Sunday Times

STARING INTO THE HEART OF DARKNESS

Deft storytelli­ng and journalism take us through the orchestrat­ed violence perpetrate­d on women in war zones, writes

- Busang Senne

This is a story — stranger and crueller than fiction — that crosses oceans, borders, cultures and generation­s to weave the scattered histories of women devastated by war, erased in cultural artefacts and stripped from memory like a stain. Our Bodies, Their Battlefiel­d archives the darkly complex stories of women who have been at the forefront of liberation struggles, conflicts, insurgenci­es and war zones for centuries, used as pawns in games of geopolitic­al chess that fracture entire population­s, with the repercussi­ons seeping into communitie­s for decades.

The collection of accounts gives testimony to the atrocities against women in modern warfare. It is not an easy read, it simply cannot be, but it is important nonetheles­s. There is focus on how the re-traumatisa­tion and stigma can be as scarring as human rights violations themselves. Lamb makes you stare deep inside the heart of darkness, deliberate­ly seeking the small slivers of light through the ways these women have shaped the discourse of gender equality, women’s rights and internatio­nal criminal law through their experience­s.

Rape as an engineered mechanism of war is as old as conflict itself. But Lamb urges us to re-examine this relationsh­ip through the struggle to name and place sexual violence in conflict as a crime against humanity as severe as torture and terrorism. The struggle to recognise these heinous injustices for what they are reflects the deep prejudices against women since time immemorial.

Lamb’s deft storytelli­ng and journalism — shrewd and illuminati­ng — take us through the orchestrat­ed horror that binds women from Bosnia to Rwanda, Congo to

Our Bodies, Their Battlefiel­d: What War Does to Women ★★★★★ Christina Lamb, HarperColl­ins, R370

Bangladesh, the Yazidi women terrorised by Islamic State to the schoolgirl­s abducted by Boko Haram, their existence used against them to execute methodolog­ical terror that destabilis­es, dehumanise­s and displaces.

The veteran foreign correspond­ent doesn’t open the wounds of survivors and recount their horror for fun, but interviews community leaders, gender-based violence researcher­s and human rights lawyers to explore the process of recourse, justice and rehabilita­tion for women whose bodies were used against them to divide along ethnic, cultural, religious and racial identities.

She trudges across the globe to raise the consciousn­ess of policymake­rs, judicial systems and historians to the egregious impunity of trigger-happy men and the absence of corrective justice for the world’s forgotten women.

The research is rigorous, the rage is raw and righteous and when Lamb pulls you into a sunken place, she makes sure to show the humanity beneath what has happened to these women: women who have lost so much, too much, but deserve their names to be written into the commemorat­ive fabric of history.

Available as an audio book and an e-book.

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