THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS 24 Friday, July 2, 1982 The Arab Woman in Israel Is Changing Her Image By ROCHELLE FURSTENBERG Israel Govt. Press Service JERUSALEM — As women fight for their rights throughout the world, a little-known but important segment of the Middle East FOR THE FINEST p P H h° P WEDDINGS r BAR MITZVAS BERNIE WINER and ASSOCIATES 357-1010 population — Israeli Arab women — is showing a unique change of con- sciousness. We don't oppose our hus- bands, but we do use per- suasion to bring them over to our points of view," says one young woman reflecting upon the growing confi- dence and family power of the Israeli Arab woman. New patterns of behavior are beginning to appear among Israel's Arab citi- zens, about 15 percent of Is- rael's total population. Paradoxically, while some Arab women inside and out- side Israel's borders have been affected by Islamic fiindamentalism, more and more Arab women in Israel today are working outside the home and having smaller families. Many experts attribute this trend to higher eco- nomic expectations, changing work patterns that are less agricultural, and the influence of tele- vision. Others cite con- tact with the more wes- ternized Israeli Jewish woman, Israel's pro- gressive legislation and a highly developed trade union system. In the past, Israeli Arabs, guarding their cultural au- tonomy, were reluctant to effect social change for fear of losing their Arab iden- tity. Today, this is less the case. To be sure, a touch of religious fundamentalism has appeared in some Is- raeli Arab villages where, influenced by visits to Mecca and the Islamic=revi- val of religion, some young women have returned to the traditional veil. But this phenomenon seems neglig- ible in the face of the larger social and economic de- velopments that are taking place. On the whole, the Israeli Arab woman is seeking to adapt to these develop- ments, but within the framework of her religion and without endangering her traditions and sense of self. "We can't imitate. We have good traditions and we're proud of them. Otherwise we'll lose our head and our feet," says Enaem Zuabi of Nazareth, a woman from educated, upper-class Moslem Circles who has for many years worked for the social and educational advancement of Arab women. Her husband, a Labor Party representa- tive to the Knesset, has encouraged her in these ac- tivities, which involve or- ganizing classes for women, Channel 3 Productions, Inc. 21700 Northwestern, Suite 1060 Southfield, Michigan 48075 The Professional Video People 557-1090 111•11ANIIIIIMMMINIMMI■s. uad•• ■•■ 711.. ■••■••■••■•••■1110, OF 6 REA7ER.Derreorr #-Rde eS77M47ES 4 SERVICE Can Cut Your Air Conditioning Costs Up To 50% with Detroit Edison's New Interruptible Air Conditioning Metering 398-5100 Sid Feldman and Stuart Weisblatt •4 • not only in dressmaking and domestic science, but in mathematics and Arabic as well. Mrs. Zuabi attributes her success in advancing women's education to the fact that she is a traditional Moslem. "I practice the reli- gion," she explains. "I ob- serve the fasts. I have pro- ved that one can be religious and still progressive as far as women are concerned. Therefore people will listen to me." In recent years educated Arab women have begun to attain positions in the gov- ernments of some of the sur- rounding Arabs countries. But in most respects, the welfare of the Arab woman, and particularly her legal status, is better in Israel than in the Arab states. Israel is one of only three countries in the region — the other two are Turkey and Tunisia — which prohibit bigamy by Arab men and, per- haps even more impor- tant, where the hus- band's rights of "talaq" has been abolished. This means that it is illegal for a husband to send his wife away or divorce her without her consent; Is- raeli law demands the consent of both sides in a divorce. The law is im- portant not only in itself, but in the confidence it affords married women who previously lived in fear of rejection. Compulsory education is another factor in extending the options of the Arab woman. When Israel was established in 1948, only 15 percent of elementary - school - age Israeli Arab girls attended school; statis- tics in the late 1970s indi- cate that 89 percent attend elementary school, 97 per- cent in the cities. According to a 1975 UN- ESCO study in the Arab countries, 52 percent of the girls between the ages of 6 and 11 attended school in Egypt; 24 percent in Saudi Arabia; 77 percent in Syria; 85 percent in Lebanon and 71 percent in Jordan. Israel's impressive record in this area does not mean that no problems are encountered in the educa- tion of the Israeli Arab girl. The drop-out rate is consid- erable in junior high school and high school; often those who leave school come from families where the daugh- ter is needed to help at home or the father feels that he cannot afford to educate his daughters. Recently, girls have also been discontinu- ing their studies and going to work in factories in order to help the family finan- cially. In many ways, the Is- raeli Arab woman is in a critical stage of transi- tion. No longer protected in her father's home until marriage, and marrying at a later age than she did formerly, she needs moral and psychological direction for a society where men and women mingle freely. In an attempt to deal with creasing use of contracep- the problems that these tives, particularly among young women face, Mrs. married women in the city Zuabi hosts a thrice-weekly who work and want to raise radio program for the fam- their standard of living. ily, in which she discusses She has observed the social issues concerning the paradoxes of young women Israeli Arab today. from the strictly-religious Gynecologist Dr. Marie Druze villages who attend Haddad, the first Arab classes at night in Kiryat woman to become a doctor Shmona and the small in Israel, is also concerned group of Arab women who with answering the needs of have gone back to tradi- the new Israeli Arab tional dress but also go to woman. She has recently the university and, when written a book on adoles- married, practice family cence and sexual develop- planning. ment, the first of its kind to It is evident that the old be written in Israel in stereotypes are falling' Arabic. away. Designed for young people and their parents, her book attempts to ex- - plain in simplified language the biological processes, sexual diseases and medical and social considerations in using contraceptives. Coun- selling control of sexual havior, she also points out FRANKLIN the pitfalls of a permisgive SHOPPING PLAZA society and of radically NORTHWESTERN HWY. breaking with one's tradi- JUST -N. of 12 -MILE tions. 353-7733 The 40-year-old Dr. Haddad, who studied in Israel and did a doctorate OPEN 6 DAYS in France on medicines to MON. 9:3040 p.m. counteract sterility, is a THURS., FRI. TUES., THURS., model for young Arab 7 a.m.-10 p.m. women. 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