http://www.dailytimes.com.pk/default.asp?page=2011\03\18\story_18-3-2011_pg3_4

  Friday, March 18, 2011

      IEW: Frailty, thy name is woman? -Dr Haider Shah

       It is high time our women heeded the call of Maulana Altaf Hussain Hali 
who, more than 150 years ago, had called upon the Muslim women to shun their 
chains and benefit from modern education



      On March 8, the whole world celebrated the International Women's Day. In 
Pakistan, thanks mainly to the print and electronic media, the day did not pass 
unnoticed. However, the honours of the day were fairly and squarely won by his 
highness Mr Jam Tamachi, chairman public accounts committee of the Sindh 
Assembly. He reminded me of Michael Caine who, in the movie 'Surrender', plays 
a novelist and after being badly burned by an ex-partner tells his lawyer 
friend that he plans to move to Kuwait "because women cannot vote there and 
they flog them". It is now for our investigative journalists to find out what 
kind of mental torture poor Tamachi has been through which made him complain so 
spitefully against women. I would have brushed aside Tamachi's clarion call 
with a grin if there was not a serious overtone attached to it. In an ironic 
way, Tamachi deserves appreciation for saying something that others believe and 
practice but are reluctant to admit publicly.

      About a year ago I had a chance to spend some time with senior officers 
of the bureaucracy in one of the prestigious training institutions in Pakistan. 
They were all decently educated officers with decades of experience in 
governance. As such the sample represented the most educated section of 
society. It was interesting to see that their views on gender equality were not 
much different from characters like Mr Tamachi. As is customary in our society, 
they also fervently believed that glossy phrases like, "maan, behan aur beti ka 
darja" (the status of mother, sister and daughter) and "haya ka zewer" (the 
ornament of modesty) seal any debate on women's rights.

      Not a long time ago, the broad daylight murder of a Peshawar girl Saima 
Sarwar by her family members in the office of Hina Jilani where she had taken 
refuge after a troubled marriage made headlines in the local and international 
media. While the world was aghast with horror, local communal leaders openly 
supported the killers who eventually not only walked free but their social 
status also did not suffer much. Similarly, a few years ago a Balochistan 
senator, Israrullah Zehri, proudly claimed that killing women is their culture 
and no one should object to that. He later became a minister in the federal 
government. In the world famous Mukhtaran Mai case, many educated Pakistanis 
were more perturbed by the bad image she had brought to Pakistan and less 
troubled by the fact that women are killed with impunity and used as a penalty 
to settle family feuds. It is, therefore, fair to conclude that Jam Tamachi 
does not speak for himself alone but rather he was betraying the mindset of a 
male-dominated society and hence must be taken seriously.

      Male chauvinism has a very long history and, to a varying degree, 
remained visibly present in almost all cultures. The ancient Athens that prided 
itself on democratic and intellectual identity did not grant voting right to 
slaves and women. Plato and Aristotle write that nature always intends to make 
a man only but when it fails it then makes a woman as a defective form of a 
human. A Russian proverb says there is only one soul in four women. The list of 
such quotes and proverbs is very long but the purpose of mentioning this is to 
show that prejudices against women are deep rooted in all human societies. Even 
in the west, emancipation of women has only happened in the recent past. For 
instance, it was only in 1928 that British women achieved voting rights after a 
long struggle by the Suffragette movement.

      As a student of organisational theory, I find it important that while 
declaring the need for a change we must also clearly state what we want to 
change to and how would we get there. In terms of gender equality, I view it as 
a three-staged progression. The first stage is of equality in the 'right to 
life'. In many parts of Pakistan, the birth of a female is greeted with sorrow 
or anguish. She is often deprived of good food and clothing. Treated as a 
property, she passes from one possessor called father to a new possessor called 
husband through a contract in which she is an unequal partner. She is often 
killed or traded freely to salvage the family honour. Once this level of 
equality is achieved, the second stage becomes important, which is equality in 
'developmental rights'. This stage comprises those rights that are essential 
for leading an independently successful life in the 21st century. These rights 
include freedom of physical movement, getting education to the highest level, 
choices of a career and of a life partner. In Pakistan, the majority of women 
still remain deprived of these rights. Either social norms or religious bigotry 
deprive them of the opportunities to realise their full potential. They are 
made to idealise a burqa (veil) and a husband's home as their primary goals of 
life and not encouraged to aspire to fly in a space shuttle like Sapna Chawla 
or Sunita Williams. The third stage of gender equality pertains to 'personal 
choices'. These can be both positive and negative and women may claim that if 
men can drink, smoke and flirt, why can they not do the same? From a women's 
emancipation point of view, such rights are important only when the first two 
stages of gender equality have been attained in a society.

      Frailty's name was woman in the recent past. But now even pure eastern 
cultures like China, Japan and Korea have increasingly become gender neutral 
and have come up with legislation to ensure that women advance in all walks of 
life and contribute to the national economy. Unfortunately, in Pakistan social 
norms and legislation do the opposite. Nothing will, however, change unless 
women themselves become champions of their cause. It is high time our women 
heeded the call of Maulana Altaf Hussain Hali who, more than 150 years ago, had 
called upon the Muslim women to shun their chains and benefit from modern 
education. They need to tell all Tamachis and Zehris that women may be treated 
as half by certain legislation but they are full human beings and deserve to be 
treated as equals.

      The writer teaches in the UK and is the founding member of Rationalist 
Society of Pakistan. He can be reached at hash...@yahoo.com


     


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