Title: John Locke
1John Lockes Letter Concerning Toleration (1689)
- Locke's primary goal is to "distinguish exactly
the business of civil government from that of
religion" - government is instituted to promote external
interests, relating to life, liberty, and the
general welfare, while the church exists to
promote internal interests, i.e., salvation - the two serve separate functions, and so, must be
considered to be separate institutions
2In defense of religious diversity
- After a devastating period of religious wars,
Locke proposes religious toleration as the
answer - In 1689, it was Catholicism that was seen as a
threat to the English way of life - Locke argues that civil unrest results from
confrontations caused by govts attempt to
prevent different religions from being practiced,
rather than tolerating their proliferation
3Locke on the politicization of religion
- I esteem that toleration to be the chief
characteristic mark of the true Church. For
whatsoever some people boast of the antiquity of
places, names, or the pomp of their outward
worship others, of the reformation of their
discipline all, of the orthodoxy of their
faithfor e/o is orthodox to himselfthese
things, and all others of this nature, are much
rather marks of men striving for power and empire
over one another than of the Church of Christ. - If like the Captain of our salvation, they
sincerely desired the good of souls, they would
tread in the steps and follow the perfect example
of that Prince of Peace, who sent out His
soldiersnot armed with the sword, or other
instruments of force, but prepared with the
Gospel of peace and with the exemplary holiness
of their conversation. This was His method. - politicization of religion the
instrumentalization, or use, of religion and
religious appeals in the political sphere, in
struggles over political power - Locke says the distinctive feature of methods
used in the political sphere is their ultimate
reliance on force or coercion, which make them
inappropriate in the realm of religion, which is
about internal interests and ones personal
relationship to God
4Oppression, not religion, causes unrest
- I know that seditions are very frequently
raised upon pretence of religion, but it is as
true that for religion subjects are frequently
ill treated, and live miserably. Believe me, the
stirs that are made proceed not from any peculiar
temper of this or that church or religious
society, but from the common disposition of all
mankind, who when they groan under any heavy
burthen endeavour naturally to shake off the yoke
that galls their necks
5"Obedience versus Autonomy Women and
Fundamentalism in Iran and Pakistan"
- Shahla Haeri, Ch. 45,
- pp. 370-378.
6Secularism, Fundamentalism, Islamism
- secularism doctrine that government or other
entities should exist separately from religion
and/or religious beliefs - secularization transformation of society from
close identification with religious values and
institutions toward non-religious values and
secular institutions - fundamentalism belief in a strict adherence to a
set of basic principles (often religious in
nature) - It typically emerges in response to
modernity/modernization and the various social
processes associated with it, e.g.,
secularization, urbanization, marketization and
globalization - Islamism a set of beliefs that hold that Islam
is not only a religion but also a political
system - also referred to as "political Islam"
7Women in context of the dialectical relationship
b/w secular reformers of 50s-60s Islamic
fundamentalism of 70s-80s in Iran/Pakistan
- In 50s 60s Muslim reformers adopted elements of
Western law and applied them within Islamic
framework - Fundamentalists contested legitimacy of these
reforms, claiming them to be inspired (or
imposed) by the West rather than guided by
Islamic law - In 80s 90s, Islamic societies were affected by
movements advocating return to Islamic ideals,
particularly in family relations, marriage, and
divorce - Tension between secularist govt and
fundamentalists has mirrored the alienation from
and disillusionment w/ ideals and promises of
"modernity" in many Muslim societies
8Debates b/w fundamentalists and Iranian /
Pakistani urban middle class women center on the
concepts of obedience autonomy
- Both obedience autonomy relate to the
reciprocal rights of spouses deriving from the
contractual form marriage in Islam - Whereas secularists try to break through and
reinterpret the predetermined boundaries of the
marriage contract, fundamentalists want to return
to the literal meaning of the contract
9Pakistan vs Iran
- Pakistan predominantly Sunni, within the South
Asian cultural sphere, fundamentalists are only
part of the ruling coalition and must compete for
power with other parties and interest groups - Iran predominantly a Shi'ite society, shares the
cultural area of the Middle East, fundamentalists
control the govt
10Fundamentalism Consolidated the Case of Iran
- 1936 Unveiling Act and 1967 Family Protection Law
granted women some autonomy and rights in the
family - Wearing veil in public became optional in 1941
111970s brought upheaval, restlessness, sense of
moral chaos
- The 1970s economic boom (as price of oil
increased) brought more destruction than
development, widening the gap between haves and
have-nots - sense of moral chaos, esp in urban areas
- "An overwhelming majority of Iranians took a
collective plunge into an idealized past, hoping
to retrieve what they could agree on, namely, an
Islamic identity" (p. 375)
12Women in Irans Islamic Revolution
- Women donned the veil in anti-Shah protests in
1978-79, many for non-religious reasons - for symbolic reasons, as protest against its
forced removal in 30s - for pragmatic reasons, fearing recognition by the
Shah's secret police - Unintended consequence of women's success as
revolutionaries heightened awareness and
increased expectations of small but vocal
segments of the urban female population - ? tension between fundamentalist regime women
who brought it to power
13Veiling
- Veiling in the Islamic world is not monolithic
and uniform, even within individual Islamic
societies - Veiling is a multifaceted and polysemic
institution, with a multiplicity of forms and
meanings, both domestically and internationally - polysemic having a number of meanings,
interpretations
14Despite the Islamic regime's attempt at
uniformity, many Iranian women assert their
"individuality" by improvising on theme of
Islamic veiling
- Some have reverted to the traditional long black
veil (chador) so that they can dress any way they
like underneath - Others use colorful scarves interwoven with gold
and silver threads - Some wrap scarves differently
- Others show strands of highlighted hair
- ? Issue in Iran is no longer to veil or not to
veil, but how to veil, to "veil well" or "veil
bad - "Although the veil itself is not subject to
negotiation, what emerges from this continuous
and subtle subversion of authority is a public
and highly politicized debate about the
particular way the veil is worn, the specific
colors chosen, or the arena within which women
can appear and work" (p. 378)