"A lot of things need to change," she said.
"Women in Gaza and the West Bank should be given complete rights. Some women
and girls are made to marry someone they don't want to marry. This is not in
our religion, it's our tradition. In our religion, a woman has a right to
choose," Naeem said.
'Struggle'
"As a woman and an MP, there are areas I want to concentrate on but that does
not mean we have forgotten our struggle for our homeland, and preparing our
children to die when the homeland calls for it," she said.
Naeem, a 37-year-old social worker at the Islamic University in Gaza City and a
mother of four, is one of six women elected to parliament on the Hamas ticket
in the Islamist party's landslide victory last month. They were due to be sworn
in when the new parliament opened yesterday.
Women played a crucial role in getting out the vote for Hamas, knocking on
doors and often getting a sympathetic hearing. Hamas's strategy to build
political support through its social programmes -- the provision of health
clinics, nurseries and food for the poor -- sealed the loyalty of many
Palestinian women.
"Women are closer to the problems of the society," said Naeem.
"They are the ones who feel the unemployment. They are the ones who have to
look after the children when their husbands are in prison. They feel well
treated by Hamas institutions. Now these women are looking to us, the women in
parliament, to change other things," she said.
Shortly before the election, Hamas launched a women's armed wing and pictured
members brandishing guns and rocket-propelled grenades in its campaign posters.
But the women MPs say their priority is reform, not armed struggle.
Jamila Shanti, a philosophy professor at the Islamic University who headed the
list of Hamas's women candidates, says the female activists agree on the need
to tackle discrimination.
"Our first job is to correct this because this is not Islam," she said. "We are
going to show that women are not secondary, they are equal to men.
Discrimination is not from Islam, it is from tradition. It may not be easy. Men
may not agree," Shanti said.
Attempts in the last parliament to change laws that impose stiff punishments on
women who commit adultery while going easy on men and provide relatively light
sentences for "honor killings" of women who are deemed to have disgraced the
family, ran into the sand amid resistance from older secular MPs.
Islah Jad, a lecturer in women's studies at Birzeit University, says the party
is at odds with itself over women's rights.
"In 1999, they admitted for the first time that women are oppressed and they
have a cause," Jad said.
"The second step is to attempt to formulate a kind of vision but it's very
unstable. When family law was discussed they approved some reforms: that the
age of marriage was 18 and that a woman can put any condition she wants in the
marriage contract," she said.
'Shariah' law
"But when it came to the penal code and the punishment for adultery, [the late
Hamas spiritual leader] Sheikh Yassin said it was based on Shariah law and
shouldn't be touched," she said.
Many male leaders of Hamas favour the extension of Shariah to cover civil as
well as criminal codes.
Some have said they want to segregate schools, others favour a ban on the sale
of alcohol. They also want to see women dress in accordance with Islam.
Naeem says changes should come only after Hamas has taken time to explain the
benefits of religious law. "Our Shariah is great if it's practised according to
its values. It's not like they say about only cutting off hands," she said.
"It's not going to be forceful but anybody who believes in the religion has to
be educated in it. At the end, what matters is fighting corruption, not what
people wear," Naeem said.
The Guardian