Unveiling The Mind
R400,00
Description
The basic thesis of Moosa’s intriguing monograph entails the belief that equality is an ideal anchored in the primary sources of Islam (see eg 24-26 and 101-106). However, Islamic law historically developed in a contrary direction through interpretation by an elite group of jurists in the preservation of male interests (see eg 8-10, 138 and 164-166; “The divine Qur’an lies buried underneath layers of interpretative classical jurisprudence” (168)). The author does not consider the door of reform and development to be closed (see especially 136-139 on ijtihad; cf Ramadan Radical Reform. Islamic Ethics and Liberation (2009)) and, in any event, “[i]t is to the broader ethical and egalitarian message and spirit implicit in Qur’anic norms that we must now return in order for women to have access to a more egalitarian Islamic law” (124) (cf Ramadan 72: “The point is to be faithful to the higher, universal objectives of scriptural sources and no longer only to the wording of a specific ruling”).




