Once upon a time I was
reading the Iraqi Freedom House report for my job. I was assigned to collect
information about the laws and practices concerning women in that country and
prepare that information for the WomanStats.org database. That's when I
stumbled upon some startling Iraqi laws...enjoy.
...and be forewarned that
the following is not so much butterflies and bunnies.
The Honor of a Man Lies between the Legs of a
Woman
Why do parents in some societies marry off their prepubescent
daughters? Why are the practices of Female Genital Mutilation and the wearing
of chastity belts common among some cultures? Why are girls of certain peoples
punished for being raped? The answers to these questions are summed up in this
Ecuadorian saying: “The honor of a man lies between the legs of a woman.”[1] Each of the above practices aims at ensuring the chastity
of women. In “honor/shame” societies (many of which are in the Middle East and
North Africa), the masculine honor of a man is directly correlated with the
chastity of his female relatives. If he fails to control or protect his wife’s
sexual virtue, and she is consequently unfaithful or raped, he cannot guarantee
that her offspring is his own and he is completely stripped of manly honor.
The 2010 Iraq Freedom House report provides tragically pertinent
example of such honor/shame ideology. If we judge the seriousness of a crime
based on how severe the punishment is, then Iraqi society deems rape (worthy of
5-15 years in prison) a much worse crime than murder (for which the perpetrator
will only serve 6 months-3 years).[2] At first glance, a Western thinker may find this utterly
absurd. The system begins to make sense, however, when put into the context of
an honor/shame society.
The first step of contextualizing these laws is to realize that
what Westerners would consider murder, Iraqis see as rather acceptable “honor
killings.” (“Honor killing” is distinguished by the victim being a female who
has brought shame upon her kin.) According to the Iraqi penal code, “a man who
kills his wife or close female relative and her partner after catching them in
an act of adultery” can only receive 6 months to 3 years in prison if he is in
fact tried and found guilty.[3] In that situation, neither the unfaithful woman, nor her lover is
legally allowed to use self-defense and acts of revenge against the killer are
prohibited. Condoning honor killings even more, the same short prison sentence
(6 months-3 years) also applies to the killing of any person who makes reference to
the dead woman’s sin, thus causing the husband to lose face.[4] These laws communicate that destroying an unfaithful woman
and all reminders of her disloyalty is an acceptable way for her male relatives
to reclaim their honor.
Iraqi laws on rape clarify even more cultural attitudes about how
men’s honor coincides with their women’s chastity. If tried and found guilty,
rapists are sentenced to 5-15 years in prison (a much longer time than the
punishment for honor killing). However, if the guilty man marries his victim,
his crime is completely forgotten and honor is restored to the victim’s male
relatives. When the woman or girl was raped, her father, brothers, and uncles
were horribly shamed because they failed to protect her chastity. The provision
that marriage to her rapist will clear all shame indicates that the Iraqi
culture values men’s honor above women’s happiness and safety.
Not only do honor/shame societies value men’s honor above women’s
happiness and safety, Iraqi law shows that male honor is more important than
female life. This ideology is foundational for much of the harm women face in
the world. It is left for us not to idly point fingers at Iraq but to examine
our own countries’ ideologies for the harm or security they provide their
female inhabitants.
One of the most harmful
ideologies in my own culture teaches that a female’s worth is based on her sex
appeal. This is why old women are not revered for their wisdom. Young girls are
dressed like teenagers instead of the children that they are. Advertising
agencies uses sexualized images of young adult women to promote any product
from beer to furniture to car repair. A female politician cannot run for office
without being publically critiqued as if they were a fashion model. Media
images are digitally altered to create an impossible standard for how every
female should look.
My society may not fit the honor/shame mold, but its ideology
about women causes outrageous harm nonetheless: increasing mental illness,
sex-based crime, and fallacious beliefs, held by both males and females, about
woman’s intellectual and professional potential.
[1] Valerie M.
Hudson, Bonnie
Ballif-Spanvill, Mary Caprioli, Chad F.
Emmett, Sex and World Peace (NY: Columbia Press
University, 2012), 8.
[2] Huda Ahmed,
“Iraq,” In Women’s Rights in the Middle East and North Africa: Progress
Amid Resistance, edited by Sanja Kelly and Julia Breslin (NY:Freedom
House; Lanham, MD: Rowman & Littlefield, 2010), 15 & 7.
Have you read Half the Sky? http://www.halftheskymovement.org/
ReplyDeleteI had to read it for a class I TAed last year. You might be interested in it.
I haven't. What class was it for?
DeleteIt was for a public leadership and community development class at University of Maryland. The book is full of true stories about the oppression of women all over the world (many of the examples come from honor/shame societies) and also tells about organizations that try to help. Its a very moving book.
DeleteJustin, how does the laws concerning women being unfaithful compare to men being unfaithful? If the husband is caught cheating may he also receive the punishment of honor killing? I am interested in knowing the differences between the sexes.
ReplyDeleteJustin actually didn't write this one. :) I (Karin) did. From all that I've read, honor/shame societies are founded on an intense double standard. Which is to say that men are not punished for being unfaithful. This intense obsession with chastity only pertains to women.
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