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Liqaye

This thread is dedicated to somali women heroes

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Liqaye   
Like i said in the heading, if you have any articles concerning women historical figures, bussiness figures, politics, or whatever, add it on the thread and if we do a good job of it perhaps admin will put it up as a welcome to every lady who registers.

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Arraweelo

A Role Model For Somali Women

 

 

By Ladan Affi

 

This essay was presented by Ladan Affi during the Somali Peace Conference in October 1995, held in Paris, France and was published in a book called "POUR UNE CULTURE DE LA PAIX EN SOMALIE" edited by Mohamed Mohamed Abdi. Here's the article in its full form.

Once upon a time, there was a famous queen named Arraweelo, who ruled most of what is now Somalia. When she was younger, Arraweelo had witnessed many wars and conflicts between Somalis. She had also seen how the council of elders had, on many occasions, made some unwise decisions. She felt that these were due to the fact that some of the men on the council were not intelligent and capable enough to be in a position of leadership. Her recommendation was that these men should be replaced by women who were intelligent and competent to make decisions, that would be of benefit to the community.

 

However, Arraweelo's husband disagreed with her and felt that that kind of work belonged to men and that women were better left to do what they did best housework and childcare.

 

The steps that Arraweelo took to get power are very well known to most Somalis and especially to Somali men. She organized the women into striking from doing household chores, so that the men were kept busy with the cooking and looking after the children. While they were preoccupied with that, Arraweelo took over the leadership, declaring herself queen. From then on, there was peace and prosperity in the land

 

Christine Choi in her article "Finely Etched Chattel: The invention of Somali Women", states that "much of the research on gender and in particular, women in Somalia, with notable exceptions, suffer from serious flaws."[1] She continues in the same article that "Orientalism coupled with a patriarchal view of African women has yielded the systematized anthropological studies of I.M. Lewis and other colonial anthropologists, which has created the image of the Somali women as chattel, commodity and a creature with little power". This image is in complete contradiction with the reality of Somali women and their position in society.

 

The theme of this conference is peace culture and its promotion in Somalia. Somali women as natural peacemakers must be an integral part of this process.

 

However, women who have shown interest in participating in the political decision making process, such as Arraweelo, have traditional ly been ostracized and treated as though they were abnormal and unwomanlike.

 

Somali women have always been the backbone of Somali society and women in nomadic Somalia do almost all the work ensuing the survival of the Somali family in a harsh environment.

 

"Somali women play a significant role in Somali

 

society; the division of labor is clearly defined

and heavily weighted towards women. Traditionally,

the nomadic woman milks the animals, processes the milk,

feeds the family, and cares for and watches the livestock.

She also collects firewood, cooks, feeds the children,

cleans the house and washes the clothes and the utensils" [2]

In addition to that, women have the responsibility of "building and dismantling the nomadic aqal (home)" as they move from place to place in search of grass and water for their livestock.

 

Meanwhile, the men have the very formidable job of "where to move, arrange additional transport from other families"[3] and looking after the camels.

 

To keep the peace between clans in times of conflict, Somali women served as sacrificial lambs when they were married off to the clan, their father, brothers and uncles had been fighting against in the past.

 

During the struggle for independence, many Somali women took part. Many contributed financially by selling their jewelry, others took part in the demonstrations. Many hid the freedom fighters against the colonial powers at a great personal cost , some were jailed and beaten, all for the sake of achieving freedom for the Somali people. One well known woman was Timiro Ukash who was jailed while pregnant by the Italian colonial powers. She gave birth to a baby girl while in jail.

 

When independence was finally achieved and British Somaliland and Italian Somaliland joined together to form the Somali Democratic Republic on July 1st, 1960, Somali women were nowhere to be seen. There were no women representatives in the Cabinet or in Parliament. Their services were no longer required in achieving independence.

 

The benefit of independence was minimal to Somali women as it was mostly the men who were educated and who benefited in terms of employment, education and prestige. However, with the movement into large cities, many Somali women lost their defined position in society, resulting in many women being left to fend for themselves, their children and other extended family members

 

In urban centers like Mogadishu, approximately "50% of small scale businesses are run by women". Others were civil servants and were involved in jobs as "teachers, nurses and clerks"[4] who were given very few opportunities to advance in a society were patriarchy and clan lineage are the order of the day.

 

In October 21, 1969, Siyad Barre came to power through a coupd'etat . The Somali language was developed into written form and a phenomenal literacy campaign was successfully launched. This was an opportunity for many Somali girls to get access to education. As many entered the universities, the future looked hopeful for Somali women.

 

However, the reality has proven otherwise. "Although 8 years of schooling is compulsory, it is estimated that 96% of Somali women cannot read and girls receive about one third of the schooling of boys and that female literacy is 39 percent of male literacy.[5]

 

Barre government's attempt to try to better the situation of Somali women failed partly due to opposition from some men who based their arguments on religion. Their position however contradicted the Quran's message of equality between women and men.

 

According to Country Report 1992, women have been subject of discrimination in work and family matters. I rural areas, women are "treated as beasts of burden" [6]doing much of the work but receiving little recognition.

 

Although Somali women have had the right to vote in Islam for over 1400 years, In Somalia since 1958 in the south and since 1961 in the north, yet they are not permitted to take part in the tribal or assembly of elder where the real clan decision making process takes place.

 

The outbreak of civil war in 1991 affected the whole country, but it has had the greatest impact on Somali women and children:

 

 

"The tragedy of the current destruction and violence

in our country has been leveled disproportionately

against the Somali women. It is not surprising that

this is so, given that women have, for a long time,

occupied a marginalized and powerless position in our

society."[7]

 

The situation of women in areas of armed conflict, as well as the role of women in Somali society, are issues that have drawn the attention of human rights groups and Somali analysts.

 

The present position of Somali women continues to be unacceptable. According to Dr. Safia Shire, a former diplomat with the Somali Ministry of Foreign Affairs, "when the slow disintegration of (Somali) society and institution as well as the destruction and violence started, the rights of Somali women began eroding and they became a voiceless group".[8]

 

Many of the victims during the past four years of war were specifically targeted because of their weakness and vulnerability due to their lack of military strength and clan or sub clan affiliation.

 

While many men were away, fighting for the honor and prestige of their clan, the women were left to take care of the family. Close to one million refugees, mostly women and children, fled to neighboring countries such as Kenya, Ethiopia and Djibouti. "Women who flee become refugees at the mercy of incomprehensible bureaucracies and hostile governments".[9]

 

On the way, they were abused, tortured, raped and killed because of their clan affiliation or that of their husband and children. Amnesty Information and other sources described "that the number of rapes in Somalia was massive in scale...and commonplace in the villages".[10]

 

When Africa Watch interviewed women in the refugee camps, nearly one half said they had also been attacked in Somalia

 

Unfortunately, many were ostracized as if the abuse they had received was something they had brought on themselves. They were used as pawns in the game of clan politics.

 

Many women remained in their cities trying to make the best of the situation. They were instrumental in trying to save many people through the opening of soup kitchens, operating schools for children, running the hospital and were generally involved in the delivery of social services

 

Thirty five years after independence, the position of Somali women is worse than it was before. Even though they suffered much in the aftermath of the civil war, Somali women have been marginalized and excluded from taking part in the reconciliation efforts, both by the Somalis as well as the International community.

 

When the U.N. announced that each region would have three individual based on their clan affiliation, it left me with a mixture of emotions. I was happy that Somali women were finally being acknowledged and at the same time realizing the futility of implementing this plan as the clan establishment is a purely male oriented realm. True to form, none of the clans agreed to have women represent them.

 

Country reports 1993, noted that "with social breakdown caused by the civil war, clan loyalties have grown even stronger". This does not bode well for Somali women or their participation in Somali society.[11]

 

The growing Islamic movements in Somalia, whose main focus seems to the domination and subjugation of women in the area of political and social participation will also be a barrier for women.

 

These men's obsession with women and especially women's dress code points to disturbing trends that is destined to erode any gain Somali women have made in the past 35 years.

 

Unfortunately, many Somali women believe that Islam is the domain of men without investigating what Islam has to say about the political and social involvement of some men. Some men feel threatened when women do claim their Islamic rights such as equality between men and women, the right to education and the right to participate in community affairs. Their reaction is to put women down so that the authority of men will not be questioned.

 

This suppression is not confined to women in Somali, but seems to afflict, from my observations, women in the Diaspora as well. Those who use Islam as a means of gaining political power are using similar means of oppression through fear as those who use the clan as a means of legitimizing their power.

 

Some women also work within the clan framework choosing to overlook the fact that the clan is a male dominated system that contributes to their oppression. They do not seem to realize that it will not benefit them as women.

 

Somali women need to support and work with each other whether from the rural or urban areas whether from the north or from the south. They need to learn about their Islamic heritage and study the Quran for themselves.

 

"Equality proposes a principled approach to society.

 

It concerns structural adjustment as well as domestic

production" [12]

Many people might feel that the equal participation of Somali women is an impossible and an unrealistic task. Somali men who are active in the reconciliation efforts in Somalia should realize that without the participation of half of society, very little has been or can be achieved. Somali men must actively participate in opposing those whose ego is comforted by the subservience of Somali women. They must be the ones to insist that Somali women be equally involved in the decision making process in Somalia

 

Somali women must question and challenge a culture that contributes to their domination. It is vital for women to educate themselves and t take a more visible and active role in society."

 

Dr Orbinski, a physician with Medecins sans Frontieres, has witnessed anti war demonstration by women and believes that women the "fabric of (Somali) society" and according to other reports, aid experts believe that "women are the most powerful force rebuilding Somalia.[13]

 

Anna Abdallah Msekwa, Minister of State in the office of the Tanzanian Prime Minister and a veteran of women's organizations as well as the initiator of Creators of Peace believes that people have to "start initiating peace in the world from where you are, in your heart, home, workplace and community"[14]

 

Somali women have demanded to be included in the peace negotiations but they have been excluded. They are "not allowed to speak in meetings and have been noticeably absent from any international or internal for for peace negotiations"[15]

 

For a lasting peace to be achieved in Somalia, women must be involved. Violence, threats of violence and abuse of women should no longer be tolerated.

 

In Islam, education is a right as well as a responsibility upon every Muslim, whether male or female. Lack of access to education has serious consequences in terms of the participation of Somali women and must be remedied immediately.

 

Attention and support must be given to women's groups by Somali society and the International communities.

 

"Substantive equality is about taking into account the

naming consequences of women's social exclusion. It is

about stopping and correcting the exclusion mechanisms."[16]

Therefore, in order for Somali women to achieve equality, women must be provided with the support and training necessary for social and economic empowerment; for example, by funding women's organizations and providing the necessary structure to facilitate women's economic success and political activism.

 

Through innovative ideas and practical implementation, women can provide ways of overcoming the distrust and hostilities between the various clans. Somali women need a platform on which they can come together, regardless of clan affiliations, to discuss common concerns and needs

 

In order to achieve this, "we must encourage the establishment of the mechanisms that will serve to advance women in all official capacities related to International diplomacy."[17]

 

Somali women must be provided with the opportunity to participate in forums, such as this conference where the future of the Somali people is being discussed.

 

The frustrations and anger felt by Arraweelo at having to be ruled by an inept and useless council is one that many Somali women, including myself, can relate to.

 

 

I firmly believe that if Somali women have been involved in the reconciliation efforts from the beginning, the hostilities would not have reached the levels they had nor would it have lasted as long as it has.

 

I believe that now is the time to remedy the situation. The efforts being made on behalf of Somalia should be one that focuses on our similarities rather than on our differences. Somalis everywhere should be reminded of our need and support for each other.

 

In the Qur'an, in the translation made by Yusuf Ali, there is a commentary in the Chapter of Women (Sura al Nisa) that says "What can be a holier cement to society than the....women's right secured; ...and all life lived in faith, charity and kindness sincere to all our fellow creatures."[18]. The essence of this is that of women are treated well, the whole society benefits. [19]

 

History seems "to indicate that Arraweelo did actually live and rule most, if not all of Somali territory"[20]. The story of Arraweelo is one that has been told for generations and is still told to children, both girls and boys today. Although it is primarily used as an example of why women's rule should be vigorously opposed, it provided me with a concrete role model of a Somali woman.

 

It illustrates and highlights the positive characteristics of having women in leadership positions. Although Arraweelo is portrayed as a violent woman who enjoyed castrating men (I believe that the castration was political rather than physical), the reality is that she took over the control of Somalia at a time when it desperately needed order, peace and prosperity.

 

My paper is dedicated to all the Somali women who continue to struggle against injustice and violence and have had the courage and strength to world towards building Somalia that is equitable and peaceful for all

 

Bibliography

[1]"Christine Choi, "Finely Etched Chattel:the intervention of a Somali Woman", The Invention of Somalia, ed. Ali Jimale Ahmed, Red Sea Press, Lawrenceville, NJ, 1995, pp. 157 189

 

[2]Rhoda Ibrahim, "The changing lives of Somali women", "Changing perceptions: writings on Gender and Development", ed. Tina Wallace with Candida March, Oxfam publications, Oxford, 1991, pp 132 136.

 

[3]Rhoda Ibrahim, 1991, op.cit.

 

[4]Rhoda Ibrahim, 1991, op.cit

 

[5]Centre d'Etudes Arabes pour le Developement (CEAD), "Somalia: Women's Human Rights", "Women in the Horn of Africa: Background papers", Alternatives, Montreal, "Quebec, 1995, pp. 144 168.

 

[6]Dahabo Farah, "Role of Women in Somali Society", Montreal, Canada, 1994.

 

[7]Centre d'Etudes Arabes pour le Development (CEAD), 1995, op.cit.

 

[8]Centre d'Etudes Arabes pour le Developpement (CEAD), 1995, op.cit.

 

[9]Diana Wong, "War and Women", "Canadian Women Studies: Women's rights are Human Rights", 15, 2&3, Spring/Summer 1995, pp. 25 29.

 

[10]Centre d'Etudes Arabs pour le Development (CEAD), 1995, op.cit.

 

[11]Centre d'Etudes Arabes pour le Developpement (CEAD), 1995, op.cit.

 

[12]Lucie Lamarche, "An historical review of Social and Economic Rights: A case for real rights", "Canadian Women Studies: Women's Rights are Human rights", 15, 2&3, Spring/Summer 1995, pp. 12 18.

 

[13]Centre d'Etudes Arabes pour le Developpement (CEAD), 1995, op.cit.

 

[14]Anna Abdallah Msekwa, "Creators of Peace Inaugural Conference", Caux, Switzerland, 1991.

 

[15]Hibaaq Osman, "Somali women rally for peace", "Match News", July 1995, p.2.

 

[16]Lucie Lamarche, 1995, op.cit.

 

[17]Hibaaq Osman, 1995, op.cit.

 

[18]The Holy Qur'an, Sura al Nisa, translation by Yusuf Ali

 

[19]Jamal Badawi, "Gender Equity in Islam: Basic Principles", American Trust Publications, Plainfield, Indiana, 1995.

 

[20]Christine Choi, 1995, op.cit.

 

© 1993 Ladan Affi

All Rights Reserved.

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Liqaye   

Starlin Abdi Arush

 

Peace activist and aid worker who fought Somalian tribalism to bring a measure of hope to her country

 

James Astill

Monday November 4, 2002

The Guardian

 

Whether negotiating with warlords, setting up hospitals or chairing her Somalian homeland's Olympic committee, Starlin Abdi Arush, who has been murdered in Nairobi aged 45, often seemed a lone voice of good humour and good sense. Some diplomats spoke of her as the first president of a new, democratic Somalia, but she eschewed such ideas of power.

She died on her way to observe the latest peace talks between Somalia's warlords . It seems that Starlin was the victim of a robbery; an ironic end for a woman who lived through the nihilistic battle of Mogadishu in 1991, and for whom confrontations with gunmen were a daily ordeal.

 

Starlin maintained that tribalism had no place, in the workings of a nation state and saw plans to save Somalia founder around the rejection of this principle. In 1993, Starlin tried to negotiate an end to the stand-off between the warlord Mohamed Farah Aideed and the American peacekeepers who saw him as the cause of all evil. The Americans launched a disastrous attack on Aideed, and thus became just another faction in a tribal war.

 

In 1999, Starlin turned down a high-level job in a new, United Nations-sponsored government. She predicted that the government - elected on tribal quotas - would fail. She told clan elders who demanded their share of jobs in her projects: "I understand your cousin needs a job. But when you have a heart attack, do you want him to treat you?"

 

Starlin advocated the creation of local governments, to take over aid projects such as those she ran for Cosv, an Italian charity. The projects' beneficiaries could be expected to support these administrations; and in this way the state could be rebuilt.

 

Starlin's childhood in Merca, a small Indian Ocean port 60 miles south of Mogadishu, prepared her for a role in Somalia's male-dominated society. Her mother - the estranged first wife of one of Somalia's first vets, and a patron of a Sufi order - expected as much of her four daughters as her three sons. She taught Starlin a fierce love of Somali's unique Islamic culture; and an equally fierce intolerance of its misinterpretation by male chauvinists. As an unmarried woman, Starlin wore neither headscarf nor veil.

 

After graduating from a Catholic convent high school, Starlin lived in Italy for 13 years. She dabbled with medical school, then forged a successful career in Turin's municipal government. Italy's nepotistic institutions were familiar; but its democratic freedoms impressed her.

 

In 1991 Somalia erupted into war, and when Starlin's younger brother and brother-in-law were killed as fighting reached Mogadishu, she returned to support her sister, Halima. Weeks later, the battle of Mogadishu began. Their home was mortared daily and ransacked twice.

 

Throughout the fighting, Starlin and Halima organised food deliveries. This led to her involvement with the UN's emergency relief effort when famine came. With Starlin an increasingly troublesome critic, Mohamed Aideed cited these international ties as a reason to have the Arush sisters hauled before a tribal court. He accused them of scheming with foreign agents. Standing proudly, Starlin with her head bare, the two women asked: "If we wanted to kill Aideed, why would we need foreign help? Why would we not take a knife and do it ourselves?" The elders were won over instantly.

 

Shortly after, Starlin returned to Merca to negotiate the release of some Italian aid workers taken hostage by a fundamentalist militia. Here she endured a slight which was to lead her to transform the town's dire fortunes. Having assured the militia that she would not help the hostages to escape, one militiaman pointed his gun at her and asked: "But why should we believe you?"

 

Starlin was stunned. Only an outsider - and a thug at that - could have dared insult her in the town where her family had lived for generations. Instantly, she vowed to try putting Merca to right.

 

It was no easy task. Its hospital had 300 employees, many of them idle militiamen, and few medical supplies. She dealt calmly with confrontation. When a thug pressed his gun to her throat, she responded: "I am Starlin Abdi Arush of the Habir Eji clan. Put down your gun or you will be dead by tomorrow." Starlin accepted such incidents as inevitable. Far more damaging was when her European donors listened to rumours, put about by rivals, that she was a warlady carving out a fiefdom.

 

Strolling around Merca with Starlin was humbling, if time-consuming - everybody flocked to pay their respects. And Starlin, gravely nodding, gently teasing or cheerfully chatting, always repaid the compliment. Then came her aid projects: the hospital, clinics for mothers and babies, schools for 3,000 children, the demobilisation camp for militiamen. For foreign correspondents, these were practically the only contemporary good-news stories in Somalia.

 

Starlin had hoped to hand over her aid projects and help set up a local administration in Merca. There seems little doubt that the people would have supported her. More than 1000 of them lined the streets to receive her body home.

 

She is survived by her family and her fiancé, Roland Marchal, a French academic, who said: "She never much considered her own future. She only thought of her country."

 

· Starlin Abdi Arush, peace activist and aid worker, born March 3 1957; died October 24 2002

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Liqaye   

Hooyo la’aanta

 

By M.M Afrah.Our women are now trying hard to break the glass ceiling in politics. They are once again in the center of attention, a jumpstart to play a bigger role in a rebirth Somalia in the field of state affairs and leadership.

 

After being sidelined by their male counterparts for a very long time, despite the fact they had played a vital role in the struggle for independence and had suffered enormously in the civil/clan wars, they’re now in a strong position to share decision-making power in politics and parliamentary affairs life.

 

It is time for affirmative action and means to ensure that more women are elected, designated or appointed at all levels of political and parliamentary life and involve more equitably in the decision-making process.

 

The real question, therefore, is whether each of us is prepared to accept to rebuild a state in which no man is ashamed of our mothers, sisters and wives to be part of a resuscitated Somalia. Are we prepared to build a society in which all men can treat our woman-folk complete equality and in a spirit of free co-operation?

 

The recent outburst by women delegates at the circus of the decade they call peace and reconciliation conference in Kenya, in which they blamed men for causing all the conflicts, mayhem and misery in Somalia, should not be taken lightly. Apparently they can take it no more.

 

Why do women feel they shouldn’t “stand up to” or assert their independent thoughts, feelings and emotions to rich, famous or powerful warlord? Now they rightly feel to expose men who routinely use and abuse women in many parts of the world, including Somalia. It is a strong wake up call by those women at Mbagathi to other women to stand up to men, to refuse to do things they don’t feel comfortable doing, to keep their dignity and integrity—and doesn’t mince words about what is likely to happen if they don’t. Those women participants at the talks have taken the first brave step to publicly accuse men of oppression, sexual harassment, the shocking Pharaonic genital mutilation, forcing young girls to marry rich old men, murder and conspiracy of silence.

 

Many of these young girls endured verbal abuse, rage, and even being thrown of their homes by their fathers simply because they refused to put up with the outdated Arranged Marriage, and eventually ended up in the streets with militia free lancers in their daily looting and killing spree. They lose their health from years of chewing the drug khat, chain smoking, insomnia, malnutrition, war-weariness and without a roof over their heads.

 

I was outraged when I read “Hostage to the Gun” by a Somali woman who narrowly escaped death by seconds during the clan warfare in Mogadishu. The book recounts a number of horrifying stories of men debasing women, hurting them physically, emotionally and destroying their already fragile sense of self--all under the shadow of the gun.

 

But the revelation of this book represents only the tip of the iceberg of violence against women and children not only in Somalia, but in war-torn African countries, such as Sierra Leone, Liberia and the Congo.

 

Of course I am aware some of my male readers maybe upset by this expose, others may be ashamed of themselves mistreating our women that, up until now, they have been hell-bent on hiding.

 

Had we protected our women, perhaps some of the things that happened to them wouldn’t have happened, instead of seeing them only as bodies, objects for their pleasure—not as thinking, feeling human beings with hearts, minds and souls.

 

It is no wonder women became Presidents, Prime Ministers and Diplomats in a number of countries and have done and are doing noble tasks in state affairs, far more superior than their male counterparts who held similar offices.

 

In the meantime thank you for reading this article with an open mind and an open heart.

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