Qasim Amin (1863-1908) was an Egyptian jurist, one of the founders of the Egyptian National Movement and Cairo University. He is perhaps most noted as an early advocate of women's rights in Islamic society.
Amin pointed out the plight of aristocratic Egyptian women who could be kept as a "prisoner in her own house and worse off than a slave". Amin criticised this from a basis of Islamic scholarship and said that women such as these could only develop to the stage where they would be competent to bring up the nation's children if they were freed from the seclusion which was forced on them by "the man's decision to imprison his wife" and given the chance to become educated.
Women's rights activists | Jurists | 1863 births | 1910 deaths | Egyptian feminists | Islamic feminists
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"Qasim Amin".
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