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Somalian Women's Courage
Goes Unrewarded
By: Robyn Dixon
August 30, 2006 – (The LA Times) During 15
years of chaos, they became breadwinners, then peacemakers. Now
their new freedoms are threatened. Her face is soft and round, cocooned
in a loose blue cotton hijab. Her eyes, black onyx full of mystery:
a Somalian Mona Lisa. But Maryam Mohammed covers her smile with
hennaed fingers, casts her eyes downward, a picture of shy anxiety,
the last person you'd expect to do the most dangerous job in one
of the most dangerous cities on Earth.
Until recently, Mohammed was one of the many women
who made the daily khat run, braving a gantlet of gunmen on the
airport road in a mad dash to meet small planes crammed with the
highly addictive narcotic leaf and bring it to market. "I was
feeling proud of myself," said Mohammed, 20, "and I felt
brave that I was risking my life for my family."
For 15 years, Somalia was ruled by clan-based strongmen,
each with his own private army. The capital was divided among the
warlords and controlled by their AK-47-toting fighters, many of
them children. In that decade and a half of chaos, violence and
war, the women of Mogadishu risked their lives time and again —
and in the process they have changed their country. First they became
the wartime breadwinners in this male-dominated society, a shift
as dramatic as when female munitions-factory workers in the United
States, Canada, Britain and Australia claimed new turf during World
War II. "Women had to help the family to survive. That's when
they got their voice, when they shared the life of the family with
the men," said Malyun Sheik Haidar, 31, who publishes a women's
newspaper.
This spring, women stepped in again. Weary of suffering
stoically, they jammed the switchboards of Mogadishu's many independent
radio stations with angry protests about the warlords' violence.
It marked a stunning shift in Somalian culture; people here call
it a popular revolution that helped defeat the warlords and ushered
in the reign of the Conservative Council of Islamic Courts in the
nation's capital. But now that they've helped end the brutal power
of the warlords, they may be forced to abandon their breadwinner
status, just like women had to after WWII.
Many also fear that before women have a chance
to enjoy their painfully acquired freedom, their wings will be clipped
by the hard-liners of the Islamic council. Already women are swapping
traditional Somalian dress, which is open at the face, for the Saudi-style
black hijab, which covers the face and body. Women's roles changed
after the overthrow of military dictator Mohamed Siad Barre in 1991,
as civil servants, mainly men, lost their jobs and the formal economy
collapsed. "Everybody had to start from scratch, and that meant
selling onions and tomatoes from small tables in the market. Men
were too proud to do that," said Shariff Osman, dean of the
computer science department at Mogadishu University. "From
the mid-1990s, people felt that women were the backbone of the family
because they paid the bills."
As the family breadwinner, Maryam Mohammed was
a part of the economic revolution, but she was too preoccupied with
the raw business of survival to worry about the political revolution
of recent months. She grew up a timid child. Her unemployed father,
a former soldier in the Barre regime, died four years ago. Her 17-year-old
brother, paid $1.50 a day as a militiaman for warlord Muse Sudi
Yalahow, was killed in a fight more than a year ago. Her mother
earned a few coins selling tea in the bazaar, but it was never enough.
So Mohammed decided to trade khat.
Like many young people raised in the warlord era,
she has little education, just three years of school, because her
father couldn't afford to send her to private school. There was
no government, thus no government-provided schools, hospitals, police,
water, electricity or sanitation. Her brother taught her how to
fire an AK-47. After he died, she approached local women for advice
on how to trade khat, and found herself, frozen by terror, on the
airport run. "I was trembling. I knew the militias could attack
us at any moment and kill me and steal the khat. But the problem
of our daily survival drove me to do it," said Mohammed, who
made $2.50 a day.
Before the warlords' defeat, the militias and freelance
gunmen were some of the most regular khat customers, but they did
not always pay. Sometimes they would shoot khat sellers in the market
or ambush them on the road. In one such ambush, Mohammed's friend
was shot and killed beside her. Nine months ago, Mohammed, under
pressure from her family, quit the dangerous trade. She joined a
militia, thinking it would be safer, but three months later she
found herself in the recent battles for Mogadishu. "I don't
like to kill people. I don't like to fight. In battle, you die or
kill," she said. "I was very frightened in battle, but
I had to do it for the money."
In a week's fighting, 50 men on Mohammed's side
died. Afraid of leaving her family without a breadwinner, she left.
But the family has only the dollar a day her mother makes selling
tea. "Now I'm not afraid of being killed, but I still have
the problem of survival. I have no job," she said. Like many
women in Mogadishu, she feels less vulnerable to violence, but she
is afraid it will be harder to find work under the Islamic regime.
"I don't see them as something good," she said. "I'd
like to leave Somalia if I can and do business, have a small shop
or even a job with a decent salary, like a secretary or a cleaner."
Anab Mohammed Isaaq, 35, has five children ranging
in age from 7 months to 10 years. She wears a white band on her
head to signify mourning for her husband, who was killed by a stray
bullet in the Mogadishu fighting. She supports the family by selling
clothes in the market, earning 50 cents to $1 a day. She has lived
in fear for her two daughters, Nasteexo, 10, and Hamsa, 7. In her
neighborhood of metal shacks, militias armed with razor-sharp machetes
have come at night and hacked through the walls, stealing girls.
A neighbor's 4-year-old was kidnapped, raped and killed. "The
problems are all on women. That's why they were complaining and
talking to the media," she said.
Osman, the university dean, said people in Mogadishu,
particularly women, were pushed over the edge. "I think they
took as much as they could," he said. "You accept things
and believe you can do nothing, but you get to the point where you
say, 'Enough is enough.' " Like the Taliban in Afghanistan,
the Islamic courts won popular support in the mid-1990s by trying
to enforce a degree of order, reducing theft and crime. When the
courts' militias recently drove the warlords from Mogadishu, they
had the support of the majority.
The courts represent various strands of Islam,
some more fundamentalist than others, but there are fears that the
recent rise of Sheik Hassan Dahir Aweys as chairman of the group
could mean more repressive, Taliban-style rules. Aweys took over
from the more moderate Sheik Sharif Sheik Ahmed. Even under the
more moderate leadership, Islamic guards had been stopping minibuses
to check women's clothing and men's hairstyles. Islamic guards grabbed
Ismahaan Ali Mohammed, 18, an aspiring actress, and hacked her clothing
with scissors because it was deemed too tight and un-Islamic. Wearing
heavy eyeliner that exaggerates her beauty, she and her friend Nawaal
Mohammed, 18, could not be more different from Maryam Mohammed,
the former khat trader. They are self-confident, assertive and eager
to soak up the pleasures of youth. But these days they must cover
their bright dresses with a hijab.
Nawaal Mohammed has two boyfriends and used to
wander the streets in a haze of love, holding hands with the favorite
of the moment. They went to the movies. She even kissed them secretly,
in their houses or hers. "Now I'm afraid to be arrested or
beaten," she said. "It's safer than before, but we have
no freedom. We are not happy with this Islamic Sharia law. "I
used to wear pants and a shirt. It's my style. I felt good. It made
me feel beautiful."
From: http://www.latimes.com/news/nationworld/world/la-fg-women30aug30,1,5228277.story?page=1&ctrack=1&cset=true&coll=la-headlines-world
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