Bangkok Post

‘Tiger widows’ shunned in Bangladesh

Women who lose their husbands to man-eating tigers struggle to make ends meet, branded as ‘witches’ and blamed for their partners’ misfortune, writes Sam Jahan

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Abandoned by her sons, shunned by her neighbours and branded a witch. Mosammat Rashida’s crime? Her husband was killed by a Bengal tiger.

Women like her are ostracised in many rural villages in Bangladesh, where they are viewed as the cause of their partner’s misfortune.

“My sons have told me that I am an unlucky witch,” she told AFP in her flimsy plank home, in the honey-hunters’ village of Gabura at the edge of the Sundarbans — a 10,000-square-kilometre mangrove forest that straddles Bangladesh and India.

Her husband was killed while out collecting honey in the jungles there.

MAN-EATERS

“Honey-hunters prefer to collect honey mostly in the southweste­rn Sundarbans, where most of the maneaters [tigers] live,” leading Bengal tiger expert at Jahangirna­gar University, Monirul Khan, said.

Tigers are an endangered species but climate change and human developmen­t is reducing their wild habitat, often forcing them towards villages in search of food.

Wildlife charities estimate there are some 100 tigers in the Bangladesh side of the Sundarbans.

At least 519 men were killed by tiger attacks in 50 villages in one district — home to half a million people — between 2001 and 2011, according to Ledars Bangladesh, a charity helping widows reintegrat­e back in the villages.

Their deaths are a double blow for the women left behind.

Already grieving the loss of their partner, overnight they become “tiger widows” — pariahs in their homes and villages at a time when they most need support.

They are often left with little means to support themselves or their families.

‘BRING BAD LUCK’

Ms Rashida is heartbroke­n but unsurprise­d that her adult sons, aged 24 and 27, abandoned her and their two young siblings.

“They are part of this society after all,” the 45-year-old said, as she wiped tears from her eyes.

Her tiny shack has no roof— it was blown off by a deadly cyclone — but there have been no offers of help from neighbours or officials, who she claims helped others in the village but shunned her. Instead she uses an old tarpaulin to keep the elements out.

Next door, Mohammad Hossain was fixing his broken tin roof, and confessed he had been instructed by his wife not to talk to Ms Rashida.

“It would mar my family’s wellbeing and could bring bad luck,” the 31-year-old honey-hunter said.

Officials denied omitting Ms Rashida from the help they provided after the cyclone.

But the head of Ledars Bangladesh, Mohon Kumar Mondal, said the mistreatme­nt of “tiger widows” was widespread in highly conservati­ve communitie­s, which often held “centuries-old” prejudices.

“They [charities] are working to restore the widows’ dignities. The main challenge is to change people’s beliefs,” he explained.

“The change is very slow. Still, I’d say there has been progress,” he added, noting that younger, more educated villagers were less fearful of the widows.

‘STAYING ALIVE’

Rijia Khatun, who said she has learnt to cope with being ostracised by her fellow villagers after her honeyhunte­r husband’s death 15 years ago, has been secretly supported by her nephew and his family.

“My sons were young. But nobody helped me. I felt bad at first as they kept blaming me for my husband’s death. I didn’t know what was my fault,” she recalled, adding: “But now I’ve learnt to live with this adversity.”

Her nephew Yaad Ali, who has witnessed several attacks including his uncle’s, explained that while he wanted to help, he could not do so publicly.

“We had to do it [help Ms Khatun] with confidenti­ality or else the village society would have ostracised us as well,” he confessed.

Honey hunting has traditiona­lly been seen as a more accessible vocation for villagers who can’t afford the equipment or boats needed to undertake the region’s other main profession — fishing.

But fears of being killed by the predators — and the consequenc­es for the wives they leave behind — has meant more and more men are opting for a different trade.

Harun ur Rashid, whose father was killed by a tiger, said he was now a fisherman, despite coming from generation­s of honey-hunters.

The 21-year-old said: “My mother doesn’t want me to end up like my father. And I want to stay alive and take care of her because she has suffered a lot and endured enough abuses after my father’s death.”

‘‘ My sons have told me that I am an unlucky witch. They are part of this society after all. MOSAMMAT RASHIDA

WIDOW OF A HONEY-HUNTER KILLED BY A BENGAL TIGER

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