The human rights of ordinary
Algerians, and in particular Algerian women, are under siege. Crimes
against human dignity occur every day, with women the targets of much of
the violence. Yet Algerian women have been tragically ignored by their
government, forgotten by the national and international media.
International humanitarian organizations have yet to respond in any
meaningful way.
Do they know that women and
girls are dying in terrorist attacks across Algeria? Two hundred women
have been killed over the last three years, aside from those who have
"disappeared." As in Bosnia, Algerian women are the first
victims of the civil war in their country. In the Balkans, rape and forced
pregnancy were tactics of "ethnic cleansing"; in Algeria, the
persecution of women is a key element of "religious cleansing."
Young or old, veiled or not,
Algerian women are powerful symbols for all of the rival factions vying
for power. Some kill women because they wear the hijab, or
headscarf. Other women are targeted because they are intellectuals,
because they work and because they are resolutely and unabashedly modern.
Why this persecution of women?
Why, of all the Islamists in all the countries of the Arab-Muslim world,
do the Islamists of Algeria alone kill women as a matter of strategy? Old
women have had their throats slit in their own homes, like 94-year-old
Boudjar Kethoum of Sidi Bel-Abbes. Students, both veiled and unveiled,
have been gunned down in the street, kidnapped, or raped and then murdered
like 19-year-old Zoulikha Boughadou and her 15-year-old sister, Saida. Four
young Algerian women lost their lives in three separate incidents. One of
these, 15-year-old Fatima Ghodbane, was dragged from her school by six
gunmen who then slit her throat. A second, Yamina Amrani, was pregnant
when she was killed by eight men in her home in Tessala El-Mardja. Three
men shot dead Amel Guedjali, 19, and her sister Karima, 18, in front of
their father and a younger sister in their house outside Algiers. These
are not unique cases. Women die day after day.
Discussion of war crimes
against women (carried out in their own country by their own countrymen)
is not to deny the tragedy of the thousands of male victims cut down by
terrorism since 1992. Rather it is intended to break the silence
surrounding the agony of Algerian women. The present situation in Algeria
is different from that of Egypt, Palestine and even Afghanistan. In these
cases, although state authorities and their Islamist rivals are locked in
battles for power, both sides pursue strategies and tactics in which
barbarous treatment of women and children is more or less avoided. In
Algeria, by contrast, wall posters threaten women with death if they go to
the hammam (public baths for women), frequent beauty salons, work,
play sports or study music or art. The hijab is now the supreme
obligation.
The treatment of women raises
serious questions about the level of faith and Islamic behavior on the
part of the protagonists in the civil war in Algeria. All involvedthe
state functionaries, the police, the military and the Islamistsare
Muslims. Even Islamic activists like Sudan's Hassan Al-Turabi have
disavowed the war against Algerian women. Tunisian Islamist Rachid
Ghannouchi declared, "As Islamists ourselves, we are ashamed at what
Algerian Islamists are doing to women!"
Only ashamed? Islam itself is
being disfigured and perverted! To see how far events in Algeria have
strayed from the ideals of the faith, one need only recall the celebrated
case of Hind, wife of the leader of the pagan Quraysh of Mecca and perhaps
the Prophet Muhammad's fiercest enemy, Abu Sufyan. During the Battle of
Uhud (625 C.E.), which pitted the Meccans against the Muslims, Hind roamed
the battlefield defiling the corpses of the Muslim dead, cutting off their
ears and noses and stringing them on her necklace. She also paid a Meccan
slave to seek out and slay Hamza, an uncle of the Prophet, during the
battle.
Yet Hind was not condemned to
death by either the Prophet or his Companions. When the Muslims entered
Mecca five years after Uhud, Hind was among those who came to give their
allegiance to Muhammad. She responded to the Prophet's terms with bitter
sarcasm. When Muhammad forbade the Meccans from killing their children
(infanticide being common in pre-Islamic Arabia), Hind snapped, "Do
we have any children left that you didn't kill at Badr?" referring to
a battle where a small band of Muslims exacted heavy losses from the
Quraysh. Despite her actions and her attitude, Hind was spared, as were
the other women who opposed Islam in its formative period. This was the
"golden era" of the Prophet Muhammad and the four "rightly
guided" caliphs; Abu Bakr, 'Umar, 'Uthman and Ali. After that time
obscurantism and the most retrograde misogyny reversed the position of
Muslim women.
The only case of wise
government mentioned in the Qur'an is that of a womanBilqis, the Queen
of Sheba. Closer to our time, in 1250 C.E., Shajarat Ad-Dur ruled Egypt
and had the Friday prayers said in her name in the country's mosques.
Therefore, one must ask where the self-proclaimed Islamists find their
program for society, in which women are made subservient under the law and
which bases its future upon the corpses of women.
Aicha
Lemsine is an award-winning Algerian author. She lives in Algeria and
publishes political analyses in the Algerian and international Arab press.
She is a member of the PEN Club's International Women's Committee and
vice-president of WORLD, the Women's Organization for Rights, Literature
and Development.
Source:
by courtesy & 2001 Aicha
Lemsine & WRMEA
by the same author:
Berberism: An Historical Travesty in Algeria's Time of
Travail