu!bes From: SX43@liverpool.ac.uk (Fazal R Ellahi) Newsgroups: soc.religion.islam Subject: sex mwise (serious article on taboo in muslim community ) Message-ID: <1990Nov23.161232.6123@nntp-server.caltech.edu> Date: 23 Nov 90 16:12:32 GMT Sender: bes@nntp-server.caltech.edu (Behnam Sadeghi) Organization: California Institute of Technology, Pasadena Lines: 134 Approved: bes@tybalt.caltech.edu -------------------------------------- Title : No Sex Please, We are Muslims! Source : MuslimWise magazine (December1989) p22. Topic : Serious analysis of taboo on discussion of sex in the muslim communities in Britain by a social worker (muslimah). Lines : 129 inc. Contact: BM MuslimWise, London WC1N 3XX England, UK. Telephone : 081-902-5968/6074 (England) -------------------------------------- "All rights are *NOT* reserved. Articles in MuslimWise *MAY* be reproduced without prior permission in any publication not published by Penguin. Being mere mortals we do get mad when somebody reproduces our articles and 'forgets' to acknowledge us. Articles on anything, so long as they have a name and address, are welcomed -- from Muslims and non-Muslims." ------------------------------------------------------------------------ NO SEX PLEASE, WE ARE MUSLIMS! By Summayah Hassan. Sex is the most taboo of words in the Muslim community. Parents abhor the very mention of the word. Utter it and you are more likely to end up -- if you are lucky -- with a frosty look, the result more often being a stinging clout around the ears. Muslim 'educationalists' treat the subject in the same manner. But the fight against sex education has more problems than solutions. If we say sex education as presently taught in schools is a no-go area for young Muslims then where do they go to learn this most natural of biological acts? I had the customary four classes of sex education at the end of my first year of secondary school. The experience was a strange and hilarious one if anything. The girls making a show of being all-knowing and trying desparately to hide their purple faces: the boys making no bones about finding the whole thing one big laugh. On reflection I don't think that those four classes were educational at all -- the message being really 'better be SAFE than sorry!'. Despite their ineffectiveness they did leave an impression, as it was the only time (till I was much older and had the audacity to ask outright questions) that I had an explanation of some bsic information on the subject, and more important in how I as a woman function. Over the last four years or so my active involvement with the Muslim community has convinced me of the significance of this subject. It seems that most of our problems --like that of the society at large--, if closely analysed, relate to sex. At its most simplest we can say that amongst Muslim men and women there is a growing misunderstanding of each other. Essentially it is a misunderstanding based on the confusion of roles. While Islam has the perfect model on the relationship between a man and a woman, most muslim men cannot claim to be particularly concerned about the teaching of Islam on this subject. They, of course, would prefer the situation to go on the way it is. In the eyes of such people the role of Muslim women is one-dimensional. Women are good at cleaning the house, cooking the food and at motherhood. Anything else beyond this is unacceptable. Not surprisingly, Muslim women are fed up with this situation. Having little Islamic education, misguided by non-muslim marriage 'counsellors' and mesmerised by the illusion of western feminist ideas, many of our sisters are understandably over-reacting to the condition. But the more immediate sexual problem relates to our youth. Young Muslim men and women living in a society where sex is freely available both physically and theoretically are confused about their own sexuality. The community's attitude towards the subject inhibit them from asking genuine adolescent questions about their growing bodies and sexual development. Instead of providing the right perspective in an understanding and sympathetic manner parents and leaders make it seem like it's _shirk_ to even bring up the subject. With all avenues shut in their faces most muslim youths live in ignorance. Their naivety about sex and its legitimate role in society enhances thir insecurity and vulnerability. The insensitivity and callousness with which we treat this important subject is obnoxious. A member of a local mosque committee is, for instance, alleged to have replied when questioned on the subject that : 'my wife was never given any sex education and she is alright'. According to our informant the inevitable titter followed in a predominantly male audience. But to belittle and laugh off the subject doesn't answer the question : would she have benefited by being more aware of the subject ? One doesn't need to be a community worker to know that the rate of domestic violence, child abuse, sexual abuse, rape, single mothers, orphaned children, and sexually transmitted diseases is on the rise in the muslim community. At the moment we may not be the most sexually ill community. But for how long is the situation going to last ? An ostrich like posture is not the best of strategies. Burying our heads in the ground only means the problem would be there longer, getting only more acute and dangerous. I am not advocating that we open the floodgates and delve into sexual permissiveness. God forbid that. What I am asking initially is : what is wrong with talking about sex? 'Sex should be discussed within the family' is the usual comment made by our leaders / spokepersons. Fine, maybe such times existed. Today, the percentage of those parents who are not only prepared but able to discuss sex with their children comprise a small, almost negligible proportion. The irony is that sex is not taboo is Islam. The Holy Qur'an discusses matrimonial relationships, menstruation, procreation and many sexual related topics in a dignified and educative manner. A compilation of Hadith in with the Prophet (PBUH) discusses sexuality could fill several volumes. ***YET to date young muslims in Britain lack a source from which they can learn about the Islamic viewpoint of sex and sexuality that would at the same time take into consideration the problems and issues prevalent in the permissive and corrupting environment in which we live.*** It would only make sense if those engaged in the ferocious fight against sex education put aside some of their energies in coming up with a dynamic, viable and _'safer'_ alternative. Summayah Hassan is _Social Affairs Editor_, MuslimWise.