Kabul, Jan 17 : Each morning, the policewoman puts on her uniform, goes to her
precinct office, sits behind a bare desk.
She is one of several officers
appointed to make it easier for women to report domestic violence. Her job ought
to be one of the busiest in the district. Instead, Pushtoon, who goes by one
name, has one of the loneliest.
"Last week we had one woman. Before that
there had not been anyone for several weeks," she said, twisting hands left
scarred by her attempt at suicide years ago in a Taliban jail. "Women are afraid
to come, but we are not allowed to go to them.
"The police chiefs will
not let us. They say it is unsafe for women officers," she said.
Five
years after the end of the Taliban era, there are new opportunities for women in
Afghanistan, and notable efforts are underway to make their daily lives better,
especially in Kabul, the capital. Improving the status of women has been a core
goal of U.S. policy here, and Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice said at a
congressional hearing in 2005 that enshrining women's equality in the Afghan
Constitution was an important advance for the entire region.
But
conversations with dozens of women suggest that each step forward has been a
struggle. Afghan society remains deeply uncomfortable with the idea of women
gaining independence and authority. The Taliban's resurgence has reversed
incremental gains, particularly in the south. If the Taliban incursions spread,
more women are likely to lose ground.
Families in the south that recently
began allowing their daughters to go to school and wives to enroll in vocational
programs have pulled them out because of Taliban attacks.
"Women's future
depends so much on security. As much as se-curity deteriorates, women's
situation deteriorates," said Masuda Jalal, former acting minister of women's
affairs. "At the first sign of insecurity, the head of the family protects his
women and children, and the first measure they take is to keep them inside the
house."
Women who have gained ground haven't talked of the constitutional
principles of equality. Instead, they focus on the respect accorded women by the
Koran, and on the importance of mothers and homes, where older women have long
held positions of power.
Their goal, often unstated, is to convince
fathers and brothers, husbands and sons that when a woman is empowered, the
males benefit as well. They hope their daughters will at least have more choices
than they had.
Women are learning to drive, some at their husbands'
urging so they can help with family errands. Small numbers have opened bank
accounts. Women have become a regular presence on television talk shows, and
they deliver weather reports and other news features.
According to
Farsona Simimi, a popular television talk show host, "There is a quiet
revolution here." But, she added, "I do not know whether it will
succeed."
Three times in the last century, the status of women has
improved, only to suffer reversals.
The first time was in the 1920s, when
ruler Amanullah Khan abolished the requirement that women be completely covered
in public and encouraged his wife to wear a hat without a veil. He was ousted by
the mullahs.
The lot of women improved again in the 1960s, when four
women were elected to parliament. One of them was the mother of Nasrine Gross,
now an Afghan American lecturer in sociology at Kabul University.
A
family album contains photos of her mother and several friends at a picnic 40
years ago. They wear knee-length dresses with short sleeves; a couple of them
have beehive hairdos, strands blowing free in the summer breeze as they lean
against a sleek car. Two men in Western clothing stand nearby.
"No one
can believe these pictures were taken here," Gross said.
In the 1970s,
political turmoil stymied women's progress. But in the next decade, ruling
communists prohibited women from wearing burkas and appointed many to government
posts. More than 50 were given judgeships, and many others took positions in the
police and healthcare professions.
When the Taliban took power in 1996,
it banned all education for women, even small girls. It removed women from
almost all jobs outside the home and required them to cover their faces in
public by wearing a burka. In some areas, it demanded that house windows be
painted black so women could not see out and men could not see in. Women were
whipped in public for the smallest infraction.
Educated Afghans and
international aid workers say the U.S.-backed government of President Hamid
Karzai has done little besides removing the Taliban restrictions. He has only
one woman in his Cabinet of 25 and none among his top advisors.
Several
Afghan women said that they had encouraged Karzai to do small things, such as
have his wife accompany him to public events, but that he had never done
so.
Rahala Salim was one of those who became a judge under the
communists, and she recalls watching in horror as the Taliban dismantled every
vestige of protection for women.
"As a judge, when I saw women coming to
me crying because they had been abused, I felt responsible, I felt I had to
defend their rights," said Salim, who was removed from her post by the Taliban.
Under its rule, she said, "if a man was accused of rape, it was the woman who
was arrested and blamed."
Salim knew from her legal studies that Sharia,
or Islamic law, offered women some legal protection. The Koran and hadiths, the
sayings of the Prophet Hazrat Mohammad (pbuh), are open to an array of
interpretations. And early Islam glorifies several women, including Prophet
Hazrat Mohammad's (pbuh)daughter Hazrat Fatima, who is portrayed as an
independent leader of her people.
"We have to know the real Sharia; we
have to be able to point to passages in the holy Koran and say, 'Here, read
this,' " Salim said. "In Islamic history, men have been the boss. They want to
be the boss forever. That's why they never want women to appear in public, but
that is not Islam; that is cultural tradition."
The notion of Islam as a
pillar of freedom came from Salim's mother.
"My mother didn't have any
sons, and so my father took a second wife, and it made her extremely sad and it
made her life very hard," Salim said. "She told me, 'Unless you can have enough
education, you can never stand against men. You must learn Islam so you can
struggle against them.' "
During the Taliban era, Salim began to teach
the Koran. Once a week, 70 women would gather for classes, sometimes at her
house, sometimes elsewhere so the Taliban would not become suspicious.
"l
would cook something as if we were just gathering for a meal, and then we would
recite the holy Koran and discuss Islamic questions and then political issues,"
she recalled.
After the Taliban fled, Salim ran for parliament. But she
understood that she would need the mullahs behind her, and when she was elected,
she asked them whether she could address families in the mosque. Her appeal
opened the door for women to enter there. In her district, women never had; they
prayed at home.
"It was the first time that women saw the inside of the
mosque," she said. Then, with the mullahs' assent, she asked the families to
send their daughters to school.
Other women have reached similar
conclusions: that if they are to persuade men to stand behind them, they will
need mullahs as allies and Islam as a shield.
Jalal, the former women's
minister, has convened meetings of mullahs to discuss Koranic interpretations of
women's rights. A meeting last summer in Kabul drew 100 mullahs from around the
country. She also has asked new "women's councils" to work closely with local
mullahs. So far, the councils are active primarily in Kabul and on its
outskirts.
In Chakadera, a district at the foot of mountains about an
hour north of Kabul, Maseema Sakhi acts as the local liaison to the Women's
Affairs Ministry. A tiny, graceful woman of 45, she went to college and teaches
at the local grade school. But she married a village man and lives in a typical
Afghan mud compound with several generations of family, where chickens and
turkeys roam the yard.
She has made overtures to local mullahs, so when
there are domestic problems they consider coming to her.
Recently a girl
arrived in the village in tattered clothes, exhausted and battered. She had run
away from her husband's family. She said she had been badly beaten and was
afraid she would be killed.
In the past, the elders and the mullah might
have forced the girl to tell them where she came from and taken her back, all
but condemning her to death. This time, the mullah sent for Sakhi.
"She
had walked three days and three nights through the mountains without stopping.
Her feet were torn," Sakhi said. "She said she was so miserable in her home that
she wished a wild animal would eat her. We took her to the women's ministry, and
now she is in a shelter and she calls me her mother."
Pushtoon, the
policewoman, never thought of herself as a crusader.
Her mother died when
she was an infant. Brought up by her father in Logar province, south of Kabul,
she gained a rudimentary knowledge of reading.
At 13, she was married to
a man many years her senior. At 15, she bore the first of her six children. The
family moved to Pakistan, where her husband, who was often unemployed, took up
with a younger woman.
Depressed, confused and only dimly aware of how the
Taliban treated women, Pushtoon returned to Logar to claim a piece of land her
father had left her when he died. She wanted to sell it to help support her
family.
But the Taliban arrested her, saying she must have killed her
husband since he wasn't with her. Her only relatives were her husband's family,
and they wanted the land for themselves. The Taliban accused her of murder and
took her to the women's prison in Kabul.
Locked in a cell barely large
enough for a bed, she became desperate.
"I was shouting and shouting that
I was innocent, and no one was listening," she recalled, nervously touching the
braid on the cuff of her police uniform.
After six months, she shut
herself in a tiny, squalid latrine, lighted a match and held it to her
clothing.
"The flames licked over the material and burned my hair and was
burning my face and burned my hands," she said. "I burned myself to die there.
That would have been better than a life in prison. I knew no one in Kabul. No
one came to visit me. I had two daughters and four boys and they were in
Pakistan and I missed them."
But she didn't die. And a few days later the
Taliban released her. She still has scars on her hands and a dark, pitted mark
on her forehead from the flames. She covers it with the ornamental red makeup
that some Afghan women daub above their brows.
She cited the case of a
woman who sought her help: "Her husband didn't have a job. He was home all the
time and he beat her every day. He broke two of her teeth, and he put a pillow
over her mouth when he hit her so she wouldn't shout and so the neighbors would
not hear."
Such women are often afraid that if they complain, their
husbands will kill them and they will bring dishonor to their families, Pushtoon
said.
"I am doing this job now," Pushtoon said, "because when a woman
says she is innocent, someone should listen."
Farsona Simimi has taken a
different road, becoming a popular television talk show host on the Tolo
network, one of Afghanistan's new private stations.
She uses the
nonthreatening idiom of shows such as "Bride" and "Happy Morning" to help women
think about asserting their rights and to help men understand the problems women
face. She often alternates taboo topics with ones that even the most
conservative men would not oppose.
"Today I had two subjects on the
family program: how to teach a child and how to get dark spots out of a shirt,"
she said with a smile.
Dressed modestly in a high-necked white blouse and
an ankle-length white skirt, only her veil suggests her independent views: It
perches so far back on her head that it looks in danger of slipping off, and it
shows a swath of her slightly hennaed hair.
"When I first was on TV, my
family was afraid for me," she said. "People said to my husband, 'How can you
let her do that?' "
A year ago, one of Simimi's female colleagues was
slain. Many people think it was because someone in her family considered her too
modern. She wore blouses and tight jeans and went to clubs at night, said
colleagues at Tolo.
It has taken almost three years, but Simimi has found
that her audience is beginning to trust her. Women telephone her at the station
and send her e-mails, and when she attends weddings or other large gatherings,
they seek her out to ask questions or tell her their stories.
Her
greatest regret is that television cannot yet show the cracked ribs and the
burns and the other abuses women suffer.
"But we can talk about some of
these things. One of our main topics on the family program is men beating their
wives.. And we talk about arranged marriage from many perspectives, [such as]
the father picks a person and doesn't talk about it or discuss it with the
woman."
When she looks at her own family, she sees the problem writ
small. Her young son recently told her as she was leaving for work, "Mama, you
must wear a bigger scarf."
"Now, where did he get that idea? He is only
8, but he spends time with his father, with his grandfather - they must say some
of these things," she said.
"It will take a long, long time for things to
change. We must wait for this generation to grow up, and then maybe in two more
generations we will see some changes."
Outside Kabul, where villages sit
lonely in the mountain desert, women's prospects are far bleaker. In Chakadera,
Sakhi's village, formation of a sewing circle was seen as a major advance. It
allowed women to meet and share their stories. But the conversations often turn
to domestic violence.
Chakadera was on the front line when the Taliban
took over, and its women were forbidden even to go to the village market. They
married first cousins because those were the only people they could meet. Now
the women gather in a school room to sew, to laugh a little, cry, and support
those among them most battered by their men.
But no one knows how long
the sewing group will last. In early autumn, a nearby school was burned. If
there is another attack, the women might not be allowed to go out, or their
daughters to go to school.
For now, Sakhi said, "everybody can come here
to sew and weave and forget her sorrows for two or three hours each
week."
One of the women, Malalai, 29, managed a smile even though she
expressed little affection for her husband, who forbids her even to buy clothes
for their children without his permission. Married at 15, she was a mother of
three boys and two girls before she was 24. She wants a different life for her
girls.
"I want them to get an education, to work, and only then to get
married," she said.
What will happen if the Taliban returns?
She
brushed her hand over several spools of thread sitting before her on the floor,
knocking each one over as if they represented the sewing circle, the dreams for
her daughters, the possibility of a different future.
"Gone," she said.
All gone.
Ends
SA/EN
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Afghan women's quiet revolution hangs by a thread
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