This study explores the 2030 Agenda of the United Nations, which advocates for Sustainable Development and strives for Gender Equality (SDG Goal 5), through the prism of Islamic tenets, relying on the most common misinterpreted practices, such as Mahr, Talaaq, and Khula, Hijab, and Madrasa.While Islam's founding principle of gender justice is apparent in the Holy Quran, patriarchal intervention in interpretations and mistranslations by Islamic clerics has reinforced gender inequality.This qualitative and comparative analysis critically examines the Holy Quran with the misinterpreted Islamic texts, such as Al Bukhari, exposing contradictions and dominant misinterpretations that have falsified Islam's stance on gender equality.By applying the method of deconstruction formulated by Jacques Derrida, this study aims to highlight and reconstruct the disparities found in the teachings of Gender Inclusivity in Islam, emphasising women's rights and sustainable development, thereby orienting the religion towards the goals of SDG 5.The study seeks to rectify historical, linguistic, and cultural biases through deconstructive reading, advocating for a more accurate understanding of Islam's true dogma of gender equality.
M et al. (Thu,) studied this question.