RNW, Janet
Nammur, RNW English section, 18 October 2012
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| (Photo: Facebook) |
Half of
Arab society is screaming at the other half: “I am just as good as you are!”
The 'Uprising of women in the Arab world’ has launched a Facebook campaign.
It’s urging Arab women to rise up against what they call ‘male dictatorship’ in
order to complete the Arab spring.
Students,
teenagers and mothers quickly began posting their pictures on the Facebook page. Each photo features a participant, carrying a poster explaining why she
supports the uprising. Or he, because large numbers of young Arab men are also
backing the campaign.
Dictators
in their houses
The
campaign ‘I am with the uprising of women in the Arab world’ started in early
October. In a press release, the four
women who launched the campaign stated they wanted “to remind everyone that the
revolutions were aimed at dignity, social justice and freedom, and that these
three goals can never be realised if women are absent from the public sphere”.
They added, "we have to continue the revolution to oust male chauvinism
that turns every man into a dictator over his wife, daughter, sister, and even
mother”.
Many
activists and bloggers have welcomed the campaign. In less than three weeks,
the number of 'likes' that the page has attracted has increased to over forty
thousand.
Women from
East to West
The
Facebook page full of pictures reflects the problems that women face in various
Arab societies, ranging from sexual harassment to women’s inability to pass
their nationality on to their children.
“I am with
the uprising of women in the Arab world,” writes a Syrian mother, “because I
have been a Syrian all my life, but my children are Russian because that’s my
husband’s nationality”.
Protesting
against the obligation to cover her face, a Saudi girl held up a paper in front
of her face: “I’m in favour of the campaign because I cannot take a picture of
my own face”.
My body is
mine
“Please
look at our brains, not our bodies”, say several participants. “I’ll back the
uprising of women in the Arab world until men stop looking at my body and start
understanding my thoughts”, writes one woman. Another says, “women are still
prisoners of their virginity”.
A Syrian
girl, for her part, writes: “My body is mine. It doesn’t belong to the liberals
whose only aim is to undress it, nor to the radicals whose only aim is to cover
it”.
Rape in the
name of marriage
Voices are
also being raised, opposing the use of religious laws against women. “Islam is
my dignity”, says a girl from Sudan. “I won't accept to be insulted or raped in
its name.”
One of the
main complaints on the page is Islamic legislation allowing marriage of
under-age girls. “Yemeni law allows me to be raped if I am fully physically
developed, even though I am still a kid”, says one Yemeni woman. “They call
that marriage.” A male compatriot says he is “tired of fatwas and a
male-dominated society that condones the marriage of children”.
Work twice
as much
Another hot
topic is equal rights in society and the workplace. “I don't want to work twice
as hard as my brother and earn half as much”, says a girl from Sudan.
People are
also expressing their concerns about developments in Tunisia: “the Personal
Status Code is in danger”, writes one young man, “but it is the best legal
framework for women in the Arab world.”
Look beyond
appearances
The
pictures of the women on the 'Uprising of women in the Arab world' page have
also been criticised. Some zealous visitors have launched personal attacks and
written obscenities.
The
moderators of the page have responded forcefully: “When we put up a picture of
a veiled woman, no one objects to her appearance. But when we post the picture
of a woman who doesn’t cover herself, it is immediately plastered with comments
claiming that her appearance is weakening the cause!”
They are
particularly sorry to see that some of these comments come from women
themselves. “This just goes to prove that women can do other women an injustice
without even being aware of it.”
People are
continuing to post new pictures in support of the uprising. According to
Lebanese artist and activist Joumana Hada, “that’s because women deserve more
and they are capable of more”.
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