Letter to Washington Post
Crimes against Women are not a Pakistani phenomenon
Why does the Post Ignore India, Egypt, Saudi Arabia, France, USA ...?
by Kaukab Siddique, Ph.D
Dear Ombudsman
The Washington Post
Washington, DC
I am puzzled by your report "In Pakistan Women Pay the Price of Honor" 
(by Pamela Constable, May 8). Does Constable think she has made a discovery? 
In what sense is it news that in a country of 120 million people, some  
individuals have committed terrible atrocities against their women folk?
I wonder if you a know a story titled PUNISHMENT? It's a classic written 
by Rabindranath Tagore about a woman who was murdered by her husband when she 
made a nasty remark when he came home and found that she had not cooked for 
him. (This was just a remark. She had not DONE anything.) The essence of the 
story is that the family then decided to tell the police that the wife of the 
murderer's brother had killed the woman. I won't tell you the whole story but 
the second woman  goes to the gallows for the crime of her brother-in-law!
The date is important: it was written in 1893. Since then tens of 
thousands of women in India have suffered at the hands of their male 
relatives. Wife/bride killings are common in India: for 'honor', for 'not 
enough bride price'. Women in Hinduism are supposed to burn themselves on the 
husband's funeral pyre. When they don't, they are looked down on. Widows are 
not allowed to re-marry.
Now Ms. Constable missed that vast target called India (she could have 
had real fun there, finding women disfigured by husbands). Instead she 
focused on Pakistan. My question is: what is at work here?
The disfigured woman knew English? The victimized woman is quoted in 
the story and the quote begins thus: "He came from the mosque ..." Thus a 
direct connection to Islam as the source of evil is made here. (No Pakistani 
uses the word 'mosque' in the Urdu or Punjabi language: it is 'masjid' or 
'msid'.)Thus the story has evidently been doctored.
Ms. Constable's bias shows when she tries to connect the problem to 
the "conservative Islamic society". Later on in the story she comes out 
clearly and connects the atrocities to "Islamic basic concept of ghairat."
In a country of 120 million, the most inflated figure is that of 300 
atrocities. As Rabindranath Tagore showed in his story, an illiterate, 
economically exploited and oppressed person can go ahead and hurt the only 
person whom he can hurt: that's his wife.
The issue is: why oppression? That issue is not even discussed by 
Ms. Constable.
THE ISLAMIC CONCEPT OF HONOR DOES NOT PERMIT ANY SUCH ATROCITIES.
The Qur'an demands four witnesses from the accuser or the accuser would be 
whipped. In the books of Hadith, Prophet Muhammad, (peace be on him) goes 
into detail to show that the husband has no right whatsoever to hurt his wife 
physically even if he catches her in flagrante delicto with another man. Even 
in divorce, the Qur'an teaches husbands not to be harsh with the woman they 
are divorcing.
Thus Ms. Constable must have picked up the idea that the atrocities 
are connected with the "Islamic basic concept of ghairat" from some of her 
"sources" in Pakistan. In fact there is a small group of  women, pro-India 
and very hostile to Islam, who would be probable source.
As a teacher of journalism at the university level, I teach my students 
never to generalize from anecdotal evidence. Such generalization leads to 
stereotyping. The stories Ms. Constable has narrated are horrible and the men 
deserve severe punishment. If Islam were implemented in Pakistan, the man 
would be punished by the woman he disfigured to the extent he did it to her. I
t's called "retaliation" and diyat which is essential to Islamic law. So not 
only are the atrocities unconnected to Islam, they exist because ISLAMIC LAW 
OF EQUAL RETALIATION BY THE VICTIM (or her agent) HAS NOT BEEN implemented.
FRANTZ FANON pointed out (see THE WRETCHED OF THE EARTH) that 
the sign of an oppressed people is that instead fighting against oppression, 
they oppress those closest to them (wife and children) who are vulnerable. As 
in the Los Angeles uprising, the African American people did not burn Beverly 
Hills (controlled by their oppressors) but their own neighborhoods.
Horrible crimes against women are very common in America. 
Go to any House of Ruth and you will not need to publish atrocity stories 
about Pakistan. Studies show that even the most highly educated people in 
America commit atrocities against their wives. One study showed that a home 
for battered women was set up in McLean, Virginia (homes starting from 
$250,000) and many of the women taking refuge there were the wives of engineers, 
doctors and professors.
In the Maryland legislature last year a bill was introduced to make 
honor killings count as "first degree murder." (That is till 1999 a man could 
murder his wife in Maryland if he suspected she had a paramour and he would 
not be tried for first degree murder!)
Now Egypt has a very close relationship with the White House. Tens of 
thousands of Muslims are in the Egyptian dictator's torture cells. In her 
book A PORTRAIT OF EGYPT, Mary Anne Weaver has given details of the 
atrocities against Islamic women. These are not random anecdotes, like yours, 
but part of the systematic policy of torture carried by Mr. Clinton's good 
friend, the criminal thug known as Hosni Mubarak. (Mubarak gets $2.8 billion 
dollars every year from the U.S. inspite of his torture of Islamic women.)
Who does not know that the Washington Post has a very close 
relationship with the power structure. When the Algerian military junta 
started slaughtering Muslim women and children and attributing the atrocities 
to "Islamists", the Post eagerly published the junta's claims as if they were 
correct. Only two years after the stories began, and a top Algerian official 
defected to tell what was going on, did the Post rein in its journalists.
Another interesting fact about the post: When Taslima Nasrin (of 
Bangladesh) first wrote her book against the Qur'an, she was hardly known in 
her homeland. At that early stage, the Post publicized her as a good 
(potentially great) writer. Another Muslim woman, Ms. Nadrat Siddique, living 
in the Washington D.C. area, wrote to the Post, criticizing its glorification 
of Taslima Nasrin. The Post ignored her letter.
So why is the Post now interested in stories of atrocities against 
women in Pakistan? I would say, the Post is part of the propaganda campaign 
against Pakistan to prepare the ground for serious moves, including sanction 
and perhaps even military moves by India.
To understand the Post's role, I would draw the attention of readers 
to the role of the Baltimore Sun and National Public Radio in the sanctions 
placed on Sudan. First a slavery story was produced against Sudan. It was 
circulated on a big scale to neutralize the African-American population's 
response to a move against an African country. There was no proof of slavery. 
The only problem was that Sudan wanted to follow an independent policy with 
leanings towards Islam.
I am quite confident that if the government in Pakistan moves against 
Islamists and helps to get Osama bin Laden arrested, the stories about 
atrocities against women will recede if not vanish.
4624 York Road
Baltimore, MD 21212
Phone: 410-638-5965
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2000-05-10 Wed 10:06ct