The social construct and custom of honour maintains order for many societies in the middle east and Africa, south and central Asia, and the worldwide diaspora of these diverse communities. A woman, the physical manifestation of honour, embodies this involuntary burden through her every day actions and decisions – or lack thereof – from the moment she takes her first breath until the day she dies.
Honour (namus, onur, şeref, izzat) has many meanings in the context of these societies: modesty, shyness, decency, virginity, decorum, virtue, reputation, and pride. Upholding honour through arranged or forced marriages, zero tolerance for homosexuality, killings, female genital mutilation, women’s confinement to the private sphere, and loyalty to an abusive husband and/or in-laws, is meant to guarantee a healthy society; one in which the family unit is strong, giving respect to the heritage and history of the people carrying out the ways of generations that came before. In practice and reality though, honour has been, and still is, the justification for long-established, community-sanctioned violence against women.
The absence of honour or a breach of the honour code, whether real or projected, is shame. Shame threatens the stability of a society as it upends the traditional powerbrokers (tribal elders, religious leaders, women whose livelihood is female cutting, passive or vindictive family members), and jeopardizes the status quo. Persistent incidents that result in shame are even more feared under suspicion that, perhaps, such occurrences are intentional efforts to effect change. And indeed, in recent years more and more women and men are embracing shame – having discovered that, within the shame, lies the key to individual human rights and dignity. Within shame - and the challenge that embracing shame poses to the longstanding perversion of honour - is the struggle for women’s rights, the realization of which will result in the entire community’s advancement and healing.
On February 14, the One Billion Rising movement reconvenes to rise for justice. Instructed to gather in front of the very infrastructure meant to protect and serve the people, across the globe advocacy groups, organizations, and individuals will employ the medium of creative movement, art, and music to channel pain, anger, frustration, and hope on the doorsteps of police stations, school houses, places of worship, and government offices. In doing so, One Billion Rising seeks to put the shame on the true culprits: the people and places that passively or actively dishonour the human rights of women. In this day of global unity, once again the world will witness how women and men are turning honour on its head in the ongoing fight to eradicate violence against women. Yet, this day merely symbolizes the every day and ongoing struggles undertaken by men and women in honour-based societies fighting against the abuse of power that is primarily exercised upon women and girls. After the day has finished and the Youtube videos have gone viral, the real work will continue.
In 2013 and continuing today, two stories that challenge the suffocating paradigm of shame and honour continue to unfold in the middle east – from the region’s western reach in Morocco, to the heart of the conflict zone that Iraq and Yemen continue to be in the 'war on terror', to the questionably stable and wealthy Gulf states. These groundbreaking developments provide encouragement that the global movement for women’s rights will continue to gain momentum, uniting men and women from all walks of life, who have been separated by oppressive political agendas; skewed religious ideologies; greed; fear of the “other;” change; authority; and ignorance. Again, it is the questioning and defying of the seemingly unshakeable grasp of shame and honour on society’s moral fabric that repeatedly provides the means by which meaningful change becomes possible.
In
March 2012, under Article 475 of the Moroccan penal code, a
16-year-old Moroccan woman was forced to marry her
rapist. In upholding a law that allows a man to evade punishment
for raping a woman, the presiding court performed its role in carrying out
justice: restoring the lost honour of under-aged Amina Filali’s family.
The victim herself, forced to marry her perpetrator, was delivered into the
hands of Mustafa Fellak, who continued to beat his wife/victim for seven long
months, until she refused to endure any more. Swallowing enough rat poision to
end her life, Amina’s suicide sparked
outrage in Morocco and abroad, igniting a discourse on the sinister prioritization of
tradition and an unjust definition of morality, over the rights of
the individual. In the past two years, steady national and international
efforts to amend the Moroccan penal code finally bore fruit when, on January
23, 2014, Morocco’s parliament unanimously amended Article 475 no longer
allowing men to avoid punishment for rape through a forced marriage. Not only
did the campaign achieve its main goal, but the victory has also served to
spotlight the ongoing civil society-led contestation of remaining Moroccan
legislation that, directly or inadvertently, sanctions violence
against women in the name of honour. Having crossed a
previously formidable threshold, the definition of honour for Moroccans is
currently under re-construction.
As far back as 2003
efforts to stop FGM in Iraqi Kurdistan began when
Kurdish women cautiously approached foreign medical workers about complications
stemming from their circumcisions. The medical workers enjoined Kurdish
activists, like Suaad Abdulrahman, Women’s Project Director of WADI (Association
for Crisis Assistance an Solidarity Development Cooperation), and along with
her team, Suaad began travelling to
remote areas of Iraqi Kurdistan: “At
first, we didn’t talk about FGM directly because the subject was still
taboo and it was difficult to start these types of
conversations in these socially and religiously conservative places. Instead,
we talked to them about general health problems, and in the course of these
conversations, the women began to open up. It soon became clear that FGM was
the source of many of their physical, emotional, and sexual problems.”
Ten years later, through
the efforts of organizations including WADI and Hivos, khatana (circumcision
in Sorani Kurdish) of women in Iraqi Kurdistan has significantly decreased. In
October 2013, a report released by WADI analyzed interviews of 5,000
women and girls in areas of Kurdistan where, as of 2004, the
rate of khatana was nearly 100 percent. Presently, in the areas
of Suleimaniyah, Halabja, Raniya, Goptata, and Garmyan, 66-99 percent of women
age 25 and older report that they have been cut; in the “pertinent age group of
6-10,” however, the rate is now close to
zero in Halabja and Garmyan. As of July 2012, seven small villages in Iraqi
Kurdistan declared themselves FGM free zones. These communities serve as role
models to other villages considering the same path, especially when awareness
of the incentives that become available to villages that ban khatana becomes
known. In the village of Toutakhel, for
instance, in exchange for their commitment to ban khatana the
inhabitants received basic school services and a small classroom.
But until women starting
to speak out against the practice, a tradition mandated and condoned by the Shafi‘i
school of Islamic law that is abided by in Iraqi Kurdistan, no one spoke of khatana,
as it dangerously bled into discussion of the taboo of sexuality and
women’s sexuality. Falah Muradkhin, Wadi’s Iraq
Project Coordinator, said " I found out that my mother and sisters had
been cut only after I began this work. I never knew! And once I did, this work
became very personal.”
Determined to challenge
the practice and to uphold the ban on khatana that finally
went into effect in 2011, dedicated mobile teams
of Kurdish female activists continue to travel from village to
village, educating women on their legal rights to refuse this practice and the harmful psychological
and physical effects it has on the female body and psyche. Joining
the Stop FGM Campaign, Kurdish men
now speak in public of the deleterious effects on
intimacy, partnership, and marriage that they endure with
wives whom they did not know underwent khatana as young girls. As far
back as 2005, in a documentary film called “Handful of Ash,” one man
testified that “circumcision is similar to neutering animals,” and had he known
his wife was cut, “even if they paid me $10,000, I would not
have married her.”
Thomas von der Osten-Sacken,
one of the founders of the Stop FGM
Kurdistan Campaign, says “the fact that FGM is reported in the media when
anti-FGM demonstrations take place, in parliament sessions
and committee meetings, homes, and schools – a discussion that
inherently involves sex and sexuality – indicates that something of a sexual
revolution has transpired in Iraqi Kurdistan.” While the goal of the alleged
sexual revolution of Iraqi Kurdistan is not sexual liberation, it is a crucial
development in the improvement of women’s rights in this tumultuous part of the
middle east. Local advocacy groups in Yemen, Oman, and Egypt have now
approached the Kurdistan team to implement the same strategies in their countries,
giving birth to the Stop FGM Middle East campaign.
From Morocco and Iraqi Kurdistan, to Sweden, South Africa and the United Kingdom - where an English teenager of Somalian origin went public with her rap against FGM, growing numbers of women and men in honour-based communities continue to rise against the social code they once believed to be the bedrock of social order. Preferring ostracization and persecution to silent suffering, and the willingness to embody shame instead of honour, marks an unmistakable evolution in an increasingly global movement to promote, uphold, and implement women’s rights.
Read more
Get our weekly email
Comments
We encourage anyone to comment, please consult the oD commenting guidelines if you have any questions.