By Dina Wahba
This
is written with love, respect and in solidarity.
I
present in this article a brief critique of the contemporary Egyptian feminist
movement. I hope that this would be considered constructive criticism and
channeled in a way that would strengthen the movement.
Orientalist
tropes
Nicola
pratt wrote an important article published in Journal of Middle East Women’s
Studies newsletter. In this article she accused the international community of
using an Orientalist narrative in dealing with women’s rights in the Middle
East. I couldn’t agree more with her but I would like to add to this argument
that we as Egyptian feminists export an Orientalist discourse. We reinforce
ideas that victimizes all women and denies them their agency as well demonize
all men.
Sexual
harassment discourse
We
seem to be trapped into the sexual harassment narrative. As if we have no other
issue pertaining to women’s rights. We don’t link sexual harassment with the
global narrative pertaining to violence against women in general nor do we link
sexual harassment to wider struggles. We seem to be very outspoken about sexual
harassment while silent on all other issues that could be more relevant to
greater groups of women and men in our society. We keep narrowing down the
discourse till it became only about sexual harassment against protestors.
SOURCE: AP/ Khalil Hamra |
No
critique
Everyone
has comments on how everyone is doing their job yet everyone is silent about
it. Not quite silent they speak behind each other’s backs. They vent out in
small groups in cafes. All that is bottled up comes out in the form of gossip
rather than constructive criticism that could revive the movement and save it
from itself. The lack of criticism is a criticism in itself!
No
reading..No writing
There
seem to be a lack of commitment to self education. There are no groups working
on gaining knowledge or producing it except for some scholars who write some
papers. However, activists seem to have lost interest in reading other feminist
work or writing their own theories even if in Facebook notes. It doesn’t have
to be scholarly but you have to have something to say. A different world view
to present. A stand point from which you challenge reality and it should be
documented somewhere so that others could read it and build on it.
We
teach we don’t learn
Arrogance
is a sin and for a good reason. We keep
going around the world lecturing, speaking in conferences, going around telling
others how to do things. Do we listen as much? Do we invite others to speak to
us about their experiences? Are we even curious? We ask others to stand in
solidarity, do we extend it?
Dealing
with authority
We
don’t have a clear strategy to deal with authority. Do we talk to them? Do we
boycott? Do we strike deals with political parties or not? Many central
questions that seem to be answered haphazardly. Recently, I was asked to speak
at a hearing in the Shura Council. Asking around, I found out that my fellow
feminists refused to go. Nevertheless, they agreed to appear with members of the
Shura Council on Television. This perplexed me. Are we or aren’t we speaking to
those in power? Are we using the media to advance our message or are we being
used by the media for sensational news?
“I
will support you no matter what” syndrome
We
don’t like the way some of us do things but we go anyway. We participate in
conferences, workshops, marches and demonstrations that we don’t approve of. I
found myself going and criticizing, going and mocking, going and disapproving
but always there. Because we have to stand by each other no matter, do we
really have to?
The
events are overwhelming. We are running from this meeting to another to this
protest and that march. There is often little or no time for reflection. But
maybe for the sake of the movement it’s time to ask ourselves some serious
questions. It’s time to reflect. I hope that this article spurs a conversation
in the Egyptian feminist movement.
With
all the love, respect and in solidarity.
Dina Wahba is an Egyptian women’s rights activist who participated actively in the Egyptian revolution and has been involved
in several initiatives that aim at promoting women’s rights and women
representation in the political life post revolution. The Women without Borders/SAVE team met her at Trust Women Conference in London, 2012.
You should see the conversation that came out because of this article here:
ReplyDeletehttps://www.facebook.com/Shimaa.writes/posts/522008397842884