purejuice: (Default)
purejuice ([personal profile] purejuice) wrote2010-08-20 07:59 pm
Entry tags:

The Veil: Notes

It is, of course, the women who don’t get to fly home to New York—or indeed leave any airport without their husbands’ consent—who truly deserve international attention. And yet these are the very women our Western politicians, media outlets, and academicians barely acknowledge because, as I was constantly advised by European and American diplomats in both Egypt and also the Sudan when I visited, “We have no right to pass judgment on the customs and mores of other countries.”

Here are just a few of those customs and mores: in Turkey, a nation often cited as “moderate,” wife beating is so common that 69 percent of all female health workers polled (and almost 85 percent of all male health workers) said that violence against women was in certain instances excusable. In April, a new epidemiological study in the European Journal of Public Health revealed that one out of every five homicides in Pakistan is the result of a so-called honor killing.
And in Mauritania, the age-old practice of force-feeding young girls—a life-threatening process that is intended to make them round and therefore “marriageable”—has seen a renaissance. Girls as young as five are herded into “fattening farms.” Those who resist are tortured.
http://www.worldaffairsjournal.org/articles/2009-Summer/full-Bachrach.html

[identity profile] tuscendi.livejournal.com 2010-08-22 02:42 am (UTC)(link)
Meanwhile we've invaded, bombed and blasted a couple of Islamic countries, destroyed bodies and homes and infrastructure, and yet never put a dent in any of this. Not to mention allowing some of it to be carried on right here in the USA.

[identity profile] purejuice.livejournal.com 2010-08-22 04:44 am (UTC)(link)
there's an argument, along the lines that the invasion of iraq was a full recruitment mandate for al qaeda, that entrenchment in these fascist activities is a reaction or backlash to modernity.