FRENCH TEENS DEMAND FREEDOM
FROM VIOLENCE
INTERNATIONAL
By Kimberly
Tabe - WeNews correspondent
PARIS (WOMENSENEWS)
--In late March, 14-year-old
Naima was cornered by three
teen-age boys only a hundred
yards from her middle school.
The boys began to molest her.
When she protested, they tied
her with duct tape, threw
her in a garbage can and tossed
lighted cigarettes on top
of her. She escaped a few
minutes later, shaken but
not seriously injured.
Last October,
17 year-old Sohane wasn't
so lucky. She was lured into
a trash depot by a 19-year-old
boy who had a score to settle
with her boyfriend. Sohane
was defiant, and so the boy
doused her with gas, flicked
on his lighter and burned
her alive while his friends
looked on.
These barbaric
events took place in France,
a country known as being among
the most egalitarian and civilized
in the world. They may be
extreme examples, but they
point to an increasingly common
phenomenon in what are known
as cites (pronounced see-tay),
the massive housing projects
that ring most of the country's
large cities.
An association
called Federation Nationale
des Maisons des Potes that
aims to help girls in the
cites says that the girls
there are trapped between
the restrictive culture of
their families and the aggression
of boys their own age, who
verbally (and often physically)
harass any of them who show
signs of independence.
"There
are only two types kinds of
girls" in the cites,
Samira Bellil writes (in French)
in her book about the gang
rapes she suffered as a teen-ager
near Paris, published last
October. "Good girls
stay home, clean the house,
take care of their brothers
and sisters, and only go out
to go to school," writes
Bellil in "Dans l'Enfer
des Tournantes" ("In
the Hell of the Gang Rapes.")
"Those who . . . dare
to wear make-up, to go out,
to smoke, quickly earn the
reputation as 'easy' or as
'little whores.'"
Movement
to Shock, Mobilize
Tired of being
labeled and harassed, a group
of girls and women from the
"quartiers" (another
name for the destitute French
suburbs) took to the streets
throughout France this spring
to denounce their situation.
Their movement, called "Ni
Putes, Ni Soumises" ("Neither
Bitch nor Submissive")--a
slogan meant both to shock
and to mobilize--culminated
in a march through 20 French
cities, a 20,000-person protest
in Paris in March, and a meeting
with the prime minister the
same month. They're organizing
an eclectic benefit concert
for next fall that will include
some of France's biggest pop,
traditional and world music
stars.
The movement
has certainly made an impact:
Posters are plastered in subway
stations and on kiosks and
the march made the front page
of France's major newspapers,
including Le Monde and Liberation.
Unlike the United
States, where many housing
projects are located in the
inner city, those in France
sprung up in the suburbs surrounding
such large cities as Paris,
Marseille and Bordeaux in
the 1950s and 1960s to provide
low-income housing for the
influx of immigrants, most
of whom were from Algeria,
Tunisia and sub-Saharan Africa.
There has long
been a high concentration
of social problems in these
areas, but "during the
last 10 years, the worsening
of the economic situation
really accelerated,"
says Helene Orain, a sociologist
and one of the movement's
main organizers in an interview.
"All of the social indicators
skyrocketed in these neighborhoods,"
she says, pointing to an unemployment
rate that now hovers at 25
percent there--more than double
that of the overall nation.
To counter these
problems, many young people
in the "quartiers"
have turned to religion, in
most cases Islam. "When
you're excluded and dominated
everywhere; the victim of
discrimination, poverty, etc.,
you start looking for your
identity," says Orain.
"Religion becomes a way
to feel like you're part of
a community." And, in
the fundamentalist, often
distorted version of religion
to which many of the youth
adhere, women are inferior
to men in every respect.
At the same
time, violence in the housing
projects turned inward. In
the 1980s and early 1990s,
teen-age boys burned cars
and scribbled graffiti to
protest against marginalization
and to attract the government's
attention. Today, says Orain,
boys are often belittled and
discriminated against in jobs
and in school, so they take
out their aggression on those
they can still dominate: girls.
"We're
girls, so we're less-than-nothings,"
Priscilla, 17, told Le Monde,
a French newspaper, after
her friend Sohane's death.
"For [the guys], it's
no big deal to hit a woman."
Souad Benani,
an activist with the Collectif
des Droits des Femmes (Women's
Rights Collective, a advocacy
coalition based in Paris)
and the former president of
Nanas Beurs, a Paris-based
feminist association for Maghreb
(North African immigrant)
women, says that 20 years
ago, women in the "quartiers"
were either "closed in
and had no rights" or
were "considered prostitutes."
But today, she says in an
interview, "they also
suffer from rapes and violence."
In fact, rapes in the housing
projects have gone up by between
15 percent and 20 percent
every year since 1999, according
to government statistics,
and women's-rights advocates
estimate that unreported rapes
make the figure even higher.
Pervasive
Harassment on Daily Basis
The macho attitude
can lead to deaths such as
that of Sohane, or cases such
as that of Sarah, a 15-year-old
girl who was harassed and
repeatedly raped by 18 teen-age
boys over the course of one
winter. But more minor harassment
affects such girls on a daily
basis.
Fadela Amara,
the founder of the Neither
Bitch Nor Submissive movement,
told the French newspaper
L'Humanite, "These women
live with constant harassment:
insults, hands on their butts,
slaps . . . " Members
of the group say girls are
subjected to a hidden system
of surveillance, in which
neighbors, older brothers
or even other girls scrutinize
them everywhere they go. Any
deviance--smoking, hanging
out with boys-- is promptly
reported back to their parents.
(The family reputation is
determined by the girls' behavior.)
First and foremost,
the girls are judged by their
clothes, which, according
to the code of the cites,
are expected to cover up their
bodies. Most girls drape themselves
in baggy athletic jackets
and track pants.
"When I
go visit my friend in the
quartier, I really feel the
difference," says Violette,
18, who participated in the
Paris march. "Once I
arrived at her apartment dressed
in a skirt. She said 'no,
no, you have to change, you
can't go out like that here.'
It really shocked me."
Her friend, 17 year-old Sophie,
concurs: "If you're dressed
too much like a woman, it
doesn't go over well."
Those who don't conform are
harassed, called "prostitutes"
and "whores." So
girls dress conservatively
and make complicated detours
to avoid walking in front
of groups of boys.
Wearing Veil
in Self-Defense
Some even resort
to wearing a veil--not necessarily
because of their Muslim beliefs,
but as a way to protect themselves,
says Orain. The right to wear
a veil to school, meanwhile,
is a matter of huge controversy
in France, a country that
prides itself on the strict
separation of church and state.
Legislators have introduced
a bill to forbid the practice,
while civil-rights advocates
argue that any attempt to
outlaw it is an infringement
on freedom of expression and
a direct assault on Muslim
traditions. For their part,
many feminists--including
members of Neither Bitch Nor
Submissive--insist that the
veil is an unacceptable symbol
of submission.
Under these
conditions, relationships
between boys and girls are
either hidden or nonexistent.
Girls who do have boyfriends
only see them outside the
neighborhood, far from the
watchful eyes of the "guardian
brothers." Those who
are suspected to have sexual
contact with a boy (a major
offense in a culture where
sex before marriage is forbidden)
instantly ruin their reputation.
"There
are rules in the cites,"
says Julianne, 17, who lives
in a quartier outside of Paris,
in an interview during the
march. "A man who has
a bunch of girlfriends is
a legend. A women who has
a bunch of boyfriends is a
slut." According to Orain,
the sociologist and activist,
chastity is so important that
some parents ask a gynecologist
to testify to their daughters'
virginity and some girls undergo
operations to stitch up their
hymens.
Faced with the
double-edged danger of becoming
victims or of losing their
reputations, many girls are
banned (or ban themselves)
from going out at all. Eric
Debarbieux, an educational
science professor at the University
of Bordeaux in Southern France,
wrote in a study on youth
violence that small acts of
aggression in the quartiers
"lead to daily oppression,
causing the victims to isolate
themselves, to feel powerless
and anguished, and to abandon
public spaces." Hence,
say the movement's organizers,
the girls are more likely
to give up their education
and succumb to forced marriages
imposed by their parents.
They become submissive, silent,
and resigned to their fate.
Movement
Seeks Protective Measures
The goal of
the Neither Bitch nor Submissive
movement is to show these
girls and young women an alternative
and call attention to their
condition. It began two years
ago through an association
called Federation Nationale
des Maisons des Potes (Houses
of Friends), a national network
based in Paris that helps
young people in France's impoverished
neighborhoods. Spurred by
Fadela Amara, the organization's
president, who grew up in
a cite, the group's leaders
met with women and girls in
cites throughout the country
in 2001. In 2002, they circulated
a "manifesto" outlining
their goals: "We are
the women of the quartiers
who have decided to no longer
be silent in face of the injustices
with which we live, and to
reject the idea that in the
name of a 'tradition' or of
a 'religion' or simply of
violence, we are condemned
to suffer."
The group immediately
went about creating "vigilance
committees" in each of
France's 95 governmental sectors
to help women to create anti-violence
programs and aid the victims
of violence or harassment.
They also forged partnerships
with such local associations
as family planning groups
and battered women's shelters.
They also called for sexual
education as early as elementary
school, courses on gender
equality and women's rights
and more co-ed after-school
programs, as well as wider
availability of counseling
and medical services.
The movement
took on a new dimension with
the death of Sohane in early
October. Sohane's older sister,
22-year-old Kahina, has become
a fervent spokesperson for
the cause.
"We need
a collective wake-up call,"
she told Maison des Potes'
newsletter in December. "But
we need all the players in
French society, the public
leaders, to help us . . .
Then we might be able to turn
the norm upside down, to change
people's mentalities."
This spring,
as the marchers took on France's
major cities, change seemed
to be on the horizon. The
movement's leaders met with
France's prime minister to
present five proposals, including
shelters for victims of physical
and sexual abuse, and a "guide
of respect" to be distributed
in middle and high schools.
All the proposals were accepted,
and 50 apartments have already
been reserved throughout France
for women in crisis. The concert
next September is expected
to raise thousands of dollars
to help fund the other measures.
The challenge now, the advocates
say, is to keep up momentum.
"The law
of silence has started to
crack," says Orain, "and
girls are beginning to talk,
to say, 'That's enough! We
can't take it anymore.'"
Kimberly
Conniff Taber is a freelance
writer and editor based in
Paris.
For more
information:
Macite femmes--Ni
Putes, ni Soumises! - (In
French): - http://www.macite.net/home/article.php3?id_article=52
Neither Bitch
Nor Submissive, A Women March
Against Ghettos, for Equality:
- http://www.taiga-press.com/features/ni_putes/