Challenging conventional notions about the place of women in Muslim societies, the Bihishti Zewar (Heavenly Ornaments) gives life to the themes of religious and social reform that have too often been treated in the abstract. This instructional guidebook, used by the world's largest population of Muslims, is a vital source for those interested in modern Indian social and intellectual history, in Islamic reform, and in conceptions of gender and women's roles.
The Bihishti Zewar was written in northern India in the early 1900s by a revered Muslim scholar and spiritual guide, Maulana Ashraf 'Ali Thanawi (1864-1943), to instruct Muslim girls and women in religious teachings, proper behavior, and prudent conduct of their everyday lives. In so doing, it sets out the core of a reformist version of Islam that has become increasingly prominent across Muslim societies during the past hundred years. Throughout the work, nothing is more striking than the extent to which the book takes women and men as essentially the same, in contrast to European works directed toward women at this time.
Author(s): Barbara Daly Metcalf; Ashraf Alī Thānvī
Publisher: University of California Press
Year: 1992
Preface
A Note on Translation
An Introduction to the Bihishti Zewar
1. Book One of the Bihishti Zewar
Translator's Introduction to Book One
The First Book of the Bihishti Zewar
2.Book Six of the Bihishti Zewar: A Discussion of Custom by Category
Translator's Introduction to Book Six
The Sixth Book of the Bihishti Zewar
3. Book Seven of the Bihishti Zewar: On Comportment and Character, Reward and Punishment
Translator's Introduction to Book Seven
The Seventh Book of the Bihishti Zewar
4. Book Eight of the Bihishti Zewar: Stories of Good Women
Translator's Introduction to Book Eight
The Eighth Book of the Bihishti Zewar
5. Book Ten of the Bihishti Zewar
Translator's Introduction to Book Ten
The Tenth Book of the Bihishti Zewar
Notes
Glossary
Index