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Burqa: Its Unrecognized Role In Afghanistan 
[Comparison with Germany 1945 and Saigon]
[Here is another excerpt from 
Dr. Kaukab Siddique's 
forthcoming book 
RETURN TO 
PAKISTAN.]
Ahmed Rashid and others in the Pakistani secular 
elite have given the burqa 
such a bad name that it has become synonymous 
with the oppression of 
women. 
Progressive circles around the world have 
accepted the burqa as a symbol of all 
that is wrong in Afghanistan and, by extension, 
in Pakistan and the rest of the 
Muslim world. When a Taliban ambassador visited 
the 
U.S. 
to explain his 
country's policies, his statements were drowned 
out by vociferous feminist protests 
against the evils of the burqa.
What has been the role of the burqa in 
Afghanistan? Is it even possible look 
at the role of the burqa dispassionately, with an 
attempt to understand 
Afghanistan?
We can begin by pointing out that Afghanistan and 
Pakistan are dissimilar 
societies in a variety of essential 
characteristics. These dissimilarities are so 
obvious that one can easily miss them, especially 
if, as in the case of Ahmed 
Rashid the purpose is to create a certain 
propaganda effect among Pakistanis.
The most important dissimilarity is that 
Afghanistan has been a land of war 
since 1977 while Pakistan during that period of 
26 years has been relatively at 
peace with only sporadic violence coming in as an 
overflow from Afghanistan.
Under Tanai and then Hafizullah Amin, leaders of 
the two Communist groupings 
of Afghanistan, a frontal attack was attempted on 
the religious and 
traditional base of Afghanistan. Tanai's Khalq 
(People') grouping, and Amin's Parcham 
(Flag') faction conceptualized Afghanistan in 
limited ideological jargon as a 
land of feudal lords trying to crush the peasants 
and the workers. [Hence the 
macabre joke about the seven million people who 
left Afghanistan to escape 
Communist rule when a neophyte Communist said: I 
did'd know Afghanistan had so many 
landlords!]
Accordin to reliable sources, the Communists used 
to make recruits to their 
Party walk on the 
Qur'an 
to ensure that the 
newcomers had shed their 
"reactionary legends." Jan Goodwin's book Caught 
in the Crossfire [1987] contains a 
photo of Afghan Communist policewomen, wearing 
skirts, lifting an Afghan woman's 
burqa to investigate her. [After page 172. The 
next photo shows five Communist 
Afghan women who were "responsible for sending 
Afghan children to the Soviet 
Union for fifteen years of indoctrination."]
The attack on Islam was frontal and the Afghan 
answer was also elementary: 
Jihad 
in the name of Allah, which sparked the 
fire of resistance which spread 
from village to village. Gradually it became a 
conflagration which ended up 
burning the Soviets and driving them out of 
Afghanistan.
However, before the Soviets came in, the Afghan 
Communists wreaked havoc on 
the people of Afghanstan.  Atrocities were 
committed and the center of 
Communist terror was always Kabul. We must 
remember  the centrality of Kabul as the 
bastion of anti-Islam experimentation by the 
Communists to understand the nature 
of the Taliban governance of that city.
The Communists, like the Americans today, 
believed that the Burqa was the 
main impedment in the way of progress by Afghan 
women. However, the more the 
Communist derided and abused the burqa, the more 
the Afghans clung to it. 
Gradually it became the symbol of Afghan honor 
and pride.
The Khalq and Parcham factions of the 
Communists were bitter foes. When 
Hafizullah Amin took over, the Soviet Union 
sensed that a nationalist brand 
of Communism had emerged to challenge Moscow's 
control on Kabul. The Soviets 
saw a possible defeat for Communism in a country 
which they aw as theirs alone. 
Since 1945, the Communists had not retreated 
anywhere. They captured Kabul in 
a day and the Afghan hinterland in three weeks. 
The rest is history.
The Soviets fought the Islamic resistance 
from village to village for 
nearly nine years. The Afghans left en masse for 
Pakistan (4 million), for 
Iran 
(one million) or simply from one place to 
another within Afghanistan (one 
million). The Americans saw their chance and 
started sending weaponry to the 
Mujahideen through General Zia's government in 
Pakistan. Even the estimated 30% 
or so of the weaponry and resources which Zia did 
pass on to the Afghans was 
enough to keep the resistance alive. The U.S. 
wanted to fight the USSR 'to the 
last Afghan.' Never did the U.S. imagine (as is 
clear from Selig Harrison's 
assurance his government) that the Afghans could 
win.
During all this time, the strict moral code 
of Islam, in its most 
archaic form of the top-to-toe burqa, saved the 
family system from disintegration.
The Soviets left and the Afghans started 
fighting each other. The 
horrors of civil war continued till 1994 and only 
ended with the emergence of the 
Taliban. During the civil war, bandits and thugs 
took over in localities where 
the  State no longer existed. During these years, 
a section of the Hazarajat 
Shias, heavily armed by Iran, tried to storm 
Kabul and committed numerous 
atrocities against women.
By 1996, the Taliban had taken over all of 
Afghanistan and implemented 
Islamic law, in its most literal sense, on the 
Communist stronghold of Kabul. 
The burqa already existed in Afghanistan and 
still does (after the overthrow 
of the Taliban in 2001). The difference was that 
the Taliban imposed it on the 
Communist women of Kabul who had consistently 
sided with the anti-Islam 
forces.  The secularized women of Kabul were in 
two categories: Firstly, the rich 
westernized women, related to the King and 
various corrupt offshoots of the 
King's power structure. The second category was 
that of Communist-related women 
who believed that Islam was oppressive and should 
be reduced to the status of a 
private religion (as in the USSR).
These Communist women were most responsible 
for the propaganda picked up 
by Ahmed Rashid and others of his mentality. A 
splinter faction among the 
Communists, a Maoist group known as RAWA, came in 
handy for American 
media 
when 
the campaign against the Taliban went into high 
gear. RAWA had put up a 
horrific web site consisting of clips pulled 
together of the first days of Taliban 
rule in Kabul. Overall RAWA used the 'big lie' 
technique and fell straight into 
the hands of publications like the 
Baltimore Sun 
and, later, the entire U.S. 
media, 
coast-to-coast.
KABUL compared to SAIGON and GERMAN cities 
after World War II.
Kabul was the germinating point of the 
anti-Islamic forces in 
Afghanistan. The Taliban took Kabul by force 
after defeating both Hikmatyar and Masood. 
However, not even one woman was raped, molested 
or enslaved by the Taliban. 
The only punishment imposed on the defeated enemy 
city was that the women could 
no longer go out in their finery. They had to 
cover themselves in the burqa 
when they went out for necessities. In a few 
cases, when they did not cover 
themselves properly, they were beaten with canes. 
No serious injury was inflicted 
on any woman.
The great victory of the Taliban which will 
make future generations 
grateful to them was that they used the burqa to 
save the Afghan family system 
which was under unimaginable stress owing to 
years of war and civil war. Owing to 
the burqa, Afghan women have survived even the 
American onslaught which 
rained death and destruction across the country 
on a scale which outdid the Soviets.
COMPARISON WITH GERMANY.
During the 1980s I visited Germany. Near the 
entrance to the U.S. army 
base near Frankfurt, there was a lineup of 
automobiles. In front of each car was 
a German woman holding the door open. My hosts 
told me that the women giving 
an open invitation to American troops to go sleep 
with them. Forty years after 
the collapse of Germany in 1945, the 
disintegration of the German family 
under the impact of war was still visible.
Frankfurt airport was the only international 
airport I have seen which 
displayed an invitation to "adult" pornographic 
entertainment for the visitor 
(not to be confused with advertising related to 
the exploitation of women).
Iranians have found that German women are 
most amenable to muta' 
(temporary) marriages.
What did war do to the women of Germany? 
"Christian armies" from USA, 
Britain, France and the USSR invaded Germany in 
1945 and the German family 
system collapsed. I will leave out the sickening 
atrocities inflicted by the 
Russians on German women. More to the point is 
the behavior of the American, French 
and British occupation forces.
One eyewitness account noted the fate of 
German women on October 5, 1945:
"Young girls, unattached, wander about and 
freely offer themselves, for 
food or bed . Very simply, they have one thing 
left to sell, and they sell it. 
As a way of dying, it may be worse than 
starvation, but it will put off dying 
for months - or even years." [Gruesome Harvest. 
The Allies Postwar War Against 
the German People by Ralph Keeling, 1947 and 
1992.]
Unlike the Russians, American troops did not 
have to resort to rape. 
Germany's women were starving in the harsh first 
winter after the war:
"The American provost marshal, Lieutenant 
Colonel Gerald F. Beane, said 
that rape represents no problem to the military 
police because 'a bit of food, 
a bar of chocolate, or a bar of soap seems to 
make rape unnecessary.' Think 
this over if you want to understand what the 
situation is in Germany." [Ibid.]
Keeling discusses the spread of venereal 
disease owing to the plight of 
German women. The sexual surrender of the female 
population spread the 
disease among American troops, German women and 
finally the few German men who were 
not in captivity. 
"Thirty-five per cent of the civilian disease 
victims are girls under 20. For 
most of them, it was desperation that turned them 
to sex indulgence. They 
needed food, clothing, and shelter." [Ibid., 
p.63]
IN AFGHANISTAN, owing to the culture of the 
burqa, the women accepted 
death by starvation rather than offering 
themselves to armed men. The silent 
heroism of the Afghan women needs to be 
recognized. Instead, Ahmed Rashid and 
others mock them as victims of Islamic bigots.
Even a FRIENDLY OCCUPATION by foreign troops 
can erode family values. 
Such was the presence of U.S. troops in South 
Vietnam, particularly in SAIGON. 
The city became a vast brothel for American 
troops as the ferocious campaign to 
defeat the Viet Cong and the North Vietnamese 
continued. Numerous 
'true-to-life' movies have shown the impact of 
friendly American troops on the Vietnamese 
population. Tens of thousands of illegitimate 
children were born from these 
"friendly" contacts. After the war, Vietnamese 
women tried for years, sometimes 
successfully, to get American soldiers to accept 
the children they had sired.
BY CONTRAST, Afghanistan has seen two 
foreign occupations, first by the 
Soviets and now by the Americans. The very first 
impact of American victory 
over the Taliban was to open up Afghan society to 
cultural imperialism and its 
associated way of life meant to introduce 
consumerism into the Muslim way of 
life. Men's beards were forcibly shaved, 
Indian 
movies and videos were 
distributed,  and women were encouraged to get 
rid of the burqa.
The burqa, in all its ugliness, stands in the 
way of America's attempts to 
"open up" Afghan society. [The term "open up" is, 
perhaps unwittingly, borrowed 
by the Americans from the language of rape and 
fornication.]
Ahmed Rashid and his friends in the West 
misled Pakistanis and Americans 
about the burqa. Afghanistan's experience of 
unending war required the 
discipline of the burqa (with serious punishments 
for fornication). The future of 
Afghanistan is linked to Islamic womanhood. Any 
erosion of discipline would make 
the little country a dirty backwater of New York, 
London and Paris.
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2003-07-25 Fri 21:05ct