Why does every social stigma end up on a woman’s shoulders?
There is an old habit in our society that survives every debate, every reform, and every generation. It is so deeply woven into everyday life that many people no longer notice it. Yet once we see it, we begin to find it everywhere. Consider a typical case, when a boy leaves home in the morning and returns late in the evening. Someone asks where he was. Someone else shrugs. The matter ends there. If a girl does the same. Now the questions are different. Where was she? With whom? Why so late? Who saw her? Who knows the family? Before long, the discussion is no longer about the girl. It is about her parents, her upbringing, her household, and inevitably, the family’s honor.
One cannot help wondering why our social imagination works this way. Why does the behavior of a son belong to him alone, while the behavior of a daughter appears to belong to an entire family? Most people have witnessed this double standard. Some have suffered because of it. Others, knowingly or unknowingly, help keep it alive.
The irony is impossible to miss. We often describe women in lofty terms. They are called the backbone of the family, the keepers of tradition, the first teachers of society. Poetry celebrates them. Speeches praise them. Yet when it comes to trust, freedom, and the benefit of doubt, the same society suddenly becomes hesitant.
A young man’s mistakes are usually treated as mistakes. A young woman’s mistakes, sometimes even her imagined mistakes, are treated as evidence. The difference may appear small, but it shapes lives.I have often felt that our neighborhoods possess a strange talent. They can construct a story from almost nothing. A delayed return home. A brief conversation. A chance encounter in a market. A sighting from a distance. These fragments are collected, rearranged, and presented as fact.
Rumor has always travelled faster than truth. In the age of smart phones, it moves even faster. The tragedy is that suspicion frequently arrives before concern. Instead of asking whether a girl is safe, people begin asking whether she has done something wrong. The judgment often comes before the information.
What makes this more troubling is that such attitudes are often defended in the language of morality and honor. The argument is familiar. Families must protect their reputation. Communities must safeguard their values.But whose reputation? And whose burden?Why does honor appear to rest so heavily on the shoulders of women?
If honor truly belongs to a family, then surely sons and daughters should carry equal responsibility for preserving it. Yet social reality suggests otherwise.For generations, many communities have tied family reputation to the conduct of women. Over time, this became accepted as common sense. Few stopped to ask whether it was fair. Fewer still asked whether it was religiously justified.
This is where an important distinction must be made. Culture and religion are not always the same thing. In public discussions, the two are often blended together until it becomes difficult to tell where one ends and the other begins. Customs inherited from previous generations are sometimes treated as religious obligations even when they are not.
“Traditions must be critically examined by every generation to ensure they promote justice rather than mask inequality. A society’s true measure lies in fairness, not superficial notions of honor. Specifically, women must be viewed as individual human beings entitled to equal dignity and freedom, rather than as symbols carrying a family’s reputation—a double standard that wrongly substitutes inequality for honor.”
Islam’s position on individual responsibility is remarkably clear. The Quran repeatedly teaches that no person carries the burden of another. Every individual is accountable for his or her own actions. A son answers for himself. A daughter answers for herself. The principle is simple and profound. Responsibility is personal.
The Quran also warns against suspicion and careless accusations. It discourages believers from rushing to conclusions about one another. The famous episode involving Aisha (RA), who was subjected to false allegations, remains one of the strongest reminders of the damage that rumors can cause. The Quran did not endorse gossip. It condemned it.
Yet despite these teachings, many societies including Muslims continue to judge women more harshly than men. The explanation lies less in religion than in social habits accumulated over centuries. Somewhere along the way, protecting women became confused with controlling them. Concern became surveillance. Guidance became restriction. Family honor became tied almost exclusively to female conduct.
The consequences are visible all around us. Many girls grow up knowing that they are being watched differently from their brothers. They understand that ordinary actions may be interpreted differently when performed by them. They learn that a mistake can become a label, and a rumor can become a reputation.
This does not merely affect personal freedom. It shapes confidence, ambition, and participation in public life. Decisions about education, work, travel, and friendships are often influenced by a single question, What will people say?That question has governed countless lives.It has prevented opportunities from being taken, talents from being developed, and dreams from being pursued. Not because those choices were wrong, but because someone somewhere might talk.A society cannot progress while allowing gossip to exercise more authority than reason. Nor can it claim to value justice while applying different standards to different gender.
The issue is not whether families should care about values. Of course they should. Every society depends upon responsibility, integrity, and good character. The issue is whether those values are applied fairly. A moral principle that applies only to daughters is not really a moral principle. It is a social preference dressed up as morality.
Perhaps the time has come to rethink some of the assumptions we inherited without questioning. Traditions deserve respect, but respect does not mean immunity from examination. Every generation has the right, and indeed the responsibility, to ask whether inherited practices serve justice or undermine it.At the end of the day, the measure of a society is not how fiercely it speaks about honor. It is how fairly it treats its people.
The girl who returns home late is not a symbol. She is not a vessel carrying the reputation of an entire clan. She is a human being, entitled to the same dignity, fairness, and presumption of innocence that society readily grants to boys. Until we accept that simple truth, women will continue to carry burdens that were never meant to be theirs. And we will continue to mistake inequality for honor.
(The author is a teacher and a researcher based in Gowhar Pora Chadoora of Central Kashmir’s Budgam district. The views, opinions and conclusions expressed in this article are those of the author and aren’t necessarily in accord with the views of “Kashmir Horizon”)
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