Pious Women Challenge Arrangements Anchored in the Dominancy of the Religious Discourse: Druze Women in Israel as a Case Study
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Theoretical Background
2.1. Druze Women in Israel: Gender, Religion, and Career
2.2. Agency, Gender, Religion, and Nationality
2.3. The Concept of “Choice” in Feminist Writing
3. Methodology
4. Findings
4.1. The Conflict between Gaining Academic Education and Belonging to the Religious Community
My mother is a religious woman, and she raised us the same way […], during my undergraduate degree, I was banned from the Hilwe, they cased a religious ban on me […] it was extremely tough […] at first, I considered dropping out, but it was my father who encouraged me […] I got used to it […] after graduating, I went for a graduate degree before rejoining the religious group […] [the whole time] I still wore the religious outfit. I never took off my Futa [head cover] […] I continued dressing exactly the same way because I believe in it […] once I finished school, I rejoined the religious group.
I belonged to the religious group since I was 14 […] my mom and dad are not religious […] my parents didn’t care I joined the religious group, but they did want me to get an academic degree […] I started studying in a University institution, and continued to visit the Hilwe and read the scriptures until a group of religious leaders published a pamphlet that was also read at our Hilwe: “religious women who study in the academia defy the religious rules, and so, they will be excluded from the Hilwe” […] […] I was banned from the Hilwe. It was a huge trauma […] the wife of the Sais [the religious leader] turned to me in the Hilwe, in front of all the women, and asked me to leave the Hilwe immediately […] there was turmoil […] I wrote to the Sais and his wife, I said I was studying in the university to get a degree and go back to work in my own community […] I didn’t wait for their response, and came back to the Hilwe. When the Sais’ wife noticed me, she turned to me and said: “We read your letter and we have been extremely moved, but we can’t change the rule”, and she asked me, again, to leave the Hilwe […]. They banned me from visiting the Hilwe and reading the scriptures […] but I continued to read them at home, together with other women who were banned due to their studies. The gathering and reading were a secret. Even our parents didn’t know.
When I started studying in the university, there was no problem. But after less than six months, the Sais of the Hilwe, on a Thursday prayer, called religious women who study in the academia to choose between their religious belonging and their studies […] I moved to another Hilwe, where the Sais accepts religious women who study […] My father didn’t like this transition. He started admonishing me, telling me: “You belong to this Hilwe since childhood, why are you moving all of a sudden?” I answered: “But the Sheikh keeps asking women who study to leave the Hilwe” […] I see no religious problem with my studies as a religious woman […] I know there is a problem of no gender separation, but in this day and age, where can you find gender separation? […] let’s take a walk: There is no separation in the village, there is no separation in the markets […] transferring to a different Hilwe was not easy. My whole family continue to pray in the Hilwe I left, and I don’t know the women in the new Hilwe […] I felt like a stranger who does not belong, but it was better than being excluded from religious practices.
My husband prays in one Hilwe, while I pray in another. I can’t accept the standards dictated by the Sais in my husband’s Hilwe […] he is strict in everything. The Hilwe I pray in is more moderate in some respects. It’s not like they are liberal in their interpretation […] but they give me the option of being a pious woman while also making my own choices as an educated woman […] I want to commit to the religious rules, but also realize myself in my career.
4.2. Bringing Two Worlds Together: Developing a Professional Identity While Maintaining Religious Identity
I made sure that my front wall was made of glass. Anyone who walks by can see who is sitting in my office and what I’m doing in the office […] on one hand, there is privacy, but on the other, I send a message of transparency […] the windows show to the outside world who is sitting in my office and what we are doing… The office’s special design was based on a fear that I will be caught somehow […] my reputation is important to me, my legitimacy in the eyes of the religious community and religious leaders, but I still want to continue practice [my profession…] when I accept a male client, there is no problem, because everyone on the street can see the inside of my office. This was also a solution to the Mahram issue […] we are transparent, there is nothing to hide. I am accepted and appreciated by our society, and particularly the Druze community.
In our job, we have morning and evening shifts. The evening shifts work with employees in the US, and so I had to stay there until midnight, which was difficult as a religious woman. I always had to make sure there were two other women in my shift, and find a Mahram who would take me home […] at first, my parents struggled to accept this reality […] but they realized I had no other option, I was out of job for a year […] the work manager, a Druze man, understands my concerns […] in some cases, I was the only woman in the shift, and so I asked to stop working and went home, I didn’t stay alone with men in the same space […] you know, in our society, one woman with a group of men is unacceptable, even if she is not religious, and of course, when she is.
I worked as a teacher and mentor for industry initiatives in the Technological academic center. Most of my students were male high schoolers. They approached me with various issues, particularly personal ones, which put me in an awkward position as a religious woman […] I had to meet with parents, particularly fathers. Before I became part of the religious group, I had no problem being with a father and his son in a room […] I would drive to work by car, because there is no suitable public transportation from my village to Haifa and the other village where I worked […]. After I decided to become religious, I quit my job as a teacher and mentor […] I moved to this village after being married, so I have no Mahram in the village besides my husband […] we live at the outskirts of the village, and I need a ride to get to school […] as a religious woman, I gave up my driving license. I don’t drive, and do not ride with a woman driver or a man that is not my Mahram […]. At first, I opened a daycare at home, and at a later stage, I hired a space in the middle of the village. Today I have 20 children aged 2–3, with two other caregivers… My paycheck is lower, but I am happy with my choice.
5. Conclusions and Discussion
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
1 | The term “Druze women” refers to Arab-Palestinian Druze women In Israel. While some Druze women define themselves as Israeli Druze, others would say they are Arabs or Druze-Arabs in Israel, and some identify as Palestinian Druze women in Israel. For the purpose of this study, I use the term “Druze women” as a general term to describe them. |
2 | The researcher has a similar article published in Hebrew (Barakat 2022). The two versions are different, in terms of structure and content. Particularly, this article differs from the similar Hebrew version, in theoretical, methodological, and discussion sections. |
3 | Section 37 of the Shar’i Druze personal status law allows women to file for divorce (Tafriq—تفريق) due to the following reasons: The man is diseased and cannot be cured (impotency or mental illness); betrayal; arrest; inability to provide; and absence. If the man rejects the request to end the relationship, after a defined timeframe, the Qadi can rule the marriage’s end. Furthermore, the division of inheritance between siblings must be equal, regardless of gender. |
4 | The Hilwe is a place of solitude, where the believer prays, alone with God. The house of prayer is thus modest, with no orna-ments. It usually comprises of a large hall divided in two—one section for women and the other for men, with a fabric partition between them. The floor is covered with carpets, mats and mattresses for the devotees, supplemented in recent years by chairs for those who are unwell and cannot seat on mattresses. The men pray, while the women listen to the prayers and read the scriptures silently. |
5 | Men and women who grew up in religious families are required, at the age of 15, to decide if they want to remain religious. In most cases, girls and boys who grow up in a religious family adopt a religious lifestyle and become officially religious themselves. Nevertheless, there are also cases where boys and girls who grew up in religious families decide at the age of 15 to not belong to the religious group. This means they stop performing religious practices in terms of modest clothing, reading the holy scriptures and visiting the Hilwe. |
6 | The Golan Heights is the hilly area overlooking the upper Jordan River valley to the west. The Golan Heights area was part of extreme southwestern Syria until 1967, when it came under Israeli military occupation, and in December 1981, Israel unilaterally annexed this territory. Unlike the Druze of northern Israel, who have largely accepted Israeli rule, the Druze living in the Golan Heights have continued to maintain close ties with Syria over the years. Out of the 21,000 Druze who live in four towns in the Israeli Golan, Interior Ministry data show that some 4300 are Israeli citizens, including some who inherited the status from their parents who previously accepted citizenship. |
7 | According to the Law of Security Service (1949), every citizen in Israel is required to enlist in the army, regardless of their religion, nation or race, including the Arab population. Today, most Arabs in Israel do not serve in the army at all. Druze and Circassians are the exception to the rule, as they still serve according to the law. |
8 | A religious ban is casted only on religious Druze. Excluded people are not allowed to visit the Hilwe (the Druze prayer house), attend public prayers or read the holy books. This ban also has social implications: in the case of death of an individual during their period of exclusion, they are relegated to a lower religious status, which, in turn, brings shame to the family within the community. Thus, according to the Druze faith, any Druze person (woman or man) who accepts a religious ban endangers his or her spiritual religious status. |
9 | During that time, only a few Druze women were integrated in the Israeli academia, as the choice to be religious prevented them from studying in higher education institutions outside of their villages without a Mahram. |
10 | Pious religious women cover their heads with a thick wight cloth, with no ornaments, which also covers their mouth, nose, hair, ears, neck, and some of the back. They wear ankle-length black or dark blue dresses or skirts, with no jewelry. The most pious women avoid wearing even wristwatches. In contrast, traditional religious women wear colorful clothes, jewelry, and a fancy transparent white headdress with embroidery. |
11 | Druze scriptures have never been interpreted in writing Arabic language, except for interpretations for specific epistles, written by the Sheikh al-Amir al-Said from Lebanon in the 16th century. It is important to note, there are publications in English, French, German, and other languages that try to interpret the Druze scriptures, but these interpretations are insignificant among the Druze society in the Middle East |
12 | The degree of religiosity is measured, among other things, according to the shape of the headdress. If the headdress covers the hair and the neck but does not cover the face, the woman is considered traditionally religious or almost pious. Pious women cover their heads, neck, and mouth. |
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Barakat, E.H. Pious Women Challenge Arrangements Anchored in the Dominancy of the Religious Discourse: Druze Women in Israel as a Case Study. Religions 2023, 14, 995. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel14080995
Barakat EH. Pious Women Challenge Arrangements Anchored in the Dominancy of the Religious Discourse: Druze Women in Israel as a Case Study. Religions. 2023; 14(8):995. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel14080995
Chicago/Turabian StyleBarakat, Ebtesam Hasan. 2023. "Pious Women Challenge Arrangements Anchored in the Dominancy of the Religious Discourse: Druze Women in Israel as a Case Study" Religions 14, no. 8: 995. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel14080995
APA StyleBarakat, E. H. (2023). Pious Women Challenge Arrangements Anchored in the Dominancy of the Religious Discourse: Druze Women in Israel as a Case Study. Religions, 14(8), 995. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel14080995