|
AFTER AN ADVOCATE'S KILLING, IRAQI
WOMEN TRY TO STAY COURSE
By Annia Ciezadlo
April 01, 2004 (Christian Monitor) For their new women's
center, the women of Karbala chose the name of a warrior: Zainab
al-Hawraa. Sister of the Shiite martyr Imam Hussein, Zainab fought
alongside him in 680, saving his young son and his legacy for future
generations.
When Fern Holland heard the story, she laughed and told the women,
"We want all Iraqi women to be just like her."
Ms. Holland, a young lawyer from Oklahoma, was women's rights coordinator
of Iraq's Shiite heartland for the Coalition Provisional Authority.
She helped write the part of the new constitution addressing women's
rights. To the women in Karbala, she was "just like a sister."
March 9, after visiting the center, Holland and her deputy, Salwa
Ourmashi, and coalition press officer Robert Zangas were killed,
their car forced off the road and machine-gunned. Investigators
arrested six suspects, four with valid Iraqi police ID.
Coalition officials call the murders an assassination, but hesitate
to conclude whether the three civilians were targeted for promoting
women's rights or as part of a larger campaign against Americans
and Iraqis who work with them. Either way, the killings accelerated
the CPA's plan to hand over the centers to Iraqi women to run by
themselves, financing their work by charging small fees for classes
and renting out space.
"Fern was a huge catalyst for women's rights, says Hilary White,
CPA press officer and Holland's former roommate, "but the women
wanted it just as much as she did."
But today, the women carrying on Holland's and Ourmashi's work are
afraid.
Over the past few months, Iraqi women in public roles, especially
those who work with Americans or in promoting women's rights, have
increasingly become targets of death threats and assassination attempts.
Many large international aid groups, including most of those with
women's programs, have already withdrawn international staff because
of attacks against aid workers. Now the few remaining women's groups
fear they will be next.
"We are all targets, women and Americans alike," says
Yanar Mohammed, a newspaper editor and outspoken feminist. "There
are many women activists, but they cannot speak boldly against political
Islam."
Ms. Mohammed has received several death threats from a militant
Islamic group called Jaish al-Sahaba, Army of the Prophet's Companions,
for her opposition to Islamic law.
"If you do not ask forgiveness, then you are an apostate and
should be killed by Islamic law," read the first threat, quoting
a verse from the Koran that promises death or crucifixion for those
who spread sins on Earth.
Mohammed is a socialist, a defiantly secular voice against sexual
taboos. But even devoutly religious women who wear the veil aren't
safe: Raja Habib Khuzai, a Shiite member of the US-appointed Iraqi
Governing Council, received threats after voting against a controversial
measure that would have replaced Iraq's civil personal status laws
with Islamic law, or sharia.
At the Karbala center, the women are hardly opposed to sharia -
most of them wear the maqna, a veil so concealing it even covers
their chins. But they are determined to recapture a role in the
city's teeming civic life.
"I came to this center because I wanted women to have a role
in this community, because we are more than half the community,"
says Amal Omran, a young veterinarian. "And I think it's our
reward for not having anything before."
Under Saddam Hussein, women enjoyed civil protections that were
relatively advanced for the Arab world, a legacy of the pre-Baathist
monarchy. But after the Iran-Iraq war of the 1980s, Mr. Hussein
began courting Islamic hard-liners, segregating schools and decriminalizing
polygamy and honor killings.
After the 1991 Gulf War, women in Iraq's Kurdish-controlled north
were able to pass laws protecting their rights, including one that
outlaws honor killings. But in the rest of Iraq, Hussein's reign
of terror led men to clamp down on women - especially in the south,
where Hussein executed tens (possibly hundreds) of thousands of
Shiites, mostly men but also women.
Today, women make up about two-thirds of southern Iraq's population.
Yet they are largely absent from public life. Holland wanted to
change that.
"Her whole push was for the centers, so that the women in the
south wouldn't be forgotten," says Manal Omar, the Iraq coordinator
of Women for Women, a non-profit group dedicated to helping women
in former war zones become self-sufficient.
With Ourmashi, Holland opened four women's centers in Iraq's south-central
region, all offering classes in computers, catering, sewing, and
other skills designed to help women support themselves. They were
planning three more.
"She was the one who suggested that we open a center for women,"
says Amira Salih, who met Holland while volunteering for Human Rights
Watch. "And I told her about this building, which used to be
for women in the time of Saddam."
After talking to the mayor of Karbala, Holland reclaimed the building
from the Shiite Dawa Party, which had occupied it after the war.
On Feb. 16, US administrator Paul Bremer showed up to open the center.
"Iraq is full of hope," he told the women, "and I
know you will succeed."
Bremer's mere presence was enough to irk some Shiite clerics. "The
development that the center is bringing, the new technology, it
serves all of the people," says Sheikh Khidayer al-Ansari,
manager of the Karbala office of firebrand Shiite cleric Moqtada
al-Sadr. "But I object that foreigners came here to open this
center."
There was trouble even before the center opened. Ms. Salih, the
center's first manager, stepped down after repeated threats to shoot
or hang her. "I talked to Salwa, and she said, 'just ignore
them,'" says Salih. "But I was scared for my life."
Today, the center remains open. Children scamper down hallways lined
with potted eucalyptus, while women hunch over computers in the
Internet cafe. But the women inside are under siege. Many get threatening
phone calls, some explicit and others unsettlingly vague. "They
always say, 'Why did they choose you?' " says Badiqa al-Samawi,
a volunteer board member.
On March 24, a woman came to Ms. Samawi's home, warning her to stay
away from the center. "She said that this center is set up
to serve the Americans - and that they are not just Americans, they
are Jews, and it's not good for a woman's reputation to go there,"
recalls Samawi. Weeping, she begged the woman to visit the center,
to see for herself. But the woman refused.
Samawi hopes the threats will ease once the Americans hand over
control. But Ms. Omar and others fear that once the Americans pull
out, someone - perhaps the Dawa Party, perhaps simply armed men
- will try to take over the Karbala building and other women's centers.
"It might not even be informal, it might even be the government
itself," says Omar.
For now, the women feel isolated. Before she was killed, Holland
would visit Karbala at least once a week, bringing them falafel
she bought in the souks. But today, few foreigners risk the roads
to Karbala. "We can't get out there because of the security
risk, and it's tearing me apart, because I know Fern and Salwa would
have wanted us to carry on their work," says Omar, an Arab-American
whose group is one of a handful of aid organizations still helping
women in southern Iraq.
But Omar is determined to go back. "Fern and Salwa bridged
two completely separate parts of the world," she says, "and
people who might not have stopped and thought about women in Iraq
now will, because of them."
From: http://www.csmonitor.com/2004/0401/p01s04-woiq.html
|