This article reflects on Muslim women’s education in Indian madrasas through the intersecting realities of gender, religion, class, and marginality. For many girls, madrasas are spaces of faith and belonging, and often the only accessible form of education. Yet they also impose limits. Narrow curricula, patriarchal expectations, economic hardship, and isolation from the formal system shape their learning and restrict their mobility and choices. The participation of women remains limited, and advanced religious scholarship-such as becoming an Aalima-is still achieved by relatively few. At the same time, small but meaningful changes are emerging. Some madrasas are introducing modern subjects, digital literacy, and vocational skills, opening pathways that allow Muslim women to imagine lives beyond traditionally prescribed roles. These shifts offer hope, but remain uneven and constrained by larger structural barriers. Drawing on Dr. B.R. Ambedkar’s vision of education as a tool for equality and dignity, this article is based on secondary sources, it highlights the gap between constitutional ideals and lived realities, arguing that true empowerment requires deeper, inclusive transformation in education.
Mannasaheb et al. (Thu,) studied this question.