Hyderabad: In war, truth is the first casualty and women the second. This is what women of war-torn Syria, Iraq, Yemen and Afghanistan symbolise. Their plight is the untold story buried under the debris of major political narratives. Yet some women make their way to safety and liberty as they realise their vulnerability to religio-political discourses. As it is also evident in the once Taliban held areas of Afghanistan.
Barring a few provinces, the entire Afghanistan, particularly provinces bordering with Pakistan, would witness women adopting primitive lifestyle against their wishes. Same was the case with women from Middle Eastern countries. Women in these regions would like to adopt a culture entailing equal opportunities of freedom and rights men enjoyed but the popular regimes never approved of it.
Most of the women, out of ignorance, believed what they practice was a part of faith, even the rights they perceived for them were, as per the Islamic jurisprudence, unequal, arguably for their different physiology. The acceptance of the farcical belief had become faith for them and women lived under this for decades and centuries.
Men were allowed to choose their partner and women had to seek approval from patriarchal family system. Men would express their feelings, women had to keep them within. The definition of sin too had many dimensions and definitions. If it were committed by men, it would come with a different cost, while for women it would come as an irreparable loss.
The worst hit, in this paradigm, during the last two decades was war-torn Afghanistan. It was during the Taliban rule that women would hardly find any place to work to support their families. They wouldn’t even go to schools with co-education. Everything that would provide them a space to vent out their expression was forbidden.
Besides face, voice of a woman was to be kept away from strangers (gair-muharim). Same was the case with women in the Arab world. Women, even in case of emergencies, wouldn’t be allowed to drive their families out. Revolution out of deprivation was inevitable and change had to happen.
The idea of individualism through modern literature and the modern interpretation of cultural Islam helped untie the shackles women remained for decades in these areas. Their plight was partly because of patriarchal coercive methods and to some extent for their nonresistance approach.
The parochial and restricted flow of information was to a large extent a deterrent to change. The war, paradoxically, led to migration of populations, which in turn led to a shift from orthodox practices in newer lifestyles in other areas.