Women at the heart of struggle |
The pervasive Western tradition of characterizing an entire community by certain traits, which their Western audiences can ooh and ahh at, has helped manufacture a plethora of distortions.
Jamila Bu Hreid of Algeria, |
South Lebanon, liberated in 2000 after nearly 22 years of Israeli occupation, was also home to female political action. Lebanese women would quietly supply resistance fighters with ammunition, often times wrapping them across their stomachs before passing through Israeli checkpoints unnoticed.
As of late, the women of the Arab world are being actively pursued by journalists, media figures and political commentators as sort of stock characters to be featured in their next editorial or television broadcast. Those usually courted by the media are there to reassert orientalist theories; for a Western audience to relish in sheer amusement, because for many an outspoken and visible Arab woman is an alluring token.
The Palestinian village of Bil'in has hosted non-violent demonstrations weekly against the occupation of their land since 2005. For nearly 7 years an assemblage of men and women courageously face Israeli Forces in order to prevent further usurpation of their villages, the destruction of their resources and the subjugation of their people.
Hana Shalabi, a 30 year old Palestinian woman from Jenin, is currently on a hunger-strike, protesting her administrative detainment without charge by the state of Israel:
Addameer, Prisoner Support and Human Rights Association
Shalabi has been subjected to beatings and humiliating treatment by Israeli Forces and despite having had her detention recently reduced from 6 months to four months since beginning her hunger-strike some 20 days ago she has declared that her hunger-strike will continue until her demand for freedom is met.
The archetypal Arab women most often approved of, for the viewing pleasure of television audiences, is one which is confined to a subservient role; a coy, bashful creature who’s raison d'être is based off of approval from a domineering male society. This decayed misconception attempts to brand every aspect of Middle Eastern and North African society as being a homogeneous Disney caricature has long been refuted by those much like Hana Shalabi and Jawaher Abu Rahmah, and a great number of other women who are deliberately ignored by the mainstream media.
Women of the Middle East and North Africa are of compelling strength, doubtless courage and incorruptible dignity and history is laden with prominent female activists, poets, authors and political figures from this region who have have long existed, despite the deliberate evasion of their stories and in the printing their names; and they will continue to exist.
Source: Al-Manar Website | 09-03-2012 - 14:12 Last updated 09-03-2012 - 14:18 |
River to Sea
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