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14/10/04
Women's Violence
Olivia Ward
The Star
In Russia, Chechen female suicide bombers known as the Black Widows have
struck devastating blows in past weeks, reportedly carrying out attacks on
airliners and near a Moscow subway station, and joining a hostage-taking at a
school in the town of Beslan.
In Israel, Palestinian women have blown themselves up in assaults that have
killed more than 35 Israelis and wounded hundreds of others.
In Iraq, genetic engineer Huda Salih Mehdi Ammash is suspected of taking a
high-profile role in rebuilding Baghdad's biological warfare capacity. She is
imprisoned along with microbiologist Rihab Taha, said to be a former director of
a bacterial and biological warfare program aimed at mass killing.
The participation of women and, sometimes, teenage girls in an increasing
number of deadly acts has horrified the international public, and a wave of
revulsion has rolled through the media at female violence in its most ruthless
form.
Yet, the extent and causes of women's violence are uncertain and remain
unpredictable in a world in which aggression has been the province of men, and
violent women considered mentally unbalanced or possessed by unimaginable evil.
Those who are now studying female violence agree that it has long been a
neglected issue. Until the 1960s, it was almost taboo, surfacing mostly as the
subject of sensational news reports.
More recently, some feminists played down female violence, calling it a
reaction to the abuse of women by men throughout the world. Others, like Valerie
Solanas of SCUM (Society for Cutting Up Men) ? who shot and wounded Andy Warhol
? gloried in violent revenge and aggressive female self-expression, earning
themselves the label of the lunatic fringe.
But the appearance of women as terrorists has focused attention on the
seriousness of female violence, and shocked onlookers are asking why and how
such appalling crimes are being committed by those once known as the gentle sex.
The shock is not only registering in the West. In Muslim countries, where
women are often expected to assume more passive roles than men, taking up arms
is unusual. In Chechnya, women were traditional peacemakers, and an ancient
custom decrees that a man seeking blood revenge will halt an attack on his enemy
if a woman throws her headscarf on the ground.
But the images of Chechen and Palestinian women who have given up their lives
to attack innocent people indicate that the facts are contradictory.
"It's particularly startling because, in general, women's suicide rates are
much lower than men's," says Patricia Pearson, author of an award-winning study
of female aggression, When She Was Bad: Violent Women and the Myth of Innocence.
"It's not the kind of behaviour we expect from women."
Widely circulated Internet photos of Reem Saleh Riyashi, the first female
suicide bomber trained by the militant Hamas organization, highlight the stark
contrast of roles: A sweet-faced woman holds a smiling toddler in one arm and a
machine gun in the other. One morning in January, Riyashi left her two infants
with her husband, strapped on an explosive belt and blew herself up at a border
crossing on the Gaza Strip, killing four Israelis.
Earlier, six other Palestinian women from widely different backgrounds also
killed themselves in suicide attacks, starting in January, 2002. They include
Hanadi Jaradat, a 29-year-old lawyer with telegenic looks and an upcoming
marriage, Wafa Idris, an impoverished Palestinian refugee who was deserted by
her husband, and Dareen Abu Eishi, an extremely religious woman who had lost two
relatives in clashes with Israeli troops.
The women themselves have left few clues to their states of mind, and reports
of the rare ones who have surrendered are dubious because of their need to gain
the favour of the authorities who detain them.
In Russia, 23-year-old Chechen Zarema Muzhakhoeva ? who says she deliberately
bungled a suicide bombing at a café in central Moscow in July, 2003 ? told
Russia's daily Izvestia a surprising story of financial ruin and domestic crime.
When her husband was killed by business associates, leaving her unable to
support an infant daughter, Muzhakhoeva said, she robbed her grandparents of
about $765, then sought money to repay them and reclaim the child from her
in-laws' care.
Hearing that a suicide bomber's family would receive $1,000, she promptly
volunteered. But the leader of the training camp tried to discourage her because
he disapproved of killing oneself for money rather than religious principles.
But she rejected his offer of marriage to a fighter who would support her,
because "I wanted to die ? not sit in the woods like a rat."
While money was allegedly the motivating factor in Muzhakhoeva's decision to
turn to violence, Israeli analysts say that the involvement of Palestinian women
in deadly suicide attacks fall into two main categories.
"Most of them were pushed to the fringes of Palestinian society for violating
a Muslim conservative rule of conduct obligatory for Palestinian women," says a
recent report from the Intelligence and Terrorism Information Center at the
Israeli-based Center for Special Studies.
"For some women, the motive was also vengeance for the deaths of relatives
and loved ones killed in the course of the ongoing Palestinian violent
confrontation with Israel."
Dr. Meir Litvak of Tel Aviv University says that the growing phenomenon of
women suicide bombers is also due to the devaluation of women that makes them
targets for opportunistic male militant leaders.
"They are exploiting the personal frustrations and grievances of these women
for their own political goals, while they continue to limit the role of women in
other aspects of life," Litvak told the daily Guardian.
In Chechnya, many of the women who joined the Black Widows suicide squad have
lost relatives during the 10-year war with Russia that has left few Chechens
untouched by tragedy.
According to human rights reports, rape is also widespread, and some analysts
suggest that suicide missions might be a way of dealing with the deep shame that
results from sexual assault, as well as the desire for revenge.
"You have had a bad day," a female hostage-taker told one of her Russian
captives during a dramatic siege of a Moscow theatre. "I have had a bad 10
years."
The Chechen terrorist attacks, as well as those in Israel, appear to be
entirely directed by men. But the idea that women are passive pawns of ruthless
warlords may be a myth, says British terrorism analyst Rhiannon Talbot, a law
lecturer at the University of Newcastle.
"In many cases, women are indignant when they're seen as pawns of men," she
says.
"They may be even more committed than their male colleagues, because they
have more social hurdles to overcome. But in the West, they are often tied to
the conventional stereotype of reacting to male violence."
Although many people today are shocked by such deliberate female violence,
Jeannine Davis-Kimball, a California-based archaeologist and ethnographer, says
there is little new about it.
"Women's desire to protect their families and their societies is as strong or
stronger than men's," she says.
"From that point of view, we shouldn't be surprised by it."
In an extensive archaeological investigation in Russia and Central Asia,
Davis-Kimball found evidence of warrior women who fought alongside men and
played an aggressive part in the nomadic Central Asian tribes of the Sarmatians
and Sauromatians in 600 B.C. to 400 B.C.
Her book, Warrior Women, documents the fact that a passive, domestic role was
not always the norm for females.
"I think that the same thing is true of North America and the early plains
settlers. Those women were left alone much of the time and they had to be able
to fire a gun," she says.
Historically, women as warriors were first noted by the Greek historian
Herodotus, who described bloodthirsty females who cut off one breast to improve
their aim as archers, killed their male children and mated with men of other
tribes when necessary.
Britain's Queen Boudicca, who ruled the Celtic Iceni tribe after the death of
her husband around AD 50, was a fearsome leader whose towering height, wild red
hair and knife-armed chariot horrified the occupying Roman troops.
Five hundred years later, the Arabian Queen Zenobia, who ruled the kingdom of
Palmyra, led her troops to resounding victories against the Romans.
Women have also turned to terrorism and political violence.
In the French Revolution, they played a bloody role, and in the late 19th
century, they were leaders of the violent People's Will organization in Russia.
Leila Khaled, a member of the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine,
gained world prominence in 1970 when she helped to hijack an airplane, later
plotting another hijacking after being jailed in Britain.
Germany's Baader-Meinhof gang was led by Ulrike Meinhof. And hundreds of
women joined militant groups such as Peru's Shining Path, the Basque
organization ETA and the Tamil Tigers ? in which a female recruit trained to
kill Indian prime minister Rajiv Gandhi, becoming the first woman suicide
bomber.
Apart from terrorism, women have also committed violent domestic crimes in
North America and Europe in recent years.
"Women commit the majority of child homicides in the U.S., more than 80 per
cent of neonaticides; an equal or greater share of severe physical child abuse;
an equal rate of spousal assault; about a quarter of child sexual molestations;
and a large portion of elder abuse," says Pearson in her book.
Since the book was written in 1997, Pearson says, the trend to violence has
continued.
"The issue is not that there are more violent women now, but that women are
feeling more comfortable with being violent.
"The impulse to aggression isn't exclusively male, but women have been
indirect in the way they are aggressive. Now, when the culture is more equal,
it's more acceptable for women, too, to be openly violent," she says.
The recent trial of Kelly Ellard, accused of murdering 14-year-old Victoria
girl Reena Virk, threw a spotlight on female gang violence, which appears to be
increasing in Canada.
"Boys are raised to expect violence, and they learn what's done and not
done," Pearson says. "Girls haven't learned any rules of engagement. They
completely underestimate their own power. Group violence gives them permission,
and they often go way overboard."
Although experts caution against predicting an "epidemic" of female violence,
many are concerned that the trend is escalating, including in countries where
the general level of violence is dropping. Violent women are an increasing part
of popular culture in film and music.
As a result, a new debate has begun on the "true" roles of men and women in
an age that deplores and glorifies violence.
"Until recently, most of the descriptions of (militant) women have been
written by men," Davis-Kimball says.
"If female violence had been portrayed more accurately earlier, it wouldn't
be so shocking today."
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