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Women’s Work
By Nisha Varia
March 8, 2008 (HRW) New York – International
Women’s Day is an opportunity not only to evaluate women’s
progress in areas such as education, employment, and politics,
but also to honor the importance of what has been traditionally
viewed as “women’s work”: cooking, cleaning,
and childcare. For many of us, an incredibly precious and important
part of our lives is the well-being of our children, the comfort
of our elderly parents, and a safe, clean home where we can count
on nourishing meals. Yet society gives little recognition to the
daily labors required to nurture a family and a home.
Lebanese women are caught in an unenviable position. While their
participation in the workforce has increased, gender stereotyping
and discrimination mean that they have retained the primary burden
of household work. Their task has been made harder by a society
that clings to the importance of a well-kept home while at the
same time disparaging cooking and cleaning as trivial and unimportant
in comparison to the “real” work of making deals at
an office or clocking hours at a factory. This societal attitude
has deeply undermined the skills required to care for the ill,
raise children, and prepare meals several times a day, and in
many cases, to perform such work simultaneously.
The lack of respect for household work is shown by not only Lebanese
men, but also by many Lebanese women. This is most obvious in
the treatment of migrant domestic workers. Each year, tens of
thousands of women from Sri Lanka, the Philippines, Ethiopia,
and other countries leave their own families behind to help the
Lebanese manage theirs. While many receive good treatment from
their employers, far too many others are treated as if they are
barely human and as if their work has little value.
Seeming to forget that they hired a domestic worker because they
themselves found the demands of cleaning, cooking, and childrearing
to be overwhelming, many employers think nothing of requiring
domestic workers to be “on call” around-the-clock
and fail to provide them even one day of rest per week. In fact,
some employers want this help without paying for it or even when
they cannot afford it. Nonpayment of wages, for months and sometimes
years, is one of the most common problems faced by women domestic
workers.
Even the Lebanese government treats these women and their work
as if they were invisible. By excluding domestic work from the
labor laws, the government denies domestic workers the minimum
standards of employment that other workers enjoy, such as a day
off once a week, limits to working hours, and a minimum wage.
This exclusion symbolizes how labor associated with traditional
female roles of care-giving is not yet given full respect as work,
and unfortunately gives employers wide latitude to exploit domestic
workers.
Those opposed to reforming the labor laws assert that domestic
work is a special case, a form of work that cannot be regulated
because it takes place in private homes. Many employers claim
they treat their domestic worker like their daughter or as part
of the family. If this was truly the case, it is puzzling that
these employers would not support basic labor protections for
those they care about. Research shows that while some Lebanese
families treat their domestic workers well, many others do not
take this approach and do require guidance from the law –
common complaints made by domestic workers include inadequate
provision of food and restrictions on their freedom of movement.
In the worst cases, employers may physically or sexually abuse
domestic workers. These situations carry strikingly similar themes
to domestic violence. In such cases, employers may belittle and
insult the domestic worker, or beat her for small mistakes in
her work. Violence such as slapping or pushing a domestic worker
may often be socially sanctioned as “discipline.”
How could treatment of domestic workers, guests in this country
who spend their days and nights caring for Lebanese families get
to this point? International Women’s Day is a key moment
to reflect on not only the status of Lebanese women, but of all
the women in Lebanon, including migrant domestic workers. This
day is a reminder to see the parallels in the struggle for equal
rights.
Lebanese society has a choice: to continue the status quo, liberating
itself from housework by passing it on to poorer sisters from
around the world, but leaving them open to exploitation and abuse.
Or it can take steps to value household work, such as providing
equal labor rights to domestic workers, and giving them the dignity
they deserve.
From:http://hrw.org/english/docs/2008/03/08/lebano18245.htm
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