Tahar Haddad’s Feminist Thought: Between Tradition and Modernity
Identificadores
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/10481/73982Metadata
Show full item recordAuthor
Hernández Justo, TatianaMateria
Protectorado francés en Túnez feminismo árabe Ley islámica Reformismo islámico
Date
2021Sponsorship
FPU16/00395Abstract
Often regarded as the father of Tunisian feminist thought, Tahar Haddad was a
Muslim reformer during the French protectorate in Tunisia. His most famous work, Imraʾatunā
fī-l-sharīʿa wa-l-mujtamaʿ, published in 1930, encompasses most of his thoughts on gender
roles and greatly impacted his society, to the point that it is rumored to have been one
of the sources of inspiration for the drafting of the Tunisian Law of Personal Status (1956).
The book was the first of its kind to express the need for inheritance rights to be the same
regardless of the receiver’s gender, as well as one of the first ones to push for the abolition of
polygyny and repudiation. It was also notable for stating the importance of national education,
including physical education, and rallying to make it extensible to female students. As
such, Haddad received much criticism, particularly from conservatives who thought he had
deviated from the Islamic law, despite the book making continuous references to the Qurʾan
and Sunna. As much as it was a revolutionary work, some of the author’s points of view
still perpetuate certain gender stereotypes and norms regarding women. This paper aims to
revisit the book, pointing out its key elements in the fight for gender equality as well as its
strengths and weaknesses.