|
Dealing with gender violence through
music
December 19, 2005 - (IRIN) Well-known Sudanese singers and actors
have an important role to play in teaching internally displaced
persons (IDPs) in the western Sudanese region of Darfur about the
harmful consequences of gender-based violence (GBV), aid workers
say.
"As a poet, music composer and singer, I profoundly know influence
of arts upon human beings and that human life is not sustained by
bread alone," said Abdel Karim el Kabli, an internationally
renowned Sudanese singer, after a recent concert in Otash IDP camp
near Nyala, the capital of South Darfur.
Kabli, along with singers Samira Dunia and Abdel Gadir Salim, entertained
thousands of IDPs as part of the 16 Days of Activism for Violence
Against Women campaign, which linked 25 November, the International
Day Against Violence Against Women and 10 December, International
Human Rights Day.
Thousands of IDPs living in Otash and surrounding areas gathered
to listen to Kabli as he sang, "Please do not cry but tell
all mothers in the neighbourhood that my passing away was due to
the ugly, primitive and dangerous circumcision. Tell all the women
the real causes of fistula; also that my death was due to my early
marriage and child pregnancy and I could not tolerate the pains
of delivery."
Kabli’s lyrics speak for thousands of women and girls in Sudan
who are victims of gender-based violence, which is often perpetrated
in the name of custom or tradition.
Between each song, members of the Tarab comedy group, which frequently
appears on Sudanese television, took to the stage and performed
comedic skits about GBV.
"These issues are very difficult to discuss in Sudan, so we
thought it best to address them in a way that would make the people
laugh but also make them think," explained Izeldin Ahmed Omda,
an actor from Tarab.
In one of the skits, a man sat at home all day while his wife worked
long hours selling tea to pay the bills. When she was late returning
home from work one night, her husband beat her for her tardiness.
"We made the man appear silly for treating the woman this way
and then asked, Why are you beating this woman when you will not
get up and work yourself? The woman does this work for you,"
Omda said.
The performances, which were supported by the UN Population Fund
(UNFPA), are part of a GBV prevention and treatment initiative in
Darfur. They were organised not only to educate Sudanese about these
issues, but also to give the IDPs a chance to enjoy themselves.
"[A] distinctive aspect of life of refugees and displaced persons
is [the] lack of access to cultural activities such as music, dance,
poetry and drama. That contributes to their sense of isolation from
the rest of society," said Pamela Delargy, chief of humanitarian
response for UNFPA in Sudan.
"Bringing some of Sudan's most renowned artists and musicians
to the camp itself is a message that the displaced in Darfur are
not forgotten in their own society and the recognition that music
and art is a very important part of life," she said.
Delargy added that greater effort needed to be made to protect women
and girls living in IDP camps.
"Women and girls in conflict situations all over the world
face problems of GBV. It comes as a direct result of war but also
because during displacement ... support systems of community and
protection are lost," she said.
During group discussions organised by the UN Children’s Fund
(UNICEF) in May, women and girls said that sexual violence and abuse
is a serious concern in Darfur. Most sexual assaults occurred outside
the camps, usually while the women and girls were collecting grass
or firewood.
These disclosures followed a report in March by the international
NGO Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF), which has provided
emergency aid and healthcare in Sudan for more than 20 years. The
organisation reported that between October 2004 and mid-February
2005, MSF doctors in numerous locations in South and West Darfur
treated almost 500 women and girls who had been raped.
Almost one-third of the victims had been raped more than once by
a single or multiple perpetrators, and 81 percent reported being
attacked by armed militia. MSF believed that these statistics reflected
only a fraction of the total number of victims because many women
and girls were reluctant to report the crime or seek treatment.
The Sudanese government refuted the findings.
UNFPA is currently helping authorities establish procedures that
will ensure protection and confidentiality for victims of GBV. It
is also working with the UN mission in Sudan and the Sudanese government
to provide timely treatment for rape victims.
Future projects include training security, police and peacekeeping
troops on GBV issues so that they can adequately protect women and
girls; informing medical personnel on how to deal appropriately
with victims of physical and sexual violence; and providing victims
with psychological support.
According to Delargy, it is important that communities work together
to promote the message that this kind of violence is no longer acceptable
in Sudanese culture. All members of communities - most importantly
the perpetrators - must be educated about the harmful consequences
of GBV.
"Some of the skits and songs [in the concert in Otash camp]
discussed GBV, and at first it appeared to be a surprise to some
of the people to have a concert in the middle of this camp based
on GBV. But in the end the women listened carefully, and even more
importantly the men listened carefully," Delargy said.
From: http://www.irinnews.org/report.asp?ReportID=50751&SelectRegion=East_Africa&SelectCountry=SUDAN
|