Friendships, Fidelities and Sufi Imaginaries: Theorizing Islamic Feminism

Author:

Shaikh Sa’diyya1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department for the Study of Religions, University of Cape Town, Cape Town 7700, South Africa

Abstract

This article theorizes Islamic feminism as a form of ‘friendship with/in tradition’, drawing creatively on Sufism. It unpacks these feminist friendships as forms of ‘radical, critical fidelity’ which includes commitments and loyalties to tradition while simultaneously engaging critically with sexism, patriarchy, and homophobia. Core epistemological and ethical concerns are explored, including the nature of relationships to tradition; analytical methods for engaging with Muslim tradition from a gendered lens; religious authority and authoritarianism; and most significantly, engaging with emancipatory horizons of imagination that are attentive to the contemporary axes of power and privilege. The paper turns to rethinking approaches to hierarchy and possibilities for abuse, focusing on the shaykh–murīd and broader teacher–student relationships. It presents a nuanced approach to engaging with hierarchies as a serious analytical category that requires attention. Positing fluidity, transparency, and accountability as central to cultivating responsible hierarchical practices, the article suggests that friendship as a modality of relationships can contribute to such positive transformations. This article, emerging from a project on Muslim feminist ethics, presents creative theorizations of Islamic feminism as a liberatory project of human and divine friendships, inspired by Sufi ideas of walāya.

Funder

National Research Foundation of South Africa

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

Religious studies

Reference56 articles.

1. Abbas, Shemeem Burney (2002). The Female Voice in Sufi Ritual: Devotional Practices of Pakistan and India, University of Texas Press.

2. Ackermann, Denise (2003). After the Locusts: Letter from a Landscape of Faith, David Phillips Publishers.

3. Addas, Claude (1993). Quest for the Red Sulphur: The Life of Ibn ʿArabī, Islamic Texts Society.

4. Islamic Feminism: Transnational and national reflections;Approaching Religion,2014

5. Ayubi, Zahra (2019). Gendered Morality: Classical Islamic Ethics of the Self, Family, and Society, Columbia University Press.

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