One of the few good things about Bush’s State of the Union speech was hearing him say “Madam Speaker”, watching the look on Pelosi’s face as he said it and of course, seeing the standing ovation that followed it. And recently, with her little “I’m in’ video, the other Clinton dipped her toe ever so tentatively into the Presidential waters.
Meanwhile, Australia has one woman fewer in our Cabinet (although I have to say I’ve never liked Vanstone particularly, surely there was another woman who could have been promoted to the new cabinet in her stead?).
My father recently sent me a message asking whether I had “no interest in how Moslems treat their women”. After calmly explaining that putting it this way implies that only the men are Moslems (his spelling) and that the women belong to them, I answered:
I am interested in how Sharia law treats women and in the dangerous spread of this form of extremism to other countries. It’s nothing new: women have been stoned to death for adultery in Nigeria under Sharia law and now it’s spreading to Somalia if you believe the leaked document at wikileaks.org. I haven’t seen much in the way of outrage about Sharia law in Nigeria. I’d like to. Is it perhaps because the women being stoned to death in Nigeria are black, so no one cares? Or is it that Nigeria isn’t strategic for Israel and America right now?
I prefer my information on women’s oppression to come from neutral organisations committed to human rights for all, such as Amnesty International, rather than from people who want human rights for those whose rights suit their agenda at a given time.
That said, though, I started thinking. One article in the Jerusalem Post forwarded by a friend of Dad’s is the transcript of a talk by a Persian-American about the plight of women in Iran. She mentions the high rate of teenage executions by the State. I thought: I’ve been watching SBS news pretty much nightly all year. I don’t remember seeing coverage of these death sentences for teenagers. But we get an item last night on whether Barak Obama really attended the school he said he attended (mind you, we also got a story on the Israeli President being accused of rape and sexual assault of three other women; people in glass cultures shouldn’t throw stones, perhaps).
Shouldn’t we hear international outrage every single time a child is sentenced to death, considering that it’s against international covenants? But I forget – and shouldn’t – that media values aren’t like that, and that the Israeli President is important because he has prominence while a few powerless girls and teenaged queers are pretty irrelevant in the grand scheme of things.
I know there’s a women’s movement in Iran, fighting hard to change this culture. I know that Muslim women in Australia and Canada and elsewhere are working on this too. I don’t believe there’s a place for patronising (matronising?) Western feminist interference but it’s hard not to want Pelosi and Clinton and Gillard and hell, even Rice to stand up and say something. On the other hand, they can’t be seen to only be about “women’s issues”.
I also find it challenging how all of a sudden, certain people (my Dad, Bush) are so concerned about the treatment of women in these areas, but how easy it was to ignore the Taliban for all those years until it was strategically advantageous to pay attention.
Think I might add Amnesty to my list of companies to call about jobs in the US.