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Women as Architects of Peace: Reclaiming Inclusion in Islamic Society

Insha Warsi by Insha Warsi
June 29, 2026
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India’s social fabric has always been shaped by diversity, coexistence, and collective participation. Yet in times marked by communal anxieties and emotional fragmentation, one crucial voice often remains unheard in conversations surrounding peace and policy making i.e. the voice of women. Across communities, women continue to act as silent negotiators of harmony within families and neighbourhoods, but their role in formal decision-making spaces remains deeply limited.

Within Muslim societies, this exclusion is frequently justified in the name of tradition, even though Islamic history itself tells a remarkably different story. Islam did not imagine women as passive observers of society; it acknowledged them as contributors to knowledge, consultation, trade, welfare, and community leadership. The earliest Islamic society included women whose wisdom influenced political decisions, social reforms, and intellectual life. Their examples challenge the modern assumption that women’s participation in public affairs is somehow incompatible with faith, in contemporary India, where the need for dialogue and social cohesion has become more urgent than ever, Muslim women can emerge as powerful agents of peace building and policy reform. Their inclusion is not merely about representation: it is about strengthening the moral and democratic foundations of society itself.

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The foundations of women’s participation in Islamic society can be traced back to the very beginning of Islam. Khadija bint Khuwayiid was not only a successful entrepreneur but also one of the strongest pillars supporting the early Muslim community. Her wisdom, financial independence, and emotional resilience played a decisive role during a period of immense uncertainty and persecution. Her life remains a reminder that leadership and influence were never denied to women in Islam.

Similarly, Aisha bint Abu Bakr emerged as one of the greatest intellectual figures in Islamic history. Scholars, jurists, and companions sought her guidance on matters of law, governance, and faith. Thousands of narrations and legal interpretations were preserved through her scholarship. Her contribution demonstrates that Muslim women historically occupied spaces of intellectual authority and public respect.

History also remembers Fatima al-Fihriya, who founded one of the world’s oldest universities. Her contribution symbolizes the deep intellectual and civilizational role Muslim women once played in shaping educational and social institutions.

Yet despite this rich legacy, many Muslim societies today continue to confine women’s participation in symbolic spaces. In India too, Muslim women are often visible during moments of social crisis but absent from the platforms where decisions were made. Whether in local community committees, educational institutions, social organizations, or peace-building initiatives, their representation remains disproportionately low.

This exclusion weakens society because women experience social realities differently and often more intimately. They witness the effects of unemployment, communal tension, educational backwardness, online radicalization, and domestic instability within homes long before these issues become public debates. Their lived experiences provide insights that are essential for meaningful policymaking and conflict resolution.

Across India, countless Muslim women are already working as educators, counsellors, social workers, legal activists, and voices for interfaith harmony. In many neighbourhoods affected by mistrust and polarization, women quietly prevent hatred from entering households. They teach children empathy, preserve cultural coexistence, and often become emotional anchors during periods of unrest. Their contribution to peace building may not always appear on television debates or political platforms, but it remains deeply significant.

At a time when social media misinformation and divisive narratives are influencing younger generations, women’s inclusion in leadership spaces becomes even more necessary. Mothers, teachers, and community mentors play a decisive role in shaping moral consciousness and social attitudes. Excluding women from policy discussions therefore means excluding one of society’s strongest resources for preventing conflict and nurturing dialogue.

Importantly, empowering women within Muslim society should not be misunderstood as abandoning tradition or imitating external models. Rather, it reflects a return to Islam’s original principles of consultation, justice, dignity, and collective responsibility. The Quran repeatedly emphasizes moral accountability and intellectual reflection for both men and women. Restricting women from participating in public life is more often a product of patriarchal culture than of religious teaching.

India’s democratic framework further strengthens the case for women’s inclusion. A diverse nation cannot progress when half of its voices remain unheard. Sustainable peace requires participation from all sections of society, especially from those who nurture communities at the grassroots level. Muslim women possess the potential to become bridges between communities, generations, and institutions but only if society is willing to recognize and trust their leadership.

In contemporary India, where social harmony faces increasing challenges, their participation has become more important than ever. Women must not remain confined to symbolic roles while crucial decisions about education, welfare, peace, and community reform are made without them. They are not merely beneficiaries of change; they are capable of leading it.

True peace is not built, through exclusion or silence. It emerges when societies create space for dialogue, empathy, and shared responsibility. By including Muslim women in policy and peace-building frameworks, India would not only revive an important Islamic legacy but also strengthen its own democratic and pluralistic spirit.

Autor is a journalism student, Jamia Millia Islamia.

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