Aisha Taymur
Aisha Taymur | |
---|---|
Born | |
Nationality | Egyptian |
Occupation(s) | activist, writer |
Aisha E'ismat Taymur (
In the assessment of Mervat Fayez Hatem,
Taymur used her work of fiction, social commentary and poetry to expand the definition of the nation-building process to include different social classes, ethnic groups and women of different generations and nationalisties. In this sincere effort, she was able to transform her very narrow social class rootes putting them into the service of the larger community. As such, she deserved, not just her poetry, the title of the "Finest of Her Class", which was one translation of the title of her poetry, Hilyat al-Tiraz.[3]
Personal life
Early life
Although Taymur was born into an Egyptian Turco-Kurdish royal family[4] originally from Iraqi Kurdistan, she worked diligently for those who did not have a voice. Her passion for women's rights in Egypt is why she is recognized as a pioneer in her field and culture.[5]
Taymur was the daughter of Isma'il Taymur, a member of the Royal Turkish entourage.[6] Taymur's mother was Circassian and a freed slave.[5] Her father provided Taymur with an education and when he died she assumed the education of her brother, Ahmed Pasha Taymur. At age 14, Taymur married and moved to Istanbul.[7]
Education
Against Taymur's mother's attempts to teach her embroidery, Taymur's father educated her in the Quran, Islamic Jurisprudence, Arabic, Turkish, and Persian. Her father also taught her composition, where she began her literary career with poetry in all three of her learned languages. Taymur was dedicated to education but because of gender at time in Egypt, she was restricted to only study in her home.[8] Taymur voiced her anger with the segregation in poems when only 13. At age 14 she gave up her studies and writing when she married Mahmud Bey al-Islambuli. After the death of her daughter, father and husband, she returned to Egypt where she studied with female tutors on the subject of poetic composition.[9]
Family
Taymur was born to a literary family; her brother
The Taymur's believed Persian is the language of literature and refinement, whereas the Arabic language is used for religion and the people.[citation needed]
Taymur's father always wanted to provide his daughter with adequate education.[1] Taymur got married in 1854 when she was 14 to Mahmud Bey al-Islambuli, a Turkish notable, and left with her husband to Istanbul. In 1873, Taymur's daughter, Tawhida, died from an unknown illness.[8] Her father died in 1882, followed closely by the death of her husband in 1885, which prompted her to return to Egypt where she resumed her writing. Her poems mourning her daughter are considered the best in that genre in modern times.[1]
Activism
After the death of her husband and daughter, Taymur started on her writings advocating for women's rights. Her works came out at the time of a socioeconomic transformation of Egypt where women realized they were being deprived of the rights Islam gave them. Taymur is referenced as the "mother of Egyptian feminism."[10]
She worked with other female intellectuals and activists to campaign for education, do charitable work, and challenge colonialism. This was the start of early growth for Egyptian feminism.[11]
Writing
Taymur wrote
In her writing, Taymur illustrated women's rights in Islam through allegorical narrative. Taymur made use of the word insan, meaning human being in Arabic, rather than using man. Taymur did this so that readers would consider her argument as a human being, and not based on her sex.[5]
Taymur used imagery of female solitude to convey visibility of the life of a woman in Egypt. This offered readers a glimpse into the life of Muslim women.[2]
Because Taymur was considered an elite Muslim in her society, she focused on going against her own status as a woman in a changing political and socioeconomic society throughout her writing.[2]
Works
- Hilyat al-tiraz [Decorative Embroidery] (in Arabic). Cairo. 1884.
{{cite book}}
: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link) Poetry. - Nata'ij al-ahwal fi-l-aqwal wa-al-af'al [The Consequences of Circumstances in Words and Deeds] (in Arabic). Cairo. 1887.
{{cite book}}
: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link) - Mir'at al-ta'ammul fi-l-umur [The Mirror of Contemplation] (in Arabic). Cairo. 1892.
{{cite book}}
: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link) Essay.
References
- ^ a b c d Aisha Taymur Archived 2012-03-21 at the Wayback Machine at Egyptian State Information Service
- ^ S2CID 55405912.
- ^ a b Mervat Fayez Hatem, Literature, gender, and nation-building in nineteenth-century Egypt: the life and works of ʻAʼisha Taymur, Literatures and cultures of the Islamic world (Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan, 2011), p. 8.
- ISBN 978-0-19-934979-1. Retrieved 2021-05-21.
- ^ S2CID 144932060.
- ISBN 978-1-55587-229-8.
Pioneer woman poet, writer, and feminist. Born in Bab al-Khalq, Cairo, she was the daughter of Isma'il Taymur, a Turkish-born official in Muhammad Ali's European chancery, and an upper-class Circassian women who tried to quash Aish'a literary leanings.
- ^ "Aisha Taymur". Egyptian State Information Service. Archived from the original on 2012-03-21.
- ^ a b c Lang, Kate (2002). "Taymuriyya, 'A'isha 'Ismat Al- (1840–1902)". Women in World History: A Biographical Encyclopedia. Gale Research. via "Taymuriyya, 'A'isha 'Ismat al- (1840–1902)". Encyclopedia.com. Retrieved 2018-04-26.
- ^ Dahduli, Tasneem. "Aisha Taymur- Ottoman Era Poet and Feminist". Mosaic of Muslim Women. Archived from the original on 2018-05-05. Retrieved 2018-04-16.
- ^ Lang, Kate (2002). "Taymuriyya, 'A'isha 'Ismat Al- (1840–1902)". Women in World History: A Biographical Encyclopedia. Gale Research. via "Taymuriyya, 'A'isha 'Ismat al- (1840–1902)". Encyclopedia.com. Retrieved 2018-04-26.
- ^ Dahduli, Tasneem. "Aisha Taymur- Ottoman Era Poet and Feminist". Mosaic of Muslim Women. Archived from the original on 2018-05-05. Retrieved 2018-04-16.
- Aisha 'Esmat al-Taymuriyya Writers from Egypt. Accessed September 2007
- Gender and politics Wanda C. Krause, Mideast & N. Africa Encyclopedia. Accessed September 2007