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Iraq Refugee Crisis Engulfs
Women Silenced by Rape
By Rasha Elass
April 1, 2007 - (WOMENSENEWS)
BEIRUT, Lebanon : An Iraqi woman who survived a rape before she
and her family moved to Lebanon is finding a way to talk about her
ordeal. But aid workers say that in the major Iraqi refugee communities
of Syria and Jordan this war wound goes unmentioned.
'Noura' fled Iraq after she was raped
The six kidnappers who raped Noura in Baghdad left her on the highway
bleeding, her face bruised, her clothes torn and her feet bare.
Her husband of 18 years was with her when she was kidnapped and
he was stabbed and left for dead.
Onlookers who witnessed the kidnapping in the street, however, took
Noura's husband to the hospital. The following morning, after the
kidnappers pushed Noura out of their car by the highway and threatened
to kill her if she described them to anyone, a minibus driver acting
as a good Samaritan picked her up, gave her his own shoes and coat
and dropped her off at her sister's.
The couple was reunited and a few days later they fled to Syria
with their three children, partly to escape the violence and start
a new life and partly to escape the stigma attached to rape victims
and shield their children from ever learning of it.
"I sat in Sit Zeinab and prayed that God would strike me dead,"
said Noura, a 34-year-old Sunni, referring to the mosque where thousands
of Iraqi refugees, mostly Shiite but some Sunni, pray in Damascus.
Today, almost two and a half years later, Noura--who asked that
her real name not be used--and her husband live in anonymity in
a suburb of Beirut.
"There were too many Iraqis in Syria," Noura said, of
the family's decision to move a second time.
"We don't socialize with any Iraqis at all. My friends are
all Lebanese. My 7-year-old doesn't even speak with an Iraqi dialect
and doesn't understand Iraqi," said Noura, who bleaches her
brunette hair blond and speaks in a mixture of dialects. Her marriage
has been shattered since the brutal attack.
"He hits me now sometimes, like just two days ago, because
he got so frustrated and angry very quickly for no reason,"
she said in his presence, adding he never used to hit her "before
the incident." Her husband stared at the floor.
Responding to the Crime
When her husband left the house, Noura also revealed that her brothers
repeatedly told her husband they blamed him for failing to protect
her. She said he has developed sexual impotence since the attack.
"Men and women exposed to torture--and rape is a form of torture--have
trouble rebuilding relations with their family because they feel
like a stranger to each other. They develop emotional numbness,
impotence, or sexual or physical aggression," said Suzanne
Jabbour, director of the Restart Center for Rehabilitation of Victims
of Violence and Torture. Based in Tripoli, Lebanon, it is one of
the few internationally accredited centers operating in the region.
Noura and her husband go to the center for psychiatric help and
counseling every week, and Noura said it has helped their relationship.
Her husband, who used to not trust doctors, now looks forward to
their weekly therapy sessions "because he feels good after
he talks about his thoughts and feelings."
But among Iraqi refugees living in crowded conditions in other countries,
there is mainly silence about the sexual violence that women may
have endured in Iraq.
"There are thousands and thousands of rape cases, but the victims
would rather die than talk about it," said Ahmed Ali, an Iraqi
journalist who recently fled to Syria. He said he repeatedly tried
to write about the pervasiveness of rape in Iraq since the war started,
but no one would discuss it with him.
Humanitarian organizations currently working with Iraqi refugees
are also shy about discussing the sexual violence that refugees
might have endured.
"There are many cases of rape among Iraqi women and, to a lesser
extent, men, but it's culturally too sensitive to discuss in the
open," said one humanitarian aid worker in Damascus on the
condition of anonymity.
Among Iraqi refugees, now
considered one of the fastest growing refugee crises in the world,
no one knows how many women live with the memory of a brutal attack,
suffering in silence to protect themselves and their families from
unbearable stigma.
Outreach Efforts Beginning
International humanitarian organizations working with refugees have
just begun to provide outreach and rehabilitation programs for rape
and sexual abuse victims.
There are 2 million Iraqi refugees living outside of Iraq, mainly
in Syria and Jordan, with several thousand in Lebanon, according
to the United Nations. And every month thousands of Iraqis flee.
Within Iraq, there are also an estimated 1.8 million internally
displaced Iraqis. The New York-based International Rescue Committee
is now setting up an operation in Amman, Jordan, to provide care
for refugees.
Statistics are not available on rape survivors among Iraqi refugees,
but a 2003 Human Rights Watch report documents numerous cases similar
to Noura's during an earlier phase in the war.
In Lebanon, Noura and her family have no legal status, which means
they struggle to live on whatever her husband manages to earn and
local charity. But she has found relief at least in breaking the
silence.
"Last Valentine's my (13-year-old) daughter asked me: How come
daddy didn't bring you flowers? I didn't know what to tell her,"
said Noura. "But I woke up in the middle of that night and
found my husband kissing my hands quietly. He was crying."
Heidi Lehmann is a senior advisor at the International Rescue Committee,
one of the first international organizations to provide gender-based
violence outreach and rehabilitation programs in conflicts such
as Bosnia-Herzegovina, Rwanda and Sierra Leone, where Lehmann has
worked with rape survivors.
Rape Endemic to War Zones
"It's amazing the similarities between war zones in terms of
women being targeted and the stigma attached," said Lehmann.
"Sexual violence is extremely common in war zones, and it's
not a matter of if, but a matter of how often." Iraqi refugees
enter a Syrian mosque in May 2006.
In February, an Iraqi woman shocked viewers when she went on Al-Jazeera,
one of the most watched television stations in the Arab world, alleging
she had been raped by three Iraqi policemen after they took her
in for questioning.
The alleged victim is Sunni and the policemen she accused are Shiite.
Her allegations unleashed a furious reaction along sectarian lines,
offering an object lesson in what a rape survivor and her family
might endure if they came forward.
One Iraqi member of Parliament told Al-Jazeera that the woman, dubbed
Sabrine, was "obviously lying about the rape . . . judging
from the makeup she wears." He was referring to the traditional
Arabic black Kohl that Sabrine wore in her eyes the day she spoke
on Al-Jazeera; she had also worn a scarf that covered her hair and
face but revealed her eyes.
Noura says she endured her own version of humiliation and stigma
after her mother and 12 siblings and neighbors found out about what
had happened to her.
"My mother and siblings in Baghdad all moved out of their neighborhood
to get away from the looks and whispers," said Noura. "And
today when my brothers call every now and then to check up on us,
I feel ashamed to talk to them. I feel I've let them down somehow."
From : http://www.womensenews.org/article.cfm?aid=3116
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