*OUR BODIES, THEIR BATTLEFIELDS*
*War Through the Lives of Women*
By Christina Lamb

In one of the more haunting stories in Christina Lamb’s urgent book, a
7-month-old baby is raped. A mother returns from working in the fields in
eastern Congo to find her house ransacked by a militia group and her
daughter wailing from pain. The mother notices a red gash on the baby’s
bottom and takes her to a nearby medical center. From there, the pair is
sent to the town of Bukavu, 160 miles away, to a hospital that has treated
55,000 victims of sexual assault since 1999. Even to the doctor, who has
treated many such cases, the assault is shocking: The infant’s anus has
ruptured from the force. “I hope whoever did this will go to jail for
years,” the distraught mother tells Lamb. Most likely, he won’t.

The atrocities in “Our Bodies, Their Battlefields” horrify, as they should.
Lamb, a veteran foreign correspondent for The Sunday Times of London, does
society a service by forcing us to look. Rape, she writes, is the “most
neglected” war crime of the 1949 Geneva Convention. It’s rarely prosecuted.
It’s rarely written about. Here, she provides one of the first exhaustive
examinations of sexual violence as a deliberate weapon, used to inflict
terror and humiliation. Her book is painful to read but should be required
for everyone interested in military and global affairs.

In the canon of literature about conflict, rape barely figures. Most such
books deal with military strategy, male heroism and suffering. Men soldier,
bond, die or return home. But what about the women? Oh, right, they’re
spoils: Men are cannon fodder, women are man fodder. Yet rape in war wields
as much destruction as guns do. It can destroy families and leave survivors
permanently scarred.

Combatants get away with sexual pillage, Lamb argues, because men in power
haven’t stopped them: “War rape was met with tacit acceptance and committed
with impunity, military and political leaders shrugging it off as a
sideshow. Or it was denied to have ever happened.”

As a foreign correspondent, Lamb paid special attention to women in
conflict zones because her colleagues seemed to be more interested in
interviewing men. Here, she hands rape survivors a microphone they are
seldom given. She travels through Asia, Africa, Europe and South America to
provide an intimate picture of what it’s like to be abused and forgotten.

She also traverses the centuries, opening her book by skewering Herodotus,
credited with writing the first history of Western civilization. He claimed
that women didn’t mind being carried off by the Phoenicians, the Greeks and
the Trojans. Yet while today the international community recoils at
abductions of women and girls by Boko Haram and ISIS, it hasn’t prosecuted
them either.

The sheer scope of wartime rape is staggering, though as Lamb points out
exact numbers are hard to come by. Most of us never learned about war rape
in school — from the thousands of German women raped by Stalin’s Red Army
during World War II to the thousands of Asian women coerced into sexual
slavery by the Japanese during the same period.

Lamb spares no details: Bangladeshi women who were tied to banana trees;
ISIS militants who pulled the names of Yazidi women out of a bowl and sold
them as sex slaves for thousands of dollars, like used cars; Bosnian women
who, imprisoned in a spa hotel, went mad from being subjected to nightly
gang rapes. Some leapt off glass balconies to their deaths. Along the way,
Lamb explains the ideology of ethnic cleansing that was used to justify
such savagery.

Despite the barbarity, Lamb’s humane portraits of survivors kept my
attention. I grew invested in the women and felt compelled to listen to
their stories. Tragically, most can’t find peace. Husbands spurn those left
incontinent and unable to bear children. Even the women’s daughters stop
speaking to them out of shame. Some live among their attackers, whom they
see on the street.

“We are like dead women walking,” says Victoire Mukambanda, who lost count
of the number of rapes she endured during Rwanda’s genocide. Left for dead
in a latrine pit, she feels unlucky to have survived.

The first prosecution of rape as a war crime occurred in 1998, at the
International Criminal Tribunal for Rwanda, half a century after the Geneva
Convention declared it such. The International Criminal Court has a sorrier
record. Created in 2002, it has secured only one conviction for sexual
slavery and rape, in the 2019 case of a Congolese warlord. (A previous
conviction was overturned.) More than half of the 90 war criminals
convicted by the tribunal for the former Yugoslavia were found guilty of
sexual violence, but this, Lamb writes, is a “fraction considering the
tribunal received reports of more than 20,000 rapes.”

Giving testimony can reawaken the trauma. At the Rwanda tribunal, defense
lawyers expressed doubt that a woman could have been raped 16 times,
because “she had not bathed and smelled.” The judges laughed. About the few
such cases in which guilty verdicts were handed down, Lamb notes acidly,
“It surely cannot be a coincidence” that the judges were women.

Recently there have been signs that the international community is finally
waking up. The 2018 Nobel Peace Prize went to two campaigners against
wartime rape
<https://www.nytimes.com/2018/10/05/world/nobel-peace-prize.html?searchResultPosition=4>:
Nadia Murad, a Yazidi repeatedly assaulted by ISIS militants, and Denis
Mukwege, a Congolese gynecologist called “Dr. Miracle” for his genital
repairs of thousands of victims of sexual crimes. Yet the devastation will
persist without recognition that rape is as heinous as murder. Witnesses
will remain silent out of fear of stigma or a lack of access to lawyers.

In the conclusion of her book, Lamb writes, “Every time I walk past a war
memorial I wonder why women’s names aren’t on it.” With “Our Bodies, Their
Battlefields,” she provides a monument of sorts.

https://www.nytimes.com/2020/09/22/books/review/our-bodies-their-battlefields-christina-lamb.html


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