From Feminism to Fitnah: The Slippery Slope of Liberal Ideology
- Muiz As-Siddeeqi
- Jul 2
- 2 min read

From Feminism to Fitnah: The Slippery Slope of Liberal Ideology
It began with “equal rights.”
Then came “my body, my choice.”
Then “I don’t need a man.”
Then “gender is a social construct.”
Then “men can get pregnant.”
Then “drag queens in schools.”
Then “pedophilia is just a minor attraction.”
From feminism to fitnah — the slope is steep, and it’s real.
Liberalism always sells its poison sweet:
“It’s just about fairness.”
“It’s just about freedom.”
“It’s just about choice.”
But beneath the surface is a war on fitrah (natural human nature) —
A war on the family, on gender roles, on modesty, on divine purpose.
Feminism was never “just about voting.”
It was always about removing women from their honour,
turning mothers into machines,
turning wives into competitors,
and turning men into emasculated bystanders.
When you unchain women from Islam — you don’t free them.
You hand them over to the wolves of consumerism, lust, exploitation, and spiritual decay.
Allah said:
“O you who believe! If you obey a group of those who were given the Scripture, they will turn you back, after your belief, into disbelievers.”
— Surah Āli-‘Imrān 3:100
And the Prophet (peace be upon him) said:
“After me I have not left any fitnah more harmful to men than women.”
— Ṣaḥīḥ al-Bukhārī
But feminism says:
“You are oppressed if you’re a mother.”
“You are liberated if you disrobe in public.”
“You’re only valuable if you compete with men.”
What happened?
Now 50% of marriages end in divorce.
Millions of women are on antidepressants.
Feminists are asking, “Where have the real men gone?”
Women are used to sell soda, shoes, and sin.
The truth is: once you let go of the rope of Allah, you drown in the ocean of desires.
Liberalism begins with “choice”…
And ends in chaos.
It begins with “my rights”…
And ends in no wrongs.
No shame. No modesty. No boundaries. No gender. No truth.
Islam honored the woman:
As a mother — Paradise lies beneath her feet.
As a wife — she is a garment for her husband.
As a daughter — she opens the gates of Jannah for her father.
As a believer — her dignity is in her ḥijāb, not in the lustful eyes of strangers.
Liberalism strips her down.
Islam lifts her up.
From feminism to fitnah, the path is steep…
But Islam is the rope that pulls us out.
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