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COMMENTARY 10 Reasons Why Women Should Oppose the "War on Terrorism" BY
THE WOMEN OF COLOR RESOURCE CENTER The "war on terrorism" focused the world’s attention on Afghan women. Their utter lack of basic human rights made it onto the radar screens of many who had never before given a thought to the condition of the women of Afghanistan. The brutality of the Taliban’s rule was captured for all to see in video footage of the public execution of a woman kneeling in a stadium. Horrifying images of women hanged or stoned for prostitution or adultery circulated on the Internet. For many in the U.S., the pale blue burkha became symbolic of the depths of gender oppression under fundamentalist rule. But these images and stories, and the genuine concern they generated, were parlayed by Washington into a propaganda campaign designed to build support for the bombing of Afghanistan. The U.S. military was cast as the liberator of Afghan womanhood. Their "salvation" became the softer side of the war. As a consequence, too many U.S. feminists have either been reluctant to speak out against the death and destruction rained down upon ordinary Afghans or, yielding to missionary and imperial impulses, have supported the war. Gender was
and is an issue in the "war on terrorism" that should be directly
addressed by anti-war activists. The humanity of the Palestinian people
is called into question each time we are asked to believe that Palestinian
mothers do not grieve the deaths of their martyred children. Muslim and
Arab women in the U.S. face gender-specific forms of harassment. And African
American women, Rep. Barbara Lee and Rep. Cynthia McKinney, have been
the most consistent anti-war voices raised in Congress.
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