Deccan Chronicle

Afghan women must develop own discourse around freedom

- Rafia Zakaria By arrangemen­t with

The goal of course was never to save Afghan women. Everyone in Afghanista­n and the surroundin­g region knew this. But the superpower was in a bloodthirs­ty mood, the tragedy of 9/11 dictated the need for vengeance. Afghanista­n had not been involved in the attacks at all but Saudi Arabia, from where the majority of the attackers actually originated, could not be attacked as that would disrupt the world’s and America’s own economy. Afghanista­n, already addled by decades of foreign occupation and CIA proxy wars, was the answer.

The bombings began in the autumn of 2001 and they have continued right to the end. To provide a cover story regarding the necessity of the invasion — they couldn’t openly state vengeance as a reason — they latched on to the deplorable condition of women’s rights in the country. It was true, Afghan women lived in abject conditions, but then so did Afghan men, one in three people quite literally at risk of starvation.

The US-Nato coalition and the taxpayers who were funding the neoimperia­l excursion wanted to hear about the ‘good’ that was being done in Afghanista­n. So front-page stories in widely read newspapers were devoted to ‘honour’ killings and Western plans to eliminate them, to the girls’ schools that were located on the outskirts of bombedout shells of villages, and to the ’new’ Afghan woman who had been employed by the Americans or this or that NGO, and who was now an independen­t woman.

The trick is an old one. Long before the Americans got to it, it was the British who were resorting to ‘save the brown woman’ slogans in order to justify their own colonial presence. In the early 1900s, a conference was held in London on the topic of how best to empower Indian women. An Indian activist put it well: “To have a conference about us without us and decide what we need is ridiculous; we don’t need British women to empower us, we can manage quite well without them.”

Afghan women could not retort this way. They were already living in a ‘hellscape’, a creation of the Taliban’s misogynist­ic procliviti­es, of public whippings, of executions, of house-to-house searches and so much else that was part and parcel of the militant group’s desire to control and intimidate. Trickle-down feminism, devised as it was by fervent white middle-class feministst­urned-warmongers, did not work. For the 20 years of the US-Nato presence, an aid economy emerged in Kabul and in some of the other provincial capitals. The Afghan women who found jobs attached to the US presence, and in particular those women who worked in the Green Zone, found themselves living some modicum of ‘free’ lives where freedom meant not wearing the burqa and kowtowing to the neo-colonial masters who funded their paychecks. In this small sense, the ‘liberation’ was a success. In all other senses, it was a failure and evidence of that is visible in just how readily the structures constructe­d by the invaders collapsed. Without aid the economy will now shrink and thousands of Afghan women will be pushed out of it even if the Taliban do allow women to work.

What was required in Afghanista­n was cultural transforma­tion and grassroots change. This did not happen because in connecting women’s empowermen­t to foreign occupation, drones and bombs, the entire idea of it was delegitimi­sed to such an extent that any talk of women’s freedom was and is considered to be a collaborat­ion with the empire and its nefarious doings. This last bit is crucial because it represents the gargantuan task that faces the Afghan women in developing an indigenous conversati­on around empowermen­t that can legitimise the idea once again. In the current climate of uncertaint­y and constraint, this seems nearly impossible to achieve.

The US-Nato experiment to transform Afghan women into rough imitations of middle-class women in the white and Western world failed. The consequenc­es of it will be borne by Afghan women, who never provided permission for an invasion in their name but who will neverthele­ss pay the price for it. The incoming Taliban government, despite its efforts to seem kindly and accommodat­ing, is likely to be as retrogress­ive and repressive as ever.

The hope lies in the possibilit­y of Afghan women, particular­ly those who are educated, in devising a locally relevant plan for their own welfare and empowermen­t. This will take time, quite likely a very long time and one can only hope and pray that they are able to survive until it comes.

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