The “Arab Spring” has received copious attention in the American
media, but one of its crucial elements has been largely overlooked: the
striking role of women in the protests sweeping the Arab world. Despite
inadequate media coverage of their role, women have been and often
remain at the forefront of those protests.
As a start, women had a significant place in the Tunisian
demonstrations that kicked off the Arab Spring, often marching up
Bourguiba Avenue in Tunis, the capital, with their husbands and children
in tow. Then, the spark for the Egyptian uprising that forced
President Hosni Mubarak out of office was a January 25th demonstration
in Cairo’s Tahrir Square called by an impassioned young woman via a
video posted on Facebook. In Yemen, columns of veiled women have come
out in Sanaa and Taiz to force that country’s autocrat from office,
while in Syria, facing armed secret police, women have blockaded roads
to demonstrate for the release of their husbands and sons from prison.
But with such bold gestures go fears. As women look to the future,
they worry that on the road to new, democratic parliamentary regimes,
their rights will be discarded in favor of male constituencies, whether
patriarchal liberals or Muslim fundamentalists. The collective memory
of how women were in the forefront of the Algerian revolution for
independence from France from 1954 to 1962, only to be relegated to the
margins of politics thereafter, still weighs heavily.
Tomgram: Shahin and Juan Cole, The Women's Movement in the Middle East
Against all odds, they just keep tottering. I’m talking,
of course, about the autocrats of the Middle East: first, Ben Ali of
Tunisia, then Mubarak of Egypt, now Ali Abdullah Saleh of Yemen. After
two months of demonstrations in the streets of Yemen’s cities, after
the defection to the pro-democracy forces of key elements of the
country’s military, Saleh has seemingly agreed to go within 30 days --
though whether it’s a real offer or a political maneuver remains uncertain,
and whether that offer, including immunity from prosecution for him
and his family, is acceptable to the demonstrators is also an open question.
At the same time, in Syria, the Arab Spring has hit in a big way and
thousands upon thousands of demonstrators are taking to the streets,
again facing an armed regime. The casualties across the Middle East
have been startling so far: at least 219 killed in Tunisia, at least 846 dead protesters (and 26 policemen) in Egypt, according to the report of a government fact-finding panel, at least 130 dead in Yemen, and at least 400 killed
in Syria. And yet after each set of deaths, emotional funerals follow
and then, knowing what they are about to face, ever more people pour
unarmed into the streets.
We may be seeing a new definition-in-action of what it means to
overcome, or even banish, fear. It’s true that Saleh is planning to
turn over power initially to his own vice president (much as Mubarak
tried to do in Egypt); that these are not, so far, “revolutions” in the
usual sense; and that, though autocrats have gone or are going, the
political and economic structures that underpinned their regimes remain
largely in place. And in some countries -- Bahrain and Yemen, to name two brutal examples -- embattled regimes have moved with some success to crush their opponents.
Still, just stop for a moment to take in what has happened: people so
determined that nothing seems to stop them for long, demonstrators who
stay in the streets for weeks or camp out
for months in the face of the imminent threat of death. Whatever the
political (or economic) results -- and they may not be known for years
to come -- this remains an epochal moment that, almost four months after
it began, shows absolutely no sign of abating. And embedded in it is a
region-wide story that has been underplayed and so remains to be
told. For the first time, Shahin and Juan Cole (whose Informed Comment
website is a must-read for those wanting to keep up with events in the
Middle East) take up the role of women in the Arab Spring uprisings,
not in a single place but across the region. It may turn out to be the
most important story of all. Tom
An Arab Spring for Women:
The Missing Story from the Middle East
Historians will undoubtedly debate the causes of the Arab Spring for
decades. Among them certainly are high rates of unemployment for the
educated classes, neoliberal policies of privatization and
union-busting, corruption in high places,
soaring food and energy prices, economic hardship caused by the
shrinking of employment opportunities in the Gulf oil states and Europe
(thanks to the 2008 global financial meltdown), and decades of
frustration with petty, authoritarian styles of governing. In their
roles as workers and professionals as well as family caregivers, women
have suffered directly from all these discontents and more, while
watching their children and husbands suffer, too.
In late January, freelance journalist Megan Kearns pointed out
the relative inattention American television and most print and
Internet media gave to women and, by and large, the absence of images of
women protesting in Tunisia and Egypt. Yet women couldn’t have been
more visible in the big demonstrations of early to mid-January in the
streets of Tunis, whether accompanying their husbands and children or
forming distinct protest lines of their own -- and given Western ideas
of oppressed Arab women, this should in itself have been news.
Women Take to the Streets from Tunisia to Syria
To start with Tunisia, women there have, in fact, been in the
vanguard of protest movements and social change since the drive to gain
independence from France of the late 1940s. Tunisian women have a
relatively high literacy rate (71%), represent more than one-fifth of
the country’s wage earners, and make up 43% of the nearly half-million
members of 18 local unions. Most of these unionized women work in the
education, textile, health, city services, and tourism industries. The
General Union of Tunisian Workers (French acronym: UGTT) had
increasingly come into conflict with the country’s strongman, Zine
el-Abidine Ben Ali, and so its rank and file enthusiastically joined the
street protests. Today, the UGTT continues to pressure the government
formed after Ben Ali fled to move forward with genuine reforms.
In all of this, women opinion-leaders played an important part. To
take one example, although like most prominent Tunisians movie star Hend Sabry had been coerced
into supporting Ben Ali and his mafia-like in-laws, when the
anti-government rallies began she broke with the autocrat, warning him in a Facebook post
against ordering his security forces to fire on the protesters. Later,
she admitted to being terrified at making such a public gesture, lest
her relatives in Tunis be harmed or she be permanently exiled from her
homeland.
In Egypt, the passionate video blog
or “vlog” of Asmaa Mahfouz that called on Egyptians to turn out
massively on January 25th in Tahrir Square went viral, playing a
significant role in the success of that event. Mahfouz appealed to
Egyptians to honor four young men who, following the example of Mohammed Bouazizi (in an act which sparked the Tunisian uprisings), set themselves afire to protest the Mubarak regime.
Although the secret police had already dismissed them as
“psychopaths,” she insisted otherwise, demanding a country where people
could live in dignity, not “like animals.” According to estimates, at
least 20% of the crowds that thronged Tahrir Square that first week were
made up of women, who also turned out in large numbers for protests in
the Mediterranean port of Alexandria. Leil-Zahra Mortada’s celebrated Facebook album of women’s participation in the Egyptian revolution gives a sense of just how varied and powerful that turnout was.
As in Tunisia, Egyptian women make up a little more than one-fifth of
wage-earning workers -- and labor has long been a powerful force for change
in that country. Before they began to mobilize around the Tahrir Square
protests, Egyptian workers had staged over 3,000 strikes since 2004,
with women sometimes taking the lead. During the height of the protests against the rule of long-time dictator Hosni Mubarak, unionized workers even formed a new, nationwide umbrella trade union.
In Libya, women’s protests proved central to the movement of entire cities
out of the control of Col. Muammar Gaddafi, as with Dirna in the
western part of the country in February. What makes the prominence of
women demonstrators there so remarkable is that city’s reputation as a
stronghold of Muslim fundamentalism. The abuse of women, a central
issue in countries like Libya, even burst into consciousness when a
recent law-school graduate from a middle-class family in Tobruk, Iman
al-Obeidi, broke into
a government press conference in Tripoli to charge that Gaddafi’s
troops had detained her at a checkpoint and then raped her. Her plight
provoked women’s demonstrations against the regime in the rebel-held
cities of Benghazi and Tobruk.
On April 15th, Yemeni president for life Ali Abdullah Saleh scolded
women for “inappropriately” mixing in public with men at the huge
demonstrations then being staged in the capital, Sanaa, as well as in
the cities of Taiz and Aden. In this way, the issue of women’s place in
the mass protests against decades of autocracy was, for the first time,
explicitly broached by a high political figure -- and the response from
women couldn’t have been clearer. They came out
in unprecedented numbers throughout the country, and even in the
countryside, day after day, accusing the president of "besmirching their
honor" by implying that they were behaving brazenly. (It is a
longstanding value in the Arab world to avoid impugning the honor of a
chaste woman.) In other words, they turned his attempt to invoke Arab
mores about women’s seclusion from the public sphere into a rallying cry
against him.
Women
of a certain age who lived in the southern part of the country found
the president’s taunt particularly painful, given that they had grown up
in the People’s Democratic Republic of Yemen (PDRY), ruled by a
communist regime that promoted women’s rights. They were not subjected
to more conservative norms until Saleh united the PDRY with northern
Yemen in 1990. Unlike in Tunisia and Egypt, only about a quarter of
Yemeni women can read and write, only 17% have finished high school, and
only 5% are wage earners, though most work hard all their lives,
many on farms. Still, in urban areas such as Aden, Taiz or Sanaa,
middle and upper middle class women have an important place in the
professions and business, or as schoolteachers, and more than a quarter
of college students are women.
Faced with the power of outraged women, Saleh quickly backed off,
maintaining that, as a secular Arab nationalist, he believed they
should be full participants in the political affairs of the nation. He
had simply been wondering aloud, he claimed, how members of the
opposition Islah Party, a fundamentalist Muslim organization, were so
willing to allow women to march in the streets against him when they
favored women’s seclusion on all other occasions.
In Syria as well, on several occasions, women have shown their
strength and bravery, turning out in forceful demonstrations --
sometimes without men, but with their children in tow. Near the town of
Bayda, for instance, thousands of women shouting “We will not be
humiliated!” cut off
a coastal road to protest a heavy-handed government policy in which the
secret police of President Bashar al-Assad had arrested their
demonstrating male relatives. On other occasions, Syrian women have staged all-female marches to demand democracy and changes in regime policy.
Protecting Women’s Gains
Despite the centrality of women activists to the Arab Spring, they
have seldom been recognized as of real significance by most of the male
politicians who will undoubtedly benefit from what they have
accomplished. It was, for example, striking that women were without
representation on the commission appointed to revise the Egyptian
constitution in preparation for September elections, and that only one
woman (a Mubarak holdover at that) was appointed to the 29-person
interim cabinet.
In addition, patriarchal forces such as Muslim fundamentalist groups
and clergy are determined that women’s rights should not be expanded in
the wake of these political upheavals. As an omen in the wind, when a
modest-sized group of 200 women showed up at Tahrir Square on March 8th
to commemorate International Women’s Day, they found themselves attacked by militant religious young men who shouted that they should go home and do the laundry.
Women’s groups and progressive movements are understandably apprehensive
about the possibility that, in Tunisia and Egypt, Muslim fundamentalist
movements will become more influential in parliament and push through
laws to the disadvantage of both women and secularists. Yet they have
been remarkably unwilling to let such considerations deter them from
embracing democracy, something secular-leaning dictators Ben Ali and
Mubarak had warned them against.
The likelihood of an actual Muslim fundamentalist takeover in either
country remains minimal for the foreseeable future. In Egypt, the
military government has so far retained a Mubarak-era ban on the Muslim
Brotherhood putting up candidates under its own banner. As a result,
its candidates will run as the representatives of other small parties.
In addition, the organization has pledged to contest parliamentary seats
in only a limited number of electoral districts, so as to allay
middle-class fears that their goal is an Iran-style fundamentalist
takeover of the country. Admittedly, Muslim conservatism will likely
burgeon as a political current more generally in Egypt, whatever the
shape of the next parliament, posing a challenge to women's rights.
For instance, some Brotherhood officials have let slip
that they will indeed be working for the implementation of a medieval
form of Islamic law, which would include the segregation of women and
men in the workplace, while the mufti or chief adviser on Islamic law to
the government in Egypt has called for a “review” of secular personal
status laws that favor women, and which had been supported by Suzanne
Mubarak, the fashionable wife of the deposed dictator.
In Tunisia, the long years of repression under Ben Ali left the
leading fundamentalist group, al-Nahda or the Renaissance Party,
weakened. In any case its leader Rashid Ghannouchi has been speaking
of institutionalizing a “Turkish model” and says that, unlike the
Egyptian Brotherhood, he supports the right of a woman to become the
country’s president.
In this, he is looking to former Turkish fundamentalists like Recep
Tayyip Erdogan and Abdullah Gul who, tired of being imprisoned by and
butting heads with the secular Turkish establishment, founded the
Justice and Development Party. Since coming to power in 2002, they have
fought for a pluralistic system as a way of making a place for more
traditional Muslims in society and politics without pushing for the
implementation of medieval Muslim legal codes.
Still, as backlash reactions like the attack on the International
Women’s Day protest have set in, activists on women’s issues and
progressives are wondering how to ensure that women’s gains this spring
not be rolled back. In Egypt, prominent newscaster and critic of the Mubarak regime Buthaina Kamel has her own idea
about how to gain women’s rights in a new, more democratic
environment. She is running for president, something inconceivable in
the Mubarak era.
Even if her run gets little traction, her candidacy is nevertheless
deeply symbolic and historic -- and another strikingly brave act by a
woman in this new era in the Arab world. (Her decision is, of course,
opposed by the Muslim Brotherhood.) Other Egyptian women are hoping
that the constitution can be rewritten to strengthen women’s rights,
and that the 64 seats set aside for women in the previous parliament
will be retained.
Politicians in the transitional government of Tunisia, for decades
the most progressive Arab country with regard to women’s rights, are
determined to protect the public role of women by making sure they are
well represented in the new legislature. Elections are now planned for
July 24th, and a high commission was appointed to set electoral rules.
That body has already announced that party lists will have to maintain parity between male and female candidates.
In such a list system, you don't vote for an individual but a party,
which has published an ordered list of its candidates. If the list gets
10% of the vote nationally, it is awarded 10 percent of the seats in
parliament, and can go down its ordered list until it fills all those
seats. Parity for women means that every other candidate on the ordered
list should be a woman, ensuring them high representation in the
legislature. This procedure is sometimes called a "zipper" gender
quota. Quotas for female legislators are common in Scandinavia and in
the global South.
Although the Tunisian requirement for gender parity remains
controversial in some quarters, Ghannouchi's al-Nahda Party recently
came out in support of it. In contrast, Abdelwaheb El Hani, leader of
the newly founded right-of-center party al-Majd, complained
that the rule was “a violation of freedom of electoral choice,” and
insisted that he doubted it would be effective in promoting women’s
representation. In contrast, the leftist al-Tajdid (Renewal) Party
praised the move as “historic” and pledged to make women’s equality an
“irreversible accomplishment and an effective reality in Tunisian
political life.” Indeed, al-Tajdid wants an explicit equal rights
amendment put into the constitution.
Giving Women a Fighting Chance
The Arab Spring has proven an epochal period of activism and change
for women, recalling the role of early feminists in the 1919 Egyptian
movement for independence from Britain, or the important place of women
in the Algerian Revolution. The sheer numbers of politically active
women in this series of uprisings, however, dwarf their predecessors.
That this female element in the Arab Spring has drawn so little comment
in the West suggests that our own narratives of, and preoccupations
with, the Arab world -- religion, fundamentalism, oil and Israel -- have
blinded us to the big social forces that are altering the lives of 300
million people.
Women have been aided by this generation's advances in education and
the professions, by the prominence of articulate women anchors on
satellite television networks like Aljazeera, and by the rise of the
Internet and social media. Women can assert leadership roles in
cyberspace that young men's dominance of the public sphere might have
hampered in city squares.
Their prominence in the labor movements and at the public rallies in
Tunisia and Egypt, moreover, underlines how much more of a public role
they now have than is usually acknowledged. Even the trend toward
wearing a headscarf among women in Egypt during the past two decades has
been seen by some social scientists as a step forward. It has been a
way for women to enter the public sphere and work outside the home in
greater numbers than ever before while maintaining a claim on
conservative ideals of chastity and piety.
Women activists of the Arab Spring have come from all social classes,
since it has been a mass movement. Middle and upper class women often
focus their political energies on issues of political representation and
on laws affecting women's equality. Seeking constitutional guarantees
of electoral parity is one possible way of responding to any patriarchal
political backlash.
Working class women are particularly concerned with wages and
workers' rights. Stronger unions would improve women's prospects for
greater rights. Women's health, literacy, and material wellbeing are
concerns of all women. During the age of the dictators, the nation's
wealth was often usurped by a narrow elite of politically connected
families. A democratization of politics could potentially lead to more
state resources being devoted to women and the poor.
Keep in mind that women such as Buthaina Kamel knew the risks when
they called for Mubarak to step down. Whatever their patronizing
appeals to feminist themes, authoritarian regimes like Mubarak’s and Ben
Ali’s politically oppressed and stole from everyone in society,
including women, and they had proved increasingly unable to deliver the
social services and employment on which women and their families
fundamentally depend for a better life. Before, women could be
marginalized at will by the dictators whenever they made demands on the
regime. Now, at least, they have a fighting chance.