Malak lived in Egypt during a period of growing intellectual and political discourse on the status of women in society. This time period included influential players like
Huda Sha'arawi,
Qasim Amin,
Nabawiyya Musa, and many more. During the same period, nationalist and traditionalist thinkers went back and forth with various ideas being formulated about the future of the Middle East. These two conversations were intrinsically linked and had a significant overlap. Malak entered this dialogue and presented her "attempt at reform" for an Egyptian future. Malak called for women to be wary of men who, at first, ordered women to wear a veil and then suddenly ordered them not to for the purpose of their ‘liberation.’ In her book Al-Nisa'iyyat, she set out her specific arguments against unveiling:
Marriage Malak wrote extensively about the marital rights of women in Egypt. This issue was one of the feminist issues with which she had significant personal experience. The fact that her husband had two wives caused her to intensely oppose
polygamy. In an article entitled “Or Co-Wives”, she deemed polyandry “women’s mortal enemy.” Malak despised the idea of a marriage rooted in economic reasons, i.e., a man marrying a woman simply for her money. She also supported her arguments against early marriage by commenting that women who married early often developed hysteria. She shared this sentiment with the other feminists of the time. She did not believe, though, that just any education would suffice. She opposed the implementation of missionary schools in Egypt, arguing that “the most ignorant of girls are the graduates of the missionary schools.” Malak called for more Egyptian control over the public education system to create schools that taught girls a more comprehensive curriculum, including history of Egyptian culture. Malak diverged from others further when she extended her argument and claimed that formal education alone could not solve
women's problems. She believed that much of the women's injustice resided in the home, that tarbiya, or the process of raising a child, was responsible for a woman's future. She emphasized the difference between European mothers and Egyptian mothers in caring for their children; Egyptian mothers did not take care of their daughters’ physical health and mental development nearly as well as European mothers did. She argued that mothers must teach their girls to feel empathy for others, to take care of themselves, and to take care of their own children. Malak proposed reforms to better teach religion to girls, to expand schools for female nurses, to increase access to healthcare for women, and to teach hygienic practices. The practice of child rearing was one of the areas in which Malak thought that some
Westernization would benefit Egyptian society, but she also believed strongly in the importance of teaching
Islam to children. Overall, she believed that most aspects of women's education needed significant reform. == Politics ==