[nasional_list] [ppiindia] A Hamas surprise: Women secure victory

  • From: "Ambon" <sea@xxxxxxxxxx>
  • To: <"Undisclosed-Recipient:;"@freelists.org>
  • Date: Fri, 3 Feb 2006 23:47:04 +0100

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**http://www.iht.com/articles/2006/02/03/news/hamas.php

      A Hamas surprise: Women secure victory  
      By Ian Fisher The New York Times

      FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 3, 2006


     


     
      GAZA Hamas has been known and feared for its men, armed with suicide 
bombs. But in its parliamentary election triumph here last week, one secret 
weapon was its women. 

      To a degree that specialists said was new in the conservative Muslim 
society of the Gaza Strip, Hamas used its women to win, sending them door to 
door with voter lists and to polling places for last-minute campaigning. 

      Now unexpectedly in control of Palestinian politics, Hamas can boast that 
women hold six of its 74 seats in Parliament, giving the women of the radical 
group, guided in all ways by their understanding of Islam, a new and 
unaccustomed public role. 

      "We are going to lead factories. We are going to lead farmers," said 
Jamila al-Shanty, 48, a professor at the Islamic University in Gaza who won a 
seat in Parliament. "We are going to spread out through society. We are going 
to show the people of the world that the practice of Islam in regard to women 
is not well known." 

      If Shanty's prediction is borne out, the role of women will certainly not 
be along the secular Western lines followed largely, and with real strides for 
women, under decades of leadership by Yasser Arafat's now-defeated Fatah 
faction. The model will be Islam: Women in Hamas wear head scarves and follow 
strict rules for social segregation from men. 

      One of their role models, and one of the few women in Hamas well known 
before the election, has a history particularly troubling to many in Israel and 
the outside world. 

      She is Mariam Farhat, the mother of three Hamas advocates killed by 
Israelis. She bade one son goodbye in a homemade videotape before he stormed an 
Israeli settlement, killing five people before he was killed. A comment she 
made later received wide publicity: She said that she wished she had 100 sons 
to sacrifice that way. Known as the "mother of martyrs," she is seen in a 
campaign video carrying a gun. 

      Now she is one of the six women elected as Hamas legislators. The 
election rules included quotas for women for all parties. Farhat was surrounded 
recently at a Hamas victory rally at the women's campus of the Islamic 
University by young, outspoken, educated women who see no contradiction between 
religious militancy and modernity. 

      "She is a mother to every house, every person," said one of the students, 
Reem el-Nabris, 20, who kissed and hugged Farhat. 

      Farhat, 56, who had not been active in politics, said she hoped she 
deserved their praise as a role model. But she said her role should not be the 
only one for Hamas's women. 

      "It is not only sacrificing sons," she said after the rally. "There are 
different kinds of sacrifice - by money, by education. Everybody, according to 
their ability, should sacrifice." 

      The Islamic University, an oasis of order in the grit and chaos of Gaza, 
shows as well as any place the conflicting images of Hamas in relation to the 
women who strongly support it. 

      A stronghold for Hamas, though not exclusively for its supporters, the 
university is split in two for men and women, and it can be jarring to cross 
the corridor from crowds without a woman's face to another of women, all with 
their heads covered, some wearing the full veil, the nikab. On the day of the 
rally, some also wore green Hamas baseball caps. 

      Yet Hamas encourages, and in some cases pays for, the education of these 
women. Sabrin al-Barawi, 21, a chemistry student, said she had been raised with 
Hamas programs for women: social groups, leadership courses, Koran classes. 
"It's not only religious," said Ahlan Shameli, 21, who is studying computers. 
"It's the Internet, computers." 

      "Before Hamas, women were not aware of the political situation," she 
said. "But Hamas showed and clarified what was going on. Women have become much 
more aware." 

      In nearly two decades, the top tier of Hamas's leadership has seemed very 
much reserved for men. But supporters of Hamas, as well as those of Fatah and 
other specialists, agreed with Shameli that Hamas had earned strong support 
from women. Studies and results from municipal elections show women supporting 
the group in larger numbers than men. 

      If the men's most visible role has been fighting Israel, it is Hamas's 
social programs that have attracted the loyalty of women. Hamas offers 
assistance programs for widows of suicide bombers and poor people, health 
clinics, day care, kindergartens and preschools, in addition to beauty parlors 
and women-only gyms. Women "are the ones who take kids to clinics," said 
Mkhaimar Abusada, professor of political science at Al-Azhar University in 
Gaza. "They are the ones who take children to schools." 

      During the elections, he said, Hamas mobilized these same women as if it 
had been "building up for this occasion for 30 years," using them as 
grass-roots campaign workers. 

      "It's something noticeable in the Gaza Strip," he said. "In Palestinian 
society, our values do not accept women to go out and campaign in the street. 
It's really a new phenomenon, especially for Hamas." 

      Reem Abu Athra, who directs women's affairs for the Fatah youth wing, 
said that her party did not seem to understand how mobilized Hamas's women were 
generally, and that Fatah had not matched the grass-roots work by Hamas women 
during the elections. 

      She said Fatah seemed to think it would naturally win the women's vote, 
as the more secular party that has been in some ways a leader in the Arab world 
in rights for women. 

      "Fatah took women for granted, and this is one reason it lost," she said. 

      Naima Sheikh Ali, a Fatah legislator who runs a group for Gaza women, 
said Hamas's strict interpretation of Islam would remain a barrier to true 
participation by women. They cannot, for instance, be judges under Islam, she 
said, and will generally remain segregated and pushed to the side. 

      "Yes, they respect women, but as they conceive that respect," she said. 
"It is from a religiously fundamental view. For the women's movement, this will 
set us back several steps." 

      Shanty disagreed. She said that women, and especially the wives of top 
Hamas leaders, had long played a central role in Hamas's leadership, though she 
said that role had not been publicized to protect them. 

      "Every decision that is taken by Hamas is passed to us, not after the 
decision is made but before," she said. 

      One measure of participation by women may be the extent that they take 
part in addressing the main problems facing Palestinians, and not just on 
social issues that affect women, families or children. 

      In an interview before she won a legislative seat, Mouna Mansour, 44, a 
physics teacher who is the widow of Jamal Mansour, an assassinated Hamas 
leader, seemed very much engaged in the central issues. The peace process with 
Israel, she said, was dead. There should be a Palestinian state, but not at the 
cost of Jerusalem or the claims of Palestinian refugees, who under previous 
negotiations would not be permitted to move into what is today Israel. 

      Hamas, she said, needs to rebuild the economy, get rid of poverty and 
unemployment and, for now, continue the cease-fire with Israel. 

      But she also defended the decision of a young Nablus man to become a 
suicide bomber. 

      "Why not ask the question from another angle?" she said. "Why would he 
blow himself up if he was not subject to such great pressures? What leads you 
to do such a bitter thing? People do this from anger and injustice, to bring 
back life to their own people by sacrificing their lives." 

      But there is also unease. One student at the Islamic University said 
Hamas represented an unknown for women like her. The student, Rula Zaanin, 19, 
said Hamas had, at least, earned her trust. 

      "A lot of Palestinians love Hamas and wanted them," she said. "But we 
don't know what will happen." 



      Steven Erlanger contributed reporting from Nablus, West Bank, for this 
article. 

     
         


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