SOME FEAR PAKISTAN RELIGIOUS
RIGHT IS NEW TALIBAN
INTERNATIONAL
By Juliette
Terzieff - WEnews correspondent
LAHORE, Pakistan
(WOMENSENEWS)
--As 60 women prepare to take
their seats in Parliament
on Saturday, the incoming
members of the religious right
are busy trying to convince
skeptical Pakistani women
that they will be able to
put aside their ideological
differences with their more
progressive colleagues over
issues ranging from women's
attire to education.
Thrust into
the spotlight after the religious
alliance Muttahida Majlis-i-Amal--the
United Action Forum--won unprecedented
gains in last month's national
elections, it is that party's
women who are shouldering
the burden of proof in front
of an often-hostile public.
"All this
scandal and fear is over nothing,"
says Raheel Qazi, daughter
of fundamentalist leader Qazi
Hussain Ahmed.
"All the
religious parties put forth
female candidates, and all
of us hold Master's degrees.
Why then would we suddenly
ban girls and women from attending
school or holding a job, and
make them stay at home? That's
ridiculous," she snorts
in response to widespread
speculation about the alliance's
plans for women. "We
want to work towards an Islamic
society, not an oppressive
one."
The alliance
is now the third largest group
in Parliament and gained full
control over the Northwest
Frontier Province assembly
along the border with Afghanistan.
Its vehemently anti-American
election platform and the
public statements of leaders,
including Qazi's father, about
ensuring that women understand
their place in Islam are exaggerated
and misunderstood, she says.
"We are
not going to ban co-education,
the Internet or cable television.
This type of exposure is everywhere,"
Qazi explains in broken English.
"Instead we will educate
our people as to what is right.
Then they can make their own
decisions."
The Dawn
of a Taliban-like Era?
But from university
campuses to the drawing rooms
of wealthy families to the
commentary pages of nearly
every Pakistani publication,
female advocates of liberal
interpretations of Islam remain
unconvinced that the UAF's
election victory will not
translate into the dawn of
a Taliban-like era.
"I am a
woman who enjoys the air of
freedom," says 28-year-old
office worker Ambreen Rashid.
"Now I fear I will be
forced to hide behind a burqa,
silence my voice and only
dream of exercising my rights."
For other female
politicians, while the inclusion
of many UAF women may be contentious,
it is also an important step
forward for Pakistani women.
This is the first time so
many women will serve on the
national level, in the 17
percent of seats reserved
for them by law. As part of
his reform program, President
Pervez Musharraf also reserved
33 percent of seats in local
assemblies.
"The important
thing is not to go backwards
but to move forwards. Women
need to feel on par with the
men, to have a say in the
corridors of power,"
says Tamina Doltana, an old
Lahore-based political hand
and one of only two women
in the country to beat a male
competitor in a direct race.
"And that
means all women--left, right,
and center of the spectrum,"
she adds. The UAF "are
human beings too. We don't
have to be scared of them
just because they have a different
opinion. That's part of democracy,
isn't it?"
Health, Education
Priorities of Religious Alliance,
Members Say
While they may
not see eye-to-eye on all
issues, there are several
areas where the incoming female
members of Parliament can
agree.
"Our priorities
are no different than other
politicians: basic education,
health and protection of the
law," explains Razia
Aziz, a UAF assembly member
from the Northwest Frontier
Province.
Only about 40
percent of Pakistani women
are literate, while half live
just at or below the poverty
line, according to government
figures. One out of every
two Pakistani women is subject
to emotional or physical abuse.
Widows, divorcees and orphans
are particularly hard hit
in this male-dominated society.
At the top of
the list for UAF female politicians
is legislation ensuring women
a fair share in property and
inheritances and a makeover
of divorce laws giving women
an equitable share of assets.
"We will
establish women-only education
institutions and a women's
university," says Aziz,
adding that many families
in the conservative province
are loathe to send their girls
to study with boys.
While UAF female
politicians say women should
cover their heads, the legislators
add that women will never
be forced to wear a burqa.
Instead, UAF women in the
Northwest Frontier Province
say they hope to create an
atmosphere where women will
do so voluntarily.
Qazi, a 37-year-old
mother of two, does not wear
a burqa though she covers
her head at all times and
veils her face when she leaves
home. At the same time, she
carries a cell phone, paints
her toenails and has an e-mail
account.
"There
should be few restrictions
on women; this is a modern
era of science and technology,"
Qazi says. "But a woman
should know her first responsibility
is to protect her family,
her home. And going forth
with modesty is paramount."
It is precisely
this type of speech that has
many urban Pakistani women
worried that UAF members are
merely on a public relations
campaign to allay society's
fears.
"I have
never felt restricted as a
woman in Islam. In fact, Islam
guarantees our rights and
equality, and I am not afraid,"
says Doltana, who believes
national exposure of religiously
conservative women will help
Pakistani society.
"The religious
right has to have a progressive
point of view to be effective,
and they will see that,"
Doltana insists. "Let
them interact with other political
women. It will help them to
strike a balance when they
see how other women live and
work, and can still be termed
'good Muslims.'"
Juliette
Terzieff is a freelance journalist
currently based in Pakistan
who has worked for the San
Francisco Chronicle, Newsweek,
CNN International and the
London Sunday Times.
For more
information:
Jamaat-e-Islami
Pakistan: - http://www.jamaat.org
Muttahida Majlis-i-Amal
(United Action Forum): -
http://www.mma.org.pk
Aurat Publication
and Information Service Foundation:
- http://www.brain.net.pk/~apisf/main.html