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Rights and Liberties

Jordanian Journalist Breaks Taboos Campaigning Against Violence

By Milon Nagi, Women's Media Center. Posted June 9, 2007.


Rana Husseini, an award-winning Jordanian journalist, is leading the cause to expose and fight honor killings of women in the Middle East.
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Dua Khalil is stoned to death in Iraq for being seen with a man of another religion. A woman is shot dead in Jordan after her photo appears on her brother's friend's cellphone. Muqadas Bibi's throat and those of her young sisters are slit by her stepfather in Pakistan after she leaves her abusive husband. Every year, across religious and national boundaries, around 5,000 women and girls are murdered by family members in so-called honor killings. "There is nothing honorable in these crimes," says Rana Husseini, award-winning Jordanian journalist and author of the forthcoming Murder in the Name of Honor, who has dedicated her career to exposing and fighting such crimes.

Husseini came across her first case -- a 16-year old girl murdered by her brother -- just a few months after she joined the Jordan Times as a young crime reporter in 1993, having returned to Jordan with degrees from Oklahoma City University. "This girl was a victim five or six times," she recalls. Raped and impregnated by another brother, she was married off to a man 50 years her senior following a secret abortion. The marriage lasted six months. "The day he divorced her, they killed her," says Husseini. They claimed she had deliberately seduced her brother.

Husseini was shocked to discover more and more such stories. The women's killers "would empty a gun, would stab them thirty, forty, fifty times, would burn them..." Although such killings were rarely talked about in Jordan, Husseini felt it was her duty as a journalist and as a woman to document these women's murders. "I wanted to be their voice," she says.

Almost immediately, she encountered a major obstacle -- public ignorance, buoyed up by media silence. At the time writing about these cases was taboo. Around 20 to 25 "honor" killings take place in Jordan each year, according to Husseini, most of them in poorer, densely populated parts of the capital city, Amman. Yet with no stories in the Arabic press, many readers initially claimed that Husseini was exaggerating. Her first such article in the English-language Jordan Times resulted in an angry phone call from a woman intellectual, she recalls. "She was yelling at my editor that I'm tarnishing Jordan's image." Her editors -- both men -- and the newspaper gave her their complete support, without which she believes her work could never have reached the level it has today. Readers, shocked and convinced by her reporting, reacted with calls for government action. A movement began to take shape.

In 1998, Husseini received the Reebok Human Rights Award, the first of many international honors recognizing her work. "This award steered a lot of things in Jordan," she says. It brought visibility -- including, crucially, international media attention and notice by NGOs -- and credibility to Husseini's campaign against "honor" crimes. She joined with others to form the Jordanian National Committee to Eliminate So-called Crimes of Honor, which campaigned to raise awareness and call for legal reform. "We conducted a public movement -- as they say here, a civil movement," says Husseini.


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Milon Nagi is a freelance writer working with the Women's Media Center.

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Primitive, animalistic bastards.
Posted by: Aussie Kim on Jun 9, 2007 2:26 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I wonder what would happen if ALL the women rose up against these bastards all at once? Let's face it, the women are the ones who know where the knives are kept.

Ah well, I can but dream...

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» RE: Primitive, animalistic bastards. Posted by: JusticeForAll
This is an excellent story.
Posted by: TassieDevil on Jun 9, 2007 4:42 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
This is an excellent story, and one we need to see more of here at Alternet. It is a credit to the author and editor for printing it here for us.
These women in these countries, young and old, are the true victims. These atrocities are the ones we, men and women, should be fighting to eradicate. This is where we should be concentrating our efforts. This is where buoycots and sanctions should be used against these countires that continue to support, in even the smallest way, these atrocities.

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» yeah, I noticed - & compare to... Posted by: karma_ran_over_dogma
Rana Husseini is a hero
Posted by: EasterBunny on Jun 9, 2007 5:45 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
notice that she doesn't engage in any apologetics for islamic misogyny or promote cultural relativism bullshit like so many alternet posters. she knows murder is wrong, it's wrong everywhere and she confronts it. and she's making progress, forcing her culture to acknowledge and correct it's flaws. meanwhile we have to listen to all these dolts on alternet who say "it's their culture", we shouldn't criticize, and "in the context" of islam it's different, etc. etc. It's just pathetic.

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» "Voluntary" marriage Posted by: astudent
» RE: ana Husseini is a hero Posted by: JusticeForAll
» RE: ana Husseini is a hero Posted by: EasterBunny
» RE: ana Husseini is a hero Posted by: Intrepidun
Jordanian King and his American stepmother
Posted by: gordie on Jun 9, 2007 6:48 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I don't understand why the young king of Jordan and his American stepmother do not figure in this article. Surely, they would be strong advocates and possibly more than figureheads
in a move to both change the laws and public opinions re: this
practice.

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» RE: Jordanian King and his American stepmother Posted by: karma_ran_over_dogma
» RE: Jordanian King and his American stepmother Posted by: karma_ran_over_dogma
» RE: Jordanian King and his American stepmother Posted by: karma_ran_over_dogma
» RE: Jordanian King and his American stepmother Posted by: karma_ran_over_dogma
» but thanks... and reading thru the lines, Posted by: karma_ran_over_dogma
It's the Muslims, huh?
Posted by: g on Jun 9, 2007 7:37 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I am not challenging the argument in this excellent article. I just want to remind other posters that until the 1960s Italy had a honors killing law as well. And outside of the Muslim world many women are killed every day by family members who consider them property rather than human beings.
As long as ideologies exist that encourage considering women baby-factories, inferior beings, creatures who cannot know what's good for them (Supreme Court Justice Stevens, are you listening?), these murders will be condoned. And such ideologies are alive and well and not confined to Muslim countries.
My applause to the brave Rana Husseini and to journalists everywhere who draw attention to the plight of women.

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» RE: It's the Muslims, huh? Posted by: EasterBunny
"Hate crimes" not "honor" killings or generic violence
Posted by: Markson on Jun 9, 2007 12:56 PM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
If women's rights advocates want to be heard right they need to call these crimes what they are: hate crimes. Women and girls are singled out for being female. Period. Males are not killed for "immorality" (Hell, they're not even killed for rape or pedophilia, the woman or girl would be). When these rights groups use that other euphemism "violence against women" it fails not only to include that males are the universal perpetrators (not all males are rapists, but universally rapists are male) but, worst, strongly implies that such crimes are generic violence. "Hate crimes" is the best way to show that it is not a random act of violence but an act of terrorism, in which a person is selected for brutal death for simply being born female. Sexual overtones do not change the end result (let alone excuse it).

There cannot be a more unnatural act of violence than the killing off of a gender. Femicide is a growing problem not only in the Middle East, but in Latin America, India (esp. via abortion), and China. With mainstream porn being brutally sadistic and movies like Hostel and Saw being disturbing popular don't think that it can't happen here. Hell, we're not that different from the Middle East: we export our "honor" killings to the public sphere. Just consider the serial killers who attack the easiest of female prey: prostitutes (slaves). Overwhelmingly, the public says they deserve it (For what crime against society, exactly? Giving men what they want?). Mind you, Johns and pimps (the ones in power) not only escape moral condemnation but are celebrated, especially the latter.

Whenever a woman/girl is targeted on the basis of gender, inevitably the following dogma comes to the forefront: She must have done something to provoke him. It rarely, if ever, fails.

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» You're absolutely right Posted by: hagwind
» RE: You're absolutely right Posted by: Markson
The War on Women and Children
Posted by: kablooie on Jun 10, 2007 8:17 AM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The world's climate of war seems to me to be intimately bound to the negation of the female -- the earth as a reflection of female fecundity. Hatred and disgust of female fertility drives gender-based murder, as it does war in general. The drive for control is fear-based.

Love your Mother, love each other -- when fear is replaced with love, what a world we could share.

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