Bharatiya Muslim Mahila Andolan or BMMA (transl. Indian Muslim Women's Movement) is an autonomous, secular, rights-based mass organization led by Zakia Soman which fights for the citizenship rights of the Muslim women in India.[1] The BMMA was formed in January 2011.[1] The organisation is based in Mumbai.[2]
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Over 30,000 members have been enrolled in the BMMA in 15 states, over the past six years.
BMMA conducted a Study[3][4][5] of Muslim women’s views on reforms in Muslim personal law— 'Seeking Justice Within the Family' across 10 states that revealed that an overwhelming 82% [6] of the over 4,000 women who were surveyed had no property in their name and that 78% were home makers with no income of their own.
“It is quite revealing that 95.5% poor women had not even heard of the All India Muslim Personal Law Board, yet the government and the people go by the decisions taken by these self-proclaimed leaders of the Muslim community,’’ said Zakia Soman, co-founder of the Bharatiya Muslim Mahila Andolan.
Noorjehan Safia Niaz, co-founder of the Bhartiya Muslim Mahila Andolan (BMMA) does not support practices such as the hijab and believes that instances where complete strangers — young and old men, and once a younger woman — walk up to her in public and question her choice of dressing with impunity and audacity, violate her personal space.[7]
BMMA has backed Hindu women in the Shani Shingnapur Temple row.[8]
Women’s entry into the inner sanctum of the Haji Ali Dargah
BMMA also challenged the restrictions on women’s entry into the inner sanctum of the Haji Ali Dargah of Mumbai, and on 26 August 2016 after a three year legal battle, the Bombay High Court, allowed women entry and termed the ban unconstitutional.[12]
Abolition of Polygamy, Mut'a marriages, Misyar marriages and Nikah halala
On June 23, 2014, BMMA released a draft, 'Muslim Marriage and Divorce Act' recommending that polygamy be made illegal in the Muslim Personal Law of India.[13]
On December 12 2022, on a public interest litigation filed by BMMA, the Supreme Court of India issued notices to the centre and Law Commission of India requesting the abolition of practices of polygamy and other practices like Mut'a marriages, Misyar marriages and Nikah halala as they violate fundamental rights of the Muslim women in India under articles 14, 15, 21 and 25 of the Constitution.[14]
In December 2022, the BMMA released a report 'Status of women in polygamous marriages and need for legal protection' based on the study of women whose husbands are in polygamous marriages, across 11 states in India. According to the report, 84% of respondents said polygamy should be prohibited, and 73% thought a husband should be penalised for taking a second wife. The Survey also found that 45% of the husbands threatened to divorce their first wives if they disapproved of his second marriage. An overwhelming number of women said that they felt a sense of betrayal, loss of dignity and loss of self-respect when the husband married other women despite her being the wife. The poll found that many of the women suffered from serious mental health problems and 50% of the 289 women reported suffering from mental trauma such as depression, self-blaming and suicidal tendencies.[14][16]