Canada's Military and Afghan Women: A Follow-Up

April 21st, 2009
Krista

This piece is also posted at Muslim Lookout.

I know I just talked about this last week, but all these questions about Canada’s involvement with the rights of Afghan women have remained a major news story, so I thought it was worth doing a follow-up.  There are still quite a few articles out there about how the new law that came out a couple weeks ago is making everyone question Canada’s mission in Afghanistan (yeah, I know: Canada’s military has been there how long and people are only asking these questions now??)

This article by Sandra Martin,  printed this past weekend in the Globe and Mail, is pretty typical of a lot of the issues that are being mentioned.  Like many of the media perspectives I discussed last week, it talks about the Afghan government’s support of the new law as “the ultimate betrayal,” as if it is a move deliberately and primarily intended to offend the Canadian mission in the country.  (Interestingly, the specific language around “betrayal” is always talked about in terms of a betrayal of Canadian expectations, and not of Afghan women.)

The article further exposes some of the other assumptions that are being made in many of the discussion about this issue within Western media.  Its constant use of “us” and “our” – in reference to Canada and Canadians, and in particular to the Canadian military – creates a rigid division, assuming that all Canadians are similar and united, and fundamentally different from Afghans.  When she says that Margaret Atwood “continues to question why we were there in the first place” and “doesn’t feel we can just pack up our kit bags,” Martin implies that all of “us” are somehow in Afghanistan, and so closely linked with the Canadian military that its kit bags are “ours” as well.  She also writes that although it used to be “that intractable problem over there, Afghanistan is now a seething issue on our streets, around dinner tables and in meeting rooms in Canada.”  She seems to assume here that it is only since Canada’s role in the NATO invasion of Afghanistan in 2001 that Afghanistan has been an issue for Canadians.

I know it might seem overly nitpicky to get all concerned about a pronoun, but the use of “we” and “our” is always worth questioning.  It is often an exclusive term (if “we” did not care about Afghanistan prior to 2001, then this “we” doesn’t really include Afghan-Canadians; if “we” are fighting in Afghanistan, then the “we” also pushes aside many Canadians who disagree with the Afghan mission.)  It is also a term that tends to create a moral binary as well, placing “us” on the side that is morally superior and more modern and progressive than the Afghan “them.”

Martin also seems to assume that military intervention is the only way to support Afghan women.  She writes that, throughout the course of Canada’s military involvement in the country, “those with a reflexively anti-war disposition found themselves torn between their opposition to military intervention and their concern for the plight of Afghan’s most vulnerable: its female population.”  Even if we ignore the overly patronising tone of “a reflexively anti-war disposition” (as if being anti-war is just a reflex, and not a result of some critical reflection), the statement is bizarre also because of its suggestion that opposing military intervention and supporting Afghanistan’s female population are mutually exclusive positions.  In fact, many people who were initially opposed to the military intervention opposed it precisely because they felt that such an intervention would hurt Afghanistan’s female population.  Moreover, many of these people were also people who were concerned about Afghanistan’s female population even before 2001, a possibility this article seems to deny altogether.

On the other hand, Martin does bring in some quotes that give some nuance to the debate.  For example, she begins by quoting Farah Mohamed, a Muslim woman who tells us that “I grew up in Canada in a Muslim home where respect and the advancement of women are normal and I was horrified by this law.”  It was nice to see an affirmation, especially right at the beginning of the article, of the possibility of being a Muslim woman who grew up in a household that would teach her to be horrified by this law.

Martin also writes that:

Some people think there are better ways of improving the lot of women than pouring in guns and soldiers.

“How has the war helped women in Afghanistan? It hasn’t,” Judy Rebick, former head of the National Action Committee on the Status of Women, says. Instead, she argues, life is worse for women since the occupation. “Never have women achieved equality by somebody coming in and giving it to them. We can’t bomb our way into equality.”

Rather than sending in troops to intervene in a society “that doesn’t want them,” she thinks countries such as Canada should have supported existing groups like RAWA, the Revolutionary Association of the Women of Afghanistan, which has been organizing non-violently against the Taliban and struggling to establish women’s rights since 1977. “We should never have gone into Afghanistan in the first place, and we should leave.”

I’m glad that she included this quote, and that she mentioned that there have been women active in women’s rights issues since 1977 (although she could have mentioned that these struggles go back even further.)  Although much of the article made me cringe, and overall did little to really challenge the idea of Canada as a benevolent power bringing nothing but good to those poor Afghans, she did bring in more complexity than some other articles have on this issue.

And I know this is petty, but I have to mention Martin’s token headscarf reference, where she reflects on some of the media coverage about Afghan women protesting the law, and writes that “seeing them march with their faces uncovered and their veils pulled back to show some hair was a hopeful sign that women are feeling strong enough to protest against an unjust law.”  Because pulling your veil back to show some hair is a true sign of liberation.  *rolling eyes*

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No Responses to “Canada's Military and Afghan Women: A Follow-Up”

  1. Ayeshter says:

    I read the article aswell. Honestly, the whole thing made me pretty sick. I mean, did anyone notice the absence of an Afghani woman’s voice? Alright, so there is a Muslim woman there, but come on…you thought her in, have her add a few commandeering remarks suddenly…BAM..balanced article. Has anyone ever told the globe that Muslims are not a monolithic entity? That have unique cultures and experiences? That a Canadian urbanite Muslima is not necessarily the best authority on the plight of Afghan women? Although, I do not support the new laws in any form, lets hear this dissent from an actually Afghani woman instead of just doing some sort of voice over.

    This wasn’t mentioned in the MMW critique, but on the preceding page (you saw the two articles together) there was a piece of Female Journalists experiences in Afghanistan. One Journalist wrote the most stereotypical piece I had ever read in this paper. Although she was in military garb and “not looking feminine at all” she was shocked by the attention she received from the local men while waiting to do an interview. Apparently, her translator suggested that as a western women, these young men assumed she had a lengthy sexual history. This leads to a condemning of Afghani men’s unchecked sexuality. Later, she praises men in Canada who “yes check out women…but at least keep it to themselves” Huh?? So I guess the men that slow down in there cars and make unwanted advances whilst I’m walking don’t count. I still can not believe that something so one sided and inaccurate gets published.

    I have now completely lost respect for the editors of the Globe and Mail.

  2. Fatemeh says:

    @ Ayeshter: Thanks for highlighting that terrible article! More of western neo-colonial racism, but it’s new and improved using women!

  3. Krista says:

    @ Ayeshter: Yeah, I saw that one too. It was AWFUL! I thought of critiquing it for MMW, but honestly, it just made me SO annoyed to read it that I figured I’d be better off if I left it alone. It was so ridicuolously racist and Orientalist… As you said, it was some of the most stereotypical reporting they could have come up with – the white-western-traveler-in-a-Muslim-land writing home about how “those people” treat their women. Ugh!

    And I agree with you about the absence of an Afghani women’s voice in this article. I found it odd too, considering she does consult a bunch of people for their comments. Even the Muslim woman that she does quote is, first of all, not Afghani (as you mentioned), but also seems to be quoted *only* because she is Muslim – without any kind of academic or other expertise that the other women quoted have. The white, non-Muslim academics get to give the overall educated analysis of what’s going on, where the Muslim woman is just there to speak from her own experience wherever it suits the journalist. At the very least, you’d think she could have found an Afghan or Muslim women who could have given a similar perspective to the other women she interviewed…

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  5. ayeshter says:

    @ Krista- Totaly agree. If the Globe needs then, I have the names of some very accomplished Muslima academics they can discuss this with!