*** ----> Toronto festival doc offers glimpse into sharia, women's rights | THE DAILY TRIBUNE | KINGDOM OF BAHRAIN

Toronto festival doc offers glimpse into sharia, women's rights

Toronto : Nearly a decade after shattering the glass ceiling of Islamic jurisprudence, the first woman judge to be appointed to a sharia court in the Middle East says women's rights still have a way to go.

Kholoud al-Faqih was at the Toronto film festival on Monday for the premiere of Erika Cohn's documentary "The Judge," which looks at sharia law through the eyes of the first woman judge to be appointed to the Middle East's religious courts.

"I'm personally satisfied with the speed of progress in Palestine," Faqih told AFP. "But I wish the rest of the Middle East would hasten their recognition of Arab women's rights."

Eight years ago, Faqih pressed Palestinian chief justice Sheikh Tayseer al-Tamimi for the judgeship and beat out dozens of male applicants.

Tamimi initially laughed off the idea of a woman judge, but eventually was persuaded by her arguments to appoint her and another woman, Asmahan Wuheidi.

Many in the West associate sharia courts with religious extremism, but they are used throughout Muslim countries.

In the Palestinian territories, civil courts handle criminal, administrative and civil law, while shariacourts adjudicate family issues. 

Only two other women have been named to the Palestinian sharia court since Faqih and Wuheidi's appointments in 2009. 

There are also female religious judges in Egypt, Indonesia, Jordan and Malaysia. Israel appointed its first female judge to a sharia court in April.

Faqih and her peers, however, continue to face pushback.

"If she gives birth, if she is pregnant or bleeding, she is bound by these things, which affect her work," sharia scholar Husam al-Deen Afanah was quoted as saying in the film.

A young woman at a cafe tells Cohn she would prefer a male judge.

"For me, it's painful to hear that a young woman would reject a female judge," Faqih said.

"But if that lady or anybody else comes to my court, they'll have to accept my ruling, because that's the way it is."

Tamimi was forced to resign one year after appointing Faqih and Wuheidi to the bench.

"Women are not treated equally by the law," he says in the film, holding out hope for change.