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Aisyiyah

Aisyiyah محمدية
World map
Zone of influence
Formation 19 May 1917
Type Organization
Purpose Religious Islamic
Headquarters Yogyakarta, Indonesia
Region served
Indonesia
Leader
Dr. Siti Noordjannah Djohantini
Website Official website

Aisyiyah is an Islamic non-governmental organization in Indonesia dedicated to female empowerment and charitable work. It was formed on 19 May 1917 by Nyai Ahmad Dahlan to facilitate women's access to education, health care and social services. The organization provides micro-loan and small business development support, family planning services, maternal and pediatric care, orphanages, training for female Muslim clerics, and standard preschool through university level education. These social services end at death, whereby the organization provides female morticians so that female bodies don't need to be prepared for burial by men. Aisyiyah manages several hundred healthcare centers in Indonesia as well as three branches in Egypt, Malaysia and the Netherlands. The organization's stated goal is to make Islamic society a reality for women, and it encourages its members to seek further education even if they become "smarter than their husbands."

Aisyiyah faces opposition to their work on two fronts. Traditional Javanese culture with its pre-Islamic practices as well as the minority of Indonesians who study Islam in the Middle East both display negative attitudes toward women in the public space.

Aisyiyah's efforts initially focused on female literacy for the sake of reading the Qur'an. The organization opened the first Indonesian Islamic preschool in Kauman in 1919, the organization's own first teacher college in 1922, and its first worship hall in the same city 1923 wherein a female imam led an all-female congregation. Much of the organization's early activity was also based on economic rights. Women in Indonesia often work at similar jobs as men, and thus Aisyiyah emphasized women's right to rest and refuse work, and the connection between religious piety and work ethic. The organization's support for female leadership from 1978 also predated wider national debate on the topic in the 1990s, and by 1999 Aisyiyah had publicly endorsed the idea of a female leader of the national government.

Aisyiyah has been noted for relatively early action in modern Indonesia's civil society. In addition to being the first Muslim women's organization in the country, it also promoted women's literacy at a time when most of the population in general was illiterate. Its members wore the Muslim headscarf at a time when the habit wasn't yet the norm in Indonesia, and although their vocational schools taught Islamic moral values, their schools were also coeducational unlike the gender-segregated religious schools of the Middle East.


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