|
PAKISTAN: Relief workers
provide positive role models for women
June 7, 2006 - (IRIN) Near her house in the small
town of Bisham, 250 km northeast of the Pakistani capital, Islamabad,
Nasreen, 10, is playing a game with her younger neighbours. Free
briefly from their domestic chores, the girls are pretending to
be doctors – tending to a rag doll that lies on a bed of twigs,
its arm and leg bandaged. While the earthquake of 8 October 2005
destroyed many lives and many dreams, the relief effort that came
after it, and the exposure of remote communities to teams of volunteers
and experts who rushed to devastated areas from around the world
and from major cities in Pakistan, seems to have generated a new
vision.
This is certainly true for Nasreen and her younger
sister, Noor, eight. Both girls, the daughters of a local shopkeeper,
want to study medicine - and are undeterred by the fact that they
are not yet enrolled at primary school. "I saw women here who
helped the injured people and injected babies so they would not
get sick. I want to be like them," Nasreen shyly told IRIN.
Fortunately for the child, her father, Ibrahim, supports the idea.
"I was amazed at the way some of the women working here were
able to help our people. Along with the men, they climbed hills,
even drove vehicles and attended to our injured womenfolk. I want
my daughters to study and be like them," he said.
In Shangla district, making up a part of the picturesque
Swat Valley, the literacy rate for the population of 541,000 is
under 15 percent. For women, the figure stands at 3.7 percent –
and even in Bisham – one of the biggest towns in the area
– most girls do not go to school. But the arrival of thousands
of relief workers, many of whom were women, appears to have inspired
many women in Bisham and in neighbouring Battagram district.
While Ibrahim is making plans to enrol his girls
at school, alongside his two sons, others, such as Zeenat Bibi,
25, from a village nearby, hopes to persuade her husband, Jamil
Khan, to let her start a small stitching business. Like over 150
other female quake victims who braved the icy winter at the Meira
Camp, in Battagram, Zeenat learnt how to stitch under an office
of the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR)-funded
programme. "The whirr of the machine made me feel powerful,
and somehow strong. I love being able to design small clothes for
children and even other women," she said.
With many of the quake-affected areas in the North
West Frontier Province (NWFP) of Pakistan ranking among the most
orthodox and conservative in the country, simply the chance to see
women at work in different roles – as camp organisers, teachers,
doctors, journalists and as a part of architectural or geological
teams – has given many a new perspective on life. Even men
have admitted to being greatly impressed by women volunteers, including
young Pakistani women. Omar Gul, 32, in Battagram, who has worked
in Dubai in the United Arab Emirates (UAE), said: "At first
people here did not believe me when I told them that there, women
worked in offices, as engineers and in shops. Now they have seen
it themselves."
In addition, awareness-raising programmes linked
to health and other concerns have also helped empower women. "Women
loved to hear new things and to have their own queries about issues
answered," said Swiss nurse Anna-Tina Jaeckle, who has spent
the last month working with the social welfare organisation Living
Education in quake-hit areas. All these factors have created a new
awakening among many women and girls in quake-hit areas. How far
the experience will help them overcome the orthodoxy that still
prevails in many regions and to benefit in one way or the other
from their experiences, remains to be seen.
From: http://www.alertnet.org/thenews/newsdesk/IRIN/2a37529d1fcf0457500705753e9af8bf.htm
|