‘WOMEN to reclaim public spaces: a programme of defiance and resistance.’ That is how the Women’s Action Forum defined the meeting it held last Friday to mobilise public opinion against extremism.
Although WAF’s concern to protect the space women have created in the public mainstream has been on its agenda for some time, this goal has acquired urgency in the wake of the events in Swat. The Nizam-i-Adl Regulation in Malakand Division has brought people face to face with the ugly reality of the Talibanisation phenomenon in the rural backwaters as well as in modern urban centres.
The
That strategy paid off. Women had already been galvanised by the video showing the flogging of a teenaged girl in Swat that activist Samar Minallah courageously brought to the world media’s attention, invoking in the process the wrath of the Taliban whose fatwa declared her as wajibul qatl. The oppression of women is an issue that cuts across classes to touch every female raw nerve. Whether it is the smartly turned-out high-society woman or the working woman who slaves all day long to feed an army of children and a drug-addict husband or even the heavily veiled orthodox woman, each type, with few exceptions, has expressed her horror at the flogging incident.
Hence on this occasion WAF managed to bring a diverse crowd together — the activists reaching out to the grassroots such as Amar Sindhu from Sindh University Hyderabad, Parveen Rahman from the Orangi Pilot Project and Sadiqa Salahuddin whose Indus Resource Centre runs schools in the interior of Sindh, as well as the elites sitting side by side with the three van-loads of women from Neelum Colony who clean the homes of the rich and will be starting their adult literacy classes from next week, courtesy Shabina’s Garage School.
The variety of speakers focusing on the theme of women’s oppression by the Taliban found a responsive audience. But the question that made many ponder was: what next? Can this interest be sustained? If they had not already started probing for answers, the thought-provoking speech by Arundhati Roy, the renowned Indian writer and activist, did the trick. Coming from
• What do we mean by the Taliban and what gave birth to them?
• Define your own space and do not surrender it.
• Don’t allow yourself to be forced into making choices of the ‘with us or against us’ type.
• Don’t be selective in your injustices.
These should provide food for thought for those struggling against oppression. Without being specific,
The fact is that we live in a largely grey area where the lines are not sharply drawn. There is a lot of overlapping between issues touching gender, class, ethnicity, culture, political power and economic gains. It is this reality one has to recognise and see how the contradictions can be addressed. The demand to take sides unambiguously, expressed so vividly in the days following 9/11 by George Bush as ‘You are with us or against us,’ can create a dilemma for people when negotiating these grey areas.
The practical approach would be to prioritise strategies that can be adapted to changing circumstances. And what should these be? Here
Produced by 17 intellectuals, with Dr Mubashir Hasan as the driving force, the book describes the state structure as being ‘based on the concentration of political and administrative power in the steel frame of the civil services under the protection of the armed forces. The structure could be defined as feudal-military-bureaucratic.’
The problem is systemic. In a state ruled by ‘a government of the elites, by the elites, for the elites’ it is inevitable that it is authoritarian and exploitative. Change can come when there is mobilisation of the people for change. When WAF mobilises women to fight against injustices it prepares them to also fight for change. The need is to empower them and instill confidence in them.
Two women I have written about who are fighting for change come from the poorest of the poor and theirs is not a feminist agenda. They are fighting to have a roof above their heads. One is the wife of Walidad from Muhammad Essa Khaskheli who came all the way to
The other is Parveen whose one-room ‘mansion’ in a katchi abadi of
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