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Afghanistan/South Asia
The enemy is not America
2004-04-27
Hat tip to Instapundit.
Osama, the first film to come out of Afghanistan since the fall of the Taliban, is about a 12-year-old girl who must shave her head and dress like a boy so she can work to support her widowed mother and grandmother. It is not about Osama bin Laden; "Osama" is the boy's name the girl adopts. But who fears whom most? Could it be that the men, who must forbid the merest expression of female sexuality, fear the women even more than the women fear them? Is not fear of women the basis for the punishing, the covering up, the locking away, the banning of them from public life, that reached its most extreme under the Taliban but which is still common throughout the Middle East?
It's what makes Islamists the stunted creatures they are. What would we — men, I mean — be like without our daily treat of the sight of pretty faces, bosoms ranging from dainty to lasciviously full, comely thighs, and lovely smiles? Life would be flavorless at best, sour at the most likely.
I am sent a newsletter from a women's rights group in Pakistan, which lists items from Pakistani newspapers. The following is a recent selection (I checked the items on the newspapers' websites):
Lahore: A girl, Kauser, 17, was strangled by her elder brother because she had married of her own will. She returned home and asked her family to forgive her but her brother strangled her with a piece of cloth. - The Daily Times.

Ghotki district: Two women were killed over Karo-Kari (honour killing). One Nihar Jatoi tied his wife to a bed and electrocuted her. One Bachal axed his wife Salma to death and fled. No arrests were reported. - The News. What chance of this woman becoming an international symbol, as has the boy who lost his arms during the invasion of Iraq?

Sargodha: A woman is in hospital after having both legs amputated because of severe injuries inflicted by her brother-in-law and mother-in-law, who clubbed her for her alleged illicit affairs. The woman, who was fighting for life, said the real reason was that her brother-in-law was trying to force her to arrange his marriage to her younger sister, but her sister had instead eloped with her paramour. - Dawn.
Why is international public opinion not outraged at the treatment of women in Islamic fundamentalist societies? Why is it easier for millions of people around the world to see America as the great evil, rather than the countries in which governments ignore such horrific abuses of women?
Wot an excellent question.
My guess is because they're part of The Masses™. To the left they lack faces, personalities, human feelings — they're an abstract, on the other side of the world.
Yet if there is ever going to be a peaceful world there are few things more important than lifting the status of women. And as a United Nations report notes, a large part of the reason so many countries in the Middle East are overpopulated, economic basket cases is the repression of women. The birth rate in Saudi Arabia is 6.1. Germany's is 1.3, Spain's 1.1. You would think EU countries would be doing everything they could to help Iraq to set an example as a decent, democratic state in the Middle East.
"Democracy" doesn't rhyme with "appeasement" in Zappie's dictionary.
Thousands of women in Arab countries are legally murdered every year in the name of honour, little girls are forced into marriages with old men, women are stoned and beaten for reasons that would be unheard of in Western countries. The freedoms of Western women, their open sexuality, are a large part of the hatred the Islamist men feel for the West. They would, if they could, spread their joyless, sex-denying, life-denying version of religion over the world. They've said, many times, this is what they want. They would, if they could, have all our daughters in burqas. More than any others, it was American feminists who during the time of the Taliban were agitating to try to get governments to take action against Afghanistan over the treatment of women.
Actually, I think I missed that...
If there's a war on, we should be clear about who is the real enemy of civilisation. Despite the reservations any liberal would feel for some policies of the present Administration (and the doubts about its competence), the enemy is not America.
The author will now be hounded to hell by the LLL who will be as effective as any Taliban milita group in terrorizing her.
Posted by:Steve White

#3  I salute her.....she's a braver woman than I am.
Although I'm not a fan of Madonna's, I remember once that she said the perfect punishment for the Ayatollah Khomeini would have been to make him live under his regime.....as a woman.
Posted by: Desert Blondie   2004-04-27 7:33:31 PM  

#2  I hate to quote M4D but frankly " This is just plain Rong"

We'll win, stay within your game.
Posted by: Shipman   2004-04-27 5:43:17 PM  

#1  Everybody already knows where I stand on all of this.

Sure hope the author has a second career to fall back on when the sh-t hits the fan. She's a brave soul. At least some journalists are doing their jobs.
Posted by: ex-lib   2004-04-27 5:26:09 PM  

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