Women in Islam


Posted by: TheMajlis

Hadhrat Aishah Siddiqah (radhiyallahu anha) nllam) narrates

“Verily, Rasulullah (sallallahu alayhi wasallam) cursed the rajlah among women.” (Abu Dawood)

The term rajlah is the feminine of rajul which means ‘a man’.Thus , rajlah means ‘a man-woman’ or a defeminized woman or a masculinized woman. Hadhrat Aishah (radhiyallahu anha) said that such women were cursed by Rasulullah (sallallahu alayhi wasallam). Women who emulate men in their appearance, dress, attitudes, etc., are termed rajlah and the la’nat (curse) of Allah, His Rasool and the Malaaikah perpetually settle on these feminized or masculinized females.

A salient feature of such women is that they vie with males in fields which Allah Ta’ala has ordained exclusively or primarily for men. They seek leadership and exposure. They love public platforms and always crave to exhibit themselves in public. They are generally raucous, loud and immodest. They detest domestic work and the home-role which Allah Ta’ala has made Waajib for them.

They display the tendencies of lesbians and many of them are in fact lesbians or female homosexuals. They insist to be in the street and out of the home in conflict with Allah’s prohibition:

“And remain (glued) inside your homes, and do not make an exhibition of yourselves like the exhibition (of the women of) Jahiliyyah.” (Qur’aan)

These specimens of humanity cursed by Rasulullah (sallallahu alayhi wasallam) have taken over from the kuffaar the slogan and concept of ‘the equality of sexes’, but there is no such stupid idea in Islam. While these defeminized women scream the slogan of ‘equality of sexes’, the Qur’aan explicitly and categorically affirms the superior rank of men and that males are the rulers of women.

The masculinized women try to push themselves into the forefront of spheres belonging to males inspite of Rasulullah’s order:

“Put them (women) behind just as Allah has put them behind.” 

Women of this kind—masculinized women, defeminized women, women with lesbian tendencies—who crave to stand shoulder to shoulder with men in the public howling slogans, form dangerous marriage partners. Men of Deeni concious should be careful when choosing a marriage partner. It is necessary to watch out for these accursed tendencies and attributes before plunging into marriage.

Marriage with masculinized women can last only if the husband buckles and accept the role of a dayyooth (cuckold). Under the domination of the masculinized woman, a man will have to agree to hand over his pants to the ‘he-her’- to the rajlah mal-oonah (the accursed male-woman). All women who compete with men and endeavour to be in public at the helm are women of this ilk.

The ideal woman of the Qur’aan and Islam is described by the Qur’aan Majeed in the following glowing terms: “(Such women who are) chaste,Simple and believing..”

The attributes of uprighteous Muslim females are Imaan, chastity and simplicity. They are not like the accursed masculinized or defeminized women who love public platforms and who detest the home-role for which Allah Ta’ala has created them. When a woman detests her natural divinely ordained role, then she must necessarily be unnatural and abnormal. Since she imitates and emulates men of her own free accord, Rasulullah (sallallahu alayhi wasallam) cursed her. Such women need to reflect and understand the umbrella of divine la’nat which covers them.

Do women get rewarded for covering themselves


Question:
Do women get rewarded for covering them selves and being modest. I always read and hear about men being rewarded in Jannah with houris for lowering their gazes but nothing about the rewards for women. As you may know in a time like today and living in the west it is sometimes difficult to go out wearing long loose clothes such as the jilbaab because not many people dress like this and they create impressions towards non-muslims that these muslim women must be oppressed. At educational institutions it is difficult to avoid talking to ghair mehrams at times. What are the rewards for a women in Jannah for staying away from such deeds that are haram.
Can a person say that there is not a 100% guarantee that each and every hadith is correct because my friend says male Jurists put the hadiths together it is so likely they may have easily been influences by their masculine nature and may have included things they like and leave out things they done like. All humans make mistakes even Adam PBUH made a mistake from the beginning.
For example no where in the Quran does it say that women wont have additional companions in heavan. The hadith only talk about men and exaggerate them with additional companions and sex. Also a scholar told me a houris is something that is pleasing to the eye and in the Quran there is no connotation of sex and houris. Also no where is it made clear in the Quran whether that Houris are not male.

Anwser:In the name of Allah, Most Gracious, Most Merciful

Assalaamu `alaykum waRahmatullahi Wabarakatuh

1. As for your question “Do women get rewarded for covering themselves and being modest?”, consider the following verses of the Holy Quran:

Translation:

So their Lord accepted their prayer: That I will not waste the work of a worker among you, whether male or female (Quran 3:195)

If any do deeds of righteousness,- be they male or female – and have faith, they will enter Heaven, and not the least injustice will be done to them. (Quran 4:124)

Whoever does good whether male or female and he is a believer, We will most certainly make him live a happy life, and We will most certainly give them their reward for the best of what they did. (Quran 16:97)

Whoever does an evil, he shall not be recompensed (with aught) but the like of it, and whoever does good, whether male or female, and he is a believer, these shall enter the garden, in which they shall be given sustenance without measure. (Quran 40:40)

Surely Allah does not do injustice to the weight of an atom, and if it is a good deed He multiplies it and gives from Himself a great reward. (Quran 4:40)

The gist of the verses above is that a believer – whether male or female — who does acts of righteousness (including being modest and covering herself from ghair mahram men), will be recompensed in the following ways:

Her effort will not go to waste (i.e. she will be rewarded for it)
In this world, she will have a good life – a fulfilling, satisfying and happy life
The reward she will get in the hereafter will be in accordance with the best of what she used to do.
She will have great rewards even for small deeds because Allah – out of His generosity – multiplies the reward of even small deeds.
She will enter the glorious paradise.
In paradise she will be given sustenance without any limitations.
No injustice will be done to her in the hereafter

The above should dispel all doubts of whether a woman will be rewarded or not for observing modesty and the rules of hijaab — if one considers these to be acts of righteousness (and of course they are acts of righteousness!). Modesty and observing hijaab from ghair mahram men are a direct means of guarding ones chastity. Guarding ones chastity is something that is greatly desired and aimed by the Shariah. The Quran mentions that the reward of guarding ones chastity is forgiveness of sins and ‘a mighty reward’. What reward can be mightier than what Allah, the Almighty, Himself has called mighty! The verse in reference:

Translation:

Surely the men who submit to Allah and the women who submit to Allah, and the believing men and the believing women, and the obeying men and the obeying women, and the truthful men and the truthful women, and the patient men and the patient women and the humble men and the humble women, and the almsgiving men and the almsgiving women, and the fasting men and the fasting women, and the men who guard their private parts and the women who guard (their private parts), and the men who remember Allah much and the women who remember — Allah has prepared for them forgiveness and a mighty reward. (Quran 33:35)

Now, imagine that if a Muslim woman will get such huge rewards for being modest and observing the laws of hijaab in normal circumstances i.e. when the environment is one of faith, piety, godliness and righteousness, and when the people generally are conscious of the consequences of ones deeds in the life hereafter; what mighty and huge rewards would there be in stock for a woman who practices these commands in a totally opposite environment, an environment of lewdness, promiscuity, materialism, godlessness and secularism where there is no concept of the life after death and, therefore, no fear of consequences of ones deeds. Rasulullah (sallallahu alaihi wa sallam) has said, “One who clings on to my sunnah during the time of corruption in my Ummah, will have the reward of a martyr.” (Al-Mu’jam Alawsat of Tabarani, hadith no. 5572). And a martyr will enter paradise without any questions. If that is the reward of holding fast to the sunnah of Rasulullah (sallallahu alaihi wa sallam) at a time of widespread corruption (like today), what will be the reward of holding fast to the compulsory acts of the Shariah!

It is true that nowadays in many countries not many women dress according to the dictates of the Shariah and some even laugh at Muslims who dress modestly; however, frequently remind yourself that our success and salvation does not lie in following what others do. Our success lies in pleasing our Creator by following His commandments. And in the life hereafter, it will be the believers who will laugh at the disbelievers. (Quran 83:34).

The others may think that the Muslim women are oppressed because they are dressed as they are; however, ask yourself “Am I oppressed? Or am I liberated, because I do not have to worry about what others think of my appearance and figure?” If Muslim women were oppressed then why do the Western women themselves, out of their own free will, choose to embrace Islam and cover themselves? Why do they out of their own free will decide to give up nudity, lewdness and immodesty and adopt the beautiful teachings of Islam? Before embracing Islam, they know many things about Islam including its dress code for women. Some study Islam in detail before embracing it. Why, then, do they proactively decide to give up the western lifestyle and adopt the beautiful teachings of Islam? The answer is simple: because they see enslavement and oppression in the western lifestyle and liberation in the teachings of Islam. Who can be a better judge of the situation than one who has seen and experienced both sides of the picture? This I wrote merely as a reply to present to those who criticise Islam’s dress code and its teachings of modesty; however, for a Muslim, knowing that it is a command of Allah, our Creator and Sustainer, should be sufficient.

Studying at an educational institute managed and run by people who are driven by secularism, atheism and materialism and who have no concept of life after death and who are guided merely by their intellect which is overcome and dominated by their whims and desires will undoubtedly present huge problems to one who wants to study therein and at the same time wants to be guided by the precepts of Islam. Instead of asking about the rewards of staying away from haraam acts in such an environment, I would be asking about the rewards of staying away from such an environment in the first place.

2. In regards to your question about the ahaadith (plural of hadith), your main concern seems to be the reliability and integrity of the muhadditheen (experts in hadith) who recorded the ahaadith. Your friend seems to have caused some doubt in you by suggesting that (na’uzubillah) the muhadditheen were self-centred and selfish people who only recorded ahaadith that were agreeable to them and that they left out things that they did not like. And because of this, your friend seems to suggest, they (the muhadditheen) left out (and did not record) ahaadith about women having companions in paradise just as men will have companions (the houris).

Firstly, I don’t know how much and to which depth your friend has studied Islam in general and the science of Hadith in particular, though, from the question it would seem that she does not even know the word for an expert in the field of hadith. A jurist is the translation of the Arabic word ‘Faqeeh’. A faqeeh is an expert in the field of jurisprudence (Fiqh), not hadith. A muhaddith is an expert in the field of hadith. Islam is not a simpleton’s religion. There are many sciences of knowledge of Shariah. The muhaditheen compile Ahadeeth while the Fuqaha (jurists) deduct rulings of Shariah from the Quran and Ahadeeth. The ulama (scholars) are the inheritors of the Prophets. It is through the ulama and their effort that the deen (religion) of Allah has reached us. Without their untiring effort we would be just in as much darkness as the rest of the world. Does your friend mean to say that the people that Allah Ta’ala chose as a means to pass on His deen down to us were so (na’uzobillah) low and immoral so as to hide the truth merely for the sake of hiding the truth? What worldly or after-life benefit would this have brought to the muhadditheen that may have made them do this? Does she mean to say that (na’uzobillah) they were all hypocrites? It is utter nonsense. One should be extremely careful of what one utters about the scholars of deen as it could be extremely detrimental to ones iman (faith). How can a Muslim who believes in Allah and the last day denigrate someone that Allah has praised?

Translation:

Allah will exalt those of you who believe, and those who are given knowledge, in high degrees (Quran 58:11)

Say, `Are those who know equal to those who know not ?’ Verily, only those endowed with understanding will take heed. (Quran 39:9)

Indeed, among His servants, those with knowledge are the ones who really fear Allah (Quran 35:28)

It seems as though your friend is a victim of the so called Ahl al-Quran movement who propagate the false notion that the ahaadith of Rasulullah (sallallahu alaihi wa sallam) are unreliable and therefore must be rejected and that one must only rely on the Quran for guidance. Such a claim is utter nonsense because of one simple reason: without the ahaadith, the commands of the Quran become meaningless, ambiguous and unpractical. For example, the Quran tells us to offer salaat, give zakaat and to do Hajj etc. But without the ahaadith, one can never know how many rak’aats there are in each salaat, the kinds of postures there are in salaat, what to recite in which posture, the order of these postures and recitals and a countless number of other details. All these details are only to be found in the ahaadith. Same is the case with the details of zakaat, fasting, hajj etc. Hence, it follows that the Quran and ahaadith go hand in hand. Therefore, to say that the ahaadith are unreliable is tantamount to saying that the teachings of the Quran are meaningless, ambiguous and unpractical. Moreover, what would the following verse of the Quran mean if one were to reject the ahaadith:

Translation:

And whatsoever the Messenger gives you, take it, and whatsoever he forbids you, abstain from it. (Quran 59:7)

If your friend had studied the science of hadith and the life of the muhadditheen, she would have known that the level of taqwa and piety of the muhadditheen was such that we can not even imagine. For example, Imam Maalik (may Allah be pleased with him) did not buy nor eat goat meat for 30 years after he learnt that a goat had been stolen from someone in his area for fear of eating the meat of the stolen goat. Imam Bukhari (may Allah be pleased with him) would do ghusl and offer nafl salaat before writing each hadith in his book. How many other virtues of these great men shall I enumerate? One only needs to read a book on their life to find out. How truly unlucky one has to be to bad mouth such great and illustrious men. In short, it is a great deviance from the straight path to reject the ahaadith altogether. And those who do so do it due to mere speculation based on their whims and desires and the trick of Satan.

As far as the classification of the ahaadith (into different categories based on the chain of narrators of the hadith and its text) is concerned, well that is a different issue altogether. And that in itself shows the beauty, intricacy, depth, uniqueness, accuracy and reliability of the science of hadith and the devotion, passion, integrity, sincerity and untiring effort of the muahadditheen.

As for the ‘mistake’ of Adam (Alaihis salaam) referred to in the query, it was not a sin – as all Prophets are protected from committing sins. It was, instead, an error based on misunderstanding or forgetfulness. (See Ma’ariful Quran vol. 1 pg. 179-181 for details).

In regards to the queries and speculations in your last paragraph about the Houris of paradise, the following verse of the Quran (along with notes that follow) should be sufficient to answer them:

Translation:

Thus, and We shall marry them to Houris (Quran 44:54)

Note:
the pronoun ‘them’ in the verse above is masculine pronoun, which means that those who will be married to the Houris will be males, not females.

The Arabic words for Houris, ‘Hoor Een’ are feminine words, and, therefore, they can only be used for females, not males.’Hoor Een’ means: fair (light coloured) females with large eyes. This shows that Houris are females, not males. Moreover, the adjectives and pronouns used for the Houris throughout the Quran are feminine adjectives and pronouns – such as the underlined words in the following verses: “before them neither man nor jinn shall have touched them.” (Quran 55:56). “Houris, close-guarded in pavilions.” (Quran 55:72). This is also irrefutable proof that Houris are females.

And Allah Ta’ala Knows Best

Wassalaamu `alaykum

Ml. Faizal Riza
Correspondence Iftaa Student, Australia

Checked and Approved by:

Mufti Ebrahim Desai
Darul Iftaa, Madrassah In’aamiyyah


Does Islam regard men and women as equal?

Answer:

Praise be to Allaah.

Firstly:

This word – equality – which many thinkers in both the east and the west advocate in various fields of life is a word which is based on deviation and a lack of understanding, especially when the speaker attributes this idea of equality to the Qur’aan and to Islam.

One of the things that people misunderstand is when they say that “Islam is the religion of equality”. What they should say is that Islam is the religion of justice.

Shaykh Ibn ‘Uthaymeen (may Allaah have mercy on him) said:

“Here we should note that there are some people who speak of equality instead of justice, and this is a mistake. We should not say equality, because equality implies no differentiation between the two. Because of this unjust call for equality, they started to ask, what is the difference between male and female?’ So they made males and females the same, and then the communists said, ‘What difference is there between ruler and subject? No one has any authority over anyone else, not even fathers and sons; the father has no authority over his son,’ and so on.

But if we say justice, which means giving each one that to which he or she is entitled, this misunderstanding no longer applies, and the word used is correct. Hence it does not say in the Qur’aan that Allaah enjoins equality, rather it says (interpretation of the meaning):

“Verily, Allaah enjoins Al-‘Adl (i.e. justice)”

[al-Nahl 16:90]

“and that when you judge between men, you judge with justice”

[al-Nisa’ 4:58]

Those who say that Islam is the religion of equality are lying against Islam. Rather Islam is the religion of justice which means treating equally those who are equal and differentiating between those who are different.

No one who knows the religion of Islam would say that it is the religion of equality. Rather what shows you that this principle is false is the fact that most of what is mentioned in the Qur’aan denies equality, as in the following verses:

‘Say: Are those who know equal to those who know not?”

[al-Zumar 39:9]

‘Say: Is the blind equal to the one who sees? Or darkness equal to light?’

[al-Ra’d 13:16]

‘Not equal among you are those who spent and fought before the conquering (of Makkah, with those among you who did so later’

[al-Hadeed 57:10]

‘Not equal are those of the believers who sit (at home), except those who are disabled (by injury or are blind or lame), and those who strive hard and fight in the Cause of Allaah with their wealth and their live’

[al-Nisa’ 4:95]

Not one single letter in the Qur’aan enjoins equality, rather it enjoins justice. You will also find that the word justice is acceptable to people, for I feel that if I am better than this man in terms of knowledge, or wealth, or piety, or in doing good, I would not like for him to be equal to me.

Every man knows that he find it unacceptable if we say that the male is equal to the female.”

Sharh al-‘Aqeedah al-Waasitah, 1/180-181

Based on this, Islam does not regard men and women as equal in matters where regarding them as equal would result in injustice to one of them, because equality that is inappropriate is a severe form of injustice.

The Qur’aan commands women to wear clothes that are different from those worn by men, because of the differences in the ways each sex is tempted by the other. The temptation posed by men is less than the temptation posed by women, so the clothes that women should wear are different than the clothes that men wear. It makes no sense to tell women to expose the parts of the body that men are allowed to expose, because of the differences in the temptation posed by a woman’s body and a man’s body – as we shall explain.

Secondly:

There are matters in which men and women are treated differently in Islamic sharee’ah, such as:

1 – Qiwaamah (being in charge of the household)

Allaah says (interpretation of the meaning):

“Men are the protectors and maintainers of women, because Allaah has made one of them to excel the other, and because they spend (to support them) from their means”

[al-Nisa’ 4:34]

Ibn Katheer (may Allaah have mercy on him) said:

“Allaah says ‘Men are the protectors and maintainers of women’ meaning that the man is in charge of the woman, i.e., he is the leader and head of the household, the one who disciplines her if she goes astray.

‘because Allaah has made one of them to excel the other’ i.e., because men are superior to women and are better than women. Hence Prophethood was given only to men, as was the position of khaleefah, because the Prophet (peace and blessings of Allaah be upon him) said, ‘No people shall ever prosper who appoint a woman as their ruler.’ This was narrated by al-Bukhaari from the hadeeth of ‘Abd al-Rahmaan ibn Abi Bakrah from his father. The same applies to the position of qaadi (judge), etc.

‘and because they spend (to support them) from their means’ refers to the mahr and the spending on women’s maintenance that Allaah has enjoined upon men in His Book and in the Sunnah of His Prophet (peace and blessings of Allaah be upon him). So a man is inherently better than a woman, and he is superior to her because he spends on her. So it is appropriate that he should be in charge of her, as Allaah says, ‘but men have a degree (of responsibility) over them’ [al-Baqarah 2:228].

‘Ali ibn Abi Talhah said, narrating from Ibn ‘Abbaas: ‘Men are the protectors and maintainers of women’ means that men are the leaders of women and they should obey them in areas where Allaah has enjoined obedience. Obedience may mean treating his family kindly and protecting his wealth.”

(Tafseer Ibn Katheer, 1/490)

2 – Testimony or bearing witness. The Qur’aan states that the testimony of one man is equivalent to the testimony of two women.

Allaah says (interpretation of the meaning):

“And get two witnesses out of your own men. And if there are not two men (available), then a man and two women, such as you agree for witnesses, so that if one of them (two women) errs, the other can remind her”

[al-Baqarah 2:282]

Ibn Katheer said:

Two women are to take the place of one man because women are lacking in reason, as Muslim narrated in his Saheeh… from Abu Hurayrah that the Prophet (peace and blessings of Allaah be upon him) said: “O women, give in charity and seek forgiveness a great deal, for I have seen that you form the majority of the people of Hell.” A wise woman among them said, “Why is it, O Messenger of Allaah, that we are the majority of the people of Hell?” He said, “Because you curse too much, and you are ungrateful to your spouses. I have seen none lacking in common sense and failing in religion but (at the same time) robbing the wisdom of the wise, besides you.” The woman asked: “O Messenger of Allaah, what is wrong with our common sense and our religion?” He said: “Your lack of common sense (can be well judged from the fact) that the evidence of two women is equal to that of one man, that is a proof of the lack of common sense, and you spend some nights (and days) in which you do not offer prayer and in the month of Ramadan (during the days) you do not observe fast, that is a failing in religion.”

(Tafseer Ibn Katheer, 1/336)

There may be some women who are wiser than some men, but this is not the usual rule and such women are not in the majority. Sharee’ah is based on what is general and most common.

The fact that women are lacking in reason does not mean that they are crazy, rather their reason is often overtaken by their emotions, and this happens to women more often than it happens to men. No one would deny this except one who is arrogant.

3 – A woman inherits half of what a man inherits.

Allaah says (interpretation of the meaning):

“Allaah commands you as regards your children’s (inheritance): to the male, a portion equal to that of two females”

[al-Nisa’ 4:11]

Al-Qurtubi said:

Because Allaah knows better than they do what is in their best interests, He made the division of inheritance based on differentiation, because He knows what is in their best interests.

Tafseer al-Qurtubi, 5/164

For example, a man is obliged to spend more than a woman, so it is appropriate that he should have a larger share of inheritance than a woman.

4 – Clothing:

A woman’s ‘awrah includes her entire body. The least that can be said is that she should not uncover anything except her face and hands, and it was said that she should not even uncover that.

Allaah says (interpretation of the meaning):

“O Prophet! Tell your wives and your daughters and the women of the believers to draw their cloaks (veils) all over their bodies (i.e. screen themselves completely except the eyes or one eye to see the way). That will be better, that they should be known (as free respectable women) so as not to be annoyed. And Allaah is Ever Oft-Forgiving, Most Merciful”

[al-Ahzaab 33:59]

The ‘awrah of a man is the area from the navel to the knees.

It was said to ‘Abd-Allaah ibn Ja’far ibn Abi Taalib, “Tell us what you heard from the Messenger of Allaah (peace and blessings of Allaah be upon him) and what you saw of him, and do not tell us about anyone else, even if he was trustworthy.” He said, “I heard the Messenger of Allaah (peace and blessings of Allaah be upon him) say, ‘The area between the navel and the knee is ‘awrah.’”

Narrated by al-Haakim in al-Mustadrak (6418); classed as hasan by al-Albaani in Saheeh al-Jaami’, 5583.

Other examples include the following, which is not a comprehensive list.

There are other differences between the sexes, including the following:

· A man can marry four women, but a woman can only have one husband.

· A man has the right to issue a divorce and it is valid if he does so, but a woman does not have the right to issue a divorce.

· A man may marry a woman from among the People of the Book (Jews and Christians), but a Muslim woman may not marry anyone but a Muslim.

· A man may travel without his wife or any of his mahrams, but a woman may not travel unless she is accompanied by a mahram.

· Prayer in the mosque is obligatory for men, but not for women; a woman’s prayer in her house is more beloved to Allaah.

· A woman may wear silk and gold, but a man must not wear them.

Everything that we have mentioned is based on the difference between men and women, because the male is not like the female. Allaah says (interpretation of the meaning):

“And the male is not like the female”

[Aal ‘Imraan 3:36]

The male is different from the female in many ways, in his strength, in his body, in his toughness and roughness, whereas women are soft and gentle.

And men are different in intellectual terms, for men are known for their strength of understanding and their memory as compared to women. Women are weaker than men in memory and forget more than men do. This is well known, for most of the reputable scholars in the world are men. There are some women who are more intelligent and have better memories than some men, but this does not cancel out the general rule. Most cases are as we have described above.

With regard to emotions, men speak of them when they get angry or when they are happy, but women are affected by the slightest emotional effects, so their tears flow at the slightest emotional provocation.

Jihad is obligatory for men, but jihad in the sense of fighting is not obligatory for women. This is the mercy of Allaah towards them, and consideration for their nature.

In conclusion we may say that the rulings for men are not like the rulings for women.

Thirdly:

Islam regards men and women as equally obliged with regard to many acts of worship and interactions with others. For example, women do wudoo’ just as men do, they do ghusl as men do, they pray as men do, and they fast as men do, except when they are menstruating or bleeding following childbirth. Women pay zakaah as men pay zakaah, and they do Hajj as men do, except for a few differences in the rulings. It is permissible and acceptable to buy from a woman, and if a woman gives charity, that is permissible. It is permissible for a woman to set free the slaves that she owns, and there are many other similar cases because women are the twin halves of men, as it says in the hadeeth:

It was narrated that ‘Aa’ishah said: The Messenger of Allaah (peace and blessings of Allaah be upon him) was asked about a man who finds some wetness (on his clothes) but did not have an erotic dream, and he said, “He should do ghusl.” He was asked about a man who had an erotic dream but did not find any wetness, and he said, “He does not have to do ghusl.” Umm Salamah said, “O Messenger of Allaah, if a woman sees that, does she have to do ghusl?” He said, “Yes, for women are the twin halves of men.”

(Narrated by al-Tirmidhi, 113; Ahmad, 25663. Classed as saheeh by al-Albaani in Saheeh al-Tirmidhi, 98)

Conclusion:

Women are like men in some aspects and they differ from them in others. Most of the rulings of Islam apply to men and women equally. In cases where a distinction is made between the sexes, the Muslim regards that as a mercy from Allaah and a sign of His knowledge of His creation, but the arrogant kaafir sees it as oppression and injustice, so he stubbornly insists on claiming that men and women are the same. So let him tell us how a man can carry a foetus and breastfeed it? He stubbornly ignores the weakness of women and how they bleed during their monthly period, and he stubbornly beat his head against the rock of reality. But the Muslim is still at peace with his faith, surrendering to the command of Allaah.

“Should not He Who has created know? And He is the Most Kind and Courteous (to His slaves), All-Aware (of everything)”

[al-Mulk 67:14 – interpretation of the meaning]

And Allaah knows best.