The Battle for Human Rights in Egypt
Posted: March 9, 2011 Filed under: Human Rights, Women's Rights | Tags: Copts, Egypt, Million Woman March, Muslims 31 Comments
This is a follow-up to my post about Egypt and the million woman march. I put up some more news excerpts last night in the comments… I thought I’d bring some of them up here on the frontpage along with a few other updates.
Before I do that, here’s some footage from Tahrir. This one is a brief clip of the “shouting match” from CNN:
Vodpod videos no longer available.
I don’t know about you, but I thought the smarmy expressions on the face of the young men who were shouting at the women said a lot. They seemed to have nothing better to do than to taunt these women demanding their rights.
Seemed reminiscent of this video awhile back where a young Yemeni girl responded to a bunch of young men telling her to wear a veil and all this other nonsense — she seemed to be an old soul with great wisdom and quick wit as she told them, among other things, “go get a job, all of you, sitting here like a bunch of bums.”
Here’s a link to a video from Tahrir posted on Facebook that Woman Voter sent to me. I don’t know exactly what’s going on, but the unsettled expressions and voices of the women at the beginning of this as at least one woman appears to be grabbed and hassled have stuck with me.
Ok, now for the excerpts and updates.
A lot of things went wrong yesterday in Tahrir, and women were doomed it seems. There was an outbreak of tension between Copts and Muslims that took away some of the activism and attention.

A worker living in Manshiyet Nasser holds a paper reading: 'Christian and Muslim, we are Egyptian' in eastern Cairo on March 9, where clashes between Egyptian Christians and Muslims occurred on Tuesday night. (Amr Abdallah Dalsh/Reuters)
Part of the reason the women’s march failed was that many decided to participate in a sit-in staged by Coptic Christians in front of the radio and television building, a few hundred metres from the square. The Copts are protesting the burning of a church in Helwan province during a Christian-Muslim clash over a romance between a Christian man and a Muslim woman, and are urging army protection for Copts who fled the village but seek to return.
Here is an Al Jazeera report from today with more on what happened with the clashes between Copts and Muslims yesterday. At least 11 people have died according to this, though I am seeing the count has been upped to 13 in some other reports.
From the Al Jazeera link:
At least 11 people have been killed and around 100 others injured in religious clashes with Muslims in the Egyptian capital Cairo.
A security source told Al Jazeera that of the 11 that were killed on Tuesday, six were Coptic, five were Muslim and that at least 25 people were arrested by the country’s military police for their involvement in the clashes.
The deaths on Tuesday occurred in the working-class district of Moqattam after at least 1,000 Copts gathered to protest the burning of a church last week.
It was the second burst of sectarian fighting in as many days and the latest in a string of violent protests over a variety of topics as simmering unrest continues nearly a month after mass protests led to the ouster of President Hosni Mubarak.
[…]
The protest outside Cairo’s radio and television building also came a day after at least 2,000 Copts demanded the re-building of the torched church, and that those responsible be brought to justice.
The Shahedain [Two Martyrs] church, in the Helwan provincial city of Sol, was set ablaze on Friday after clashes between Copts and Muslims left at least two people dead.
The violence was triggered by a feud between two families, which disapproved of a romantic relationship between a Christian man and a Muslim woman in Sol.
Here’s another Al Jazeera report about more clashes erupting in Tahrir today.
Also, an informative feature over at the Christian Science Monitor (from which I got the photo above) that gives a quick click-through overview on some background about the Copts and the tension — Copt-Muslim clash in Cairo renews question: Who are the Copts?
Anyhow, getting back to the women’s march. It seems like women’s rights, as always, got overshadowed yesterday and energies got divided between causes and injustice that all deserve attention.
This sort of goes along with what I’ve been discussing in the comments… women need strength in numbers here and really strong organization because this is going to be a very long hard road… this Women’s March was announced on the fly to coincide with International Women’s Day. I’m very proud of those who turned up and fought back what happened yesterday in Tahrir… I just hope as they continue to organize that they take time before the next women’s march or event. What looked like protests materializing overnight in Egypt over the last few months were really months and months in the making after the murder of Khaled Said. Women are up against the thugs who showed up yesterday and their ilk as well as a media filter that will say women aren’t turning out for themselves, etc.
Especially when just as here in the US we have the Phyllis Schlaflys… there are women in Egypt who are working for the patriarchy too. It’s not just the men saying “go home, wash clothes.” Again as I mentioned yesterday, this has written all over it shades of the “Iron My Shirt“ chant that reared its ugly head when Hillary vied for the presidency here in the US. Come to think of it, it’s also the perfect bookend to the “When Will that Stupid Bitch Quit” drumbeat that she and her supporters faced throughout the primaries and pretty much since before she even ran!
Take the following from the New Yorker News Desk’s report on yesterday’s events:
Men were hardly the only dissenting voices. At one point, a woman in a niqab began screaming at a cluster of people. Her son had died in the protests, and the conduct of the people in Tahrir—particularly the uncovered women—was inappropriate. They were dating, she insisted, not protesting. It was a sad echo of a rumor levelled at the protesters before Mubarak’s resignation, accusing them of KFC-fuelled courtship. Other women objected to the feminist values being voiced, which, they felt, were old-fashioned. Alia Mossallam, a student and writer, said, “There has always been a female presence. If you set yourself apart, you make yourself a spectacle.” Two young women said, simply, “Egypt is in a dangerous time right now. We should wait.”
Dating not protesting? *Headdesk*
So I suppose in 2008 we weren’t campaigning for Hillary, we were just having a big lesbo orgy out in public (remember, the Matt Taibbis called Hillary rallies the “Lifetime demographic”).
Women wouldn’t have to “set themselves apart” if their economic, social, and political rights were adequately protected by law and in practice.
When our rights to political protest or expression are so ubiquitously dismissed as “dating” or “Lifetime programming,” be it in Egypt or the US, then yes, we have to set ourselves apart and demand for what is rightfully ours.
As the quote that inspired the name of my blog goes:
“There are some who question the reason for this conference. Let them listen to the voices of women in their homes, neighborhoods, and workplaces.” –Hillary Rodham Clinton, Beijing 1995
I didn’t like it when the youth movement in Egypt gathering to demand their rights was dismissed as a “facebook party” either, or when the workers in Wisconsin and other states doing the same similarly met sneers that they were Democratic party lemmings, etc. It takes a lot to get people past complacency and out to protest in the streets.
Workers, young people, seniors, and women all have rights and one of those rights includes the rights to protest, dissent, and civil disobedience. If all people were doing at any of these protests was socializing and partying, there wouldn’t be so much hostile resistance. There wouldn’t be violent thugs, there wouldn’t be police state style crackdowns, and there wouldn’t be an effort to annihilate the rights to collectively bargain itself.
People around the world are gathering to demand their rights and they are threatening the status quo bigtime. We see the fear reflected in all the pushback this demand for equality is creating.
More from the New Yorker:
Still, on the elevated concrete median across the street from the tents, Wassef was glowing at the turnout, which he estimated at a thousand. “I am ecstatic,” he said. There had been some negative feedback on the Facebook page, but “you can’t print taboos and expect all positive feedback.” Most of the men on the median were repeating the same argument as that in the square: a female President was forbidden by Islam. But the women were arguing back, and that was important. “It’s like lancing an abscess. What’s coming out is disgusting, but it needs to be done,” Wassef said.
Wassef is the guy who put up the facebook page calling for the march. I was wary of what would happen when I heard about the march because it all sounded so haphazard and hastily organized to coincide with International Women’s Day, but I agree with that quote in bold emphasis about lancing an abscess. Again, I just hope women and like-minded men get the time they need to build up the strength in numbers they deserve and need.
Which brings me to a few other things I wanted to highlight.
While nothing that happened was terribly surprising yesterday, given the history and the attack on Lara Logan, I noticed in a lot of these reports, particularly Nima Elbagir’s reporting to CNN, that reporters emphasized how there were men marching with women on behalf of women’s rights. Of course it was mostly women, but there seems to have been more men there than one would have thought or enough to have made all the journalists take particular note of it. Men even formed a human chain around the women. Unfortunately the thugs outnumbered them by a lot and broke through.
Since so much of patriarchy is deeply embedded within attitudes–and those attitudes can be held by women too–I think it is important that women for women work together with the men who do truly seem to be like-minded. I know most men won’t stand up for women and that ultimately women are the key to progress for women, but with so many women still caught in selling the rest of us out, I think allies in this fight are important wherever we can find them, and that the women in Egypt have found some does strike me as one of the few bright notes in this story, along with the fact of course that the brave women who showed up didn’t stay silent and fought back.
Also, another point from the Nima Elbagir report. In the youtube that I linked to above (at around the 2:40 mark for anyone interested), Nima talks about how just the leaflets alone were a point of contention–one of the leaflets said “we demand control of our reproductive rights”–and how men considered it shameful for women to be distributing materials with words like that printed on them.
Again, the contrast between that and the men who formed the human chain strikes me as poignant. Especially given the following (via the Guardian):
“Women were caught in the middle and groped,” witness Ahmad Awadalla said. “When I tried to defend them they said, ‘why are you defending women? Are you queer?’”
Once again misogyny and homophobia collide underscoring that this is a fight for human rights for every last one of us. All of us–women or man, young or old, working or middle class, gay or straight, Christian or Muslim or anything else, white, black, and everything in between, and on and on–we all share a stake in this fight, and we’re all connected. The forces trying to convince that we’re not are trying to break up the strength in numbers built in to our human coalition.
One last excerpt from the New Yorker link:
The men were particularly incensed at the notion that a woman could be President of Egypt. It was, they argued, against a hadith which states that men should not take orders from women. “Don’t you obey your mother?” wondered a colleague of mine, an Egyptian whose style of dress often causes her to be mistaken for a foreigner. “I obey religion,” he replied.
“They were saying that my opinion did not exist,” my colleague said. “Still, when I asked them to step back, they stepped back.”
When I read that, I couldn’t help but think of the following 1948 Olive Oyl for President cartoon (a reworking of the 1932 Betty Boop for president cartoon that was released just days before FDR was elected)… if only all these people who fear women having any sort of power got a metaphorical thwap from Olive Oyl’s skillet and had the dream that Popeye has…
Ahram Online: “Egyptian million woman march ends with a gunshot”
Posted: March 8, 2011 Filed under: Women's Rights | Tags: Egypt, international women's day, Million Woman March 26 Comments“We are not convinced by the amendments of the constitution as they don’t give women the right to run for presidential elections, and there are still no equal rights.” –Reem Shahin, a member of the Egyptian Million Woman March movement
Today in Cairo, the spirit of the Tahrir protests was turned inside out. The calls for a Million Woman March–to coincide with International Women’s Day and call for the recognition of women’s political voices in the New Egypt–drew a small crowd (a thousand by some reports, 200 by another) to Liberation Square. With a depressed turnout, the march fell prey to violent anti-feminist thugs who disrupted the event.
Chants used to bring down Mubarak were replaced by chants calling for the downfall of women.
Ahram Online reports:
Meanwhile, as a group of activists stood side-by-side holding banners of the movement calling for equality, another group of male protesters came from the other side to disrupt the march. As males and females activists chanted “Men and women, one hand,” “Muslims and Christian, one hand,” the other group described as “thugs” chanted “No, no, the people want women to step down,” and “The Quran is our ruler.”
It was a shouting match more than a dialogue, with neither side hearing the other. The thugs became insulting and aggressive, but the majority of the activists insisted on staying. The thugs then became violent and started pushing and harassing some women. Activists ran away to Qasr El Aini street, thugs running after them until they reached a point where the army was stationed. The army fired in the air, and the thugs ran away. The army sent soldiers to accompany home girls who had been harassed. “I got harassed by those thugs, I don’t know what to say,” said an activist female who preferred to remain anonymous. She was very angry and called on everyone to leave Tahrir Square and not to return, at least for today.
Who, if anybody, sent these thugs? Some points to consider:
Feminist activist Mona Ezzat who participated in the march thinks that this is a result of culture created by the old Egyptian regime. “This is a natural product of the long years of dictatorship and the absence of culture in Egypt,” Ezzat told Ahram Online. She also thinks that the disruptive people were thugs and do not therefore represent the majority of Egyptians.
Most people in Tahrir Square believe that the old regime pays thugs as one of their counter-revolution techniques. “They come here every day and try to disperse our demonstration in Tahrir Square. The same faces every day,” said Osama Motawea, one of the demonstrators who sleeps in Tahrir Square every night.
Christian Science Monitor, “In Egypt’s Tahrir Square, women attacked at rally on International Women’s Day“:
“We fought side by side with men during the revolution, and now we’re not represented,” said Passat Rabie, a young woman who came with friends, after men aggressively dispersed the protest. “I thought Egypt was improving, that it was becoming a better country. If it’s changing in a way that’s going to exclude women, then what’s the point? Where’s the democracy?”Hastily organized on Facebook to coincide with International Women’s Day, the protest was billed as a “Million Woman” march. But in fact, it attracted only about 200 demonstrators, mostly women but some men as well. The violent opposition they faced suggests that Egyptian women must fight their own revolution to achieve equal rights.
More from CSM… shades of “Iron My Shirt“:
“Go home, go wash clothes,” yelled some of the men. “You are not married; go find a husband.” Others said, “This is against Islam.” To the men demonstrating with the women, they yelled “Shame on you!”
What is it about women daring to compete for presidential power that drives people so crazy?
Things got very ugly. The CSM has other details including this:
The men took over the raised platform where the women had held their demonstration, as many of the women trembled in rage. During the melee, one of the attacking men groped Fatima Mansour, a college student who wore purple for International Women’s Day and argued eloquently with a man who said it was unIslamic for a woman to become president, quoting the Quran back at him. Sexual harassment is a common indignity for women in Cairo, though it virtually disappeared during the first few days of the uprising. After the attack, she was disheartened, but determined to continue the fight.
She whirled and slapped him, before her colleagues held her back to keep her from getting hurt, she said. Before the attack, she had been optimistic. “We believe that we have a right to rebuild Egypt,” she said. “Women’s participation during the revolution was remarkable. We can’t ignore this and deny us a role.”
Her friend Shaza Abdel Lateef chimed in. “They can’t just send us home after the revolution,” she said. One of the criticisms they faced over and over again was that now was not the time for women to demand their rights. Ms. Lateef rejects that. “We say no, we are half the population. If we stay silent, we will continue to experience all the discrimination of the past.”
Washington Post, “Women’s rights marchers in Cairo report sexual assaults by angry mob“:
CAIRO – Women hoping to extend their rights in post-revolutionary Egypt were faced with a harsh reality Tuesday when a mob of angry men beat and sexually assaulted a group of marchers calling for political and social equality, witnesses said.
“Everyone was chased. Some were beaten. They were touching us everywhere,” said Dina Abou Elsoud, 35, a hostel owner and organizer of the ambitiously named Million Woman March.
She was among a half-dozen women who said they were repeatedly groped by men – a common form of intimidation and harassment here that was, ironically, a target of the protesters. None reported serious injuries.
[…]
As upwards of 300 marchers assembled late Tuesday afternoon, men began taunting them, insisting that a woman could never be president and objecting to women’s demands to have a role in drafting a new constitution, witnesses said.
“People were saying that women were dividing the revolution and should be happy with the rights they have,” said Ebony Coletu, 36, an American who teaches at American University in Cairo and attended the march, as she put it, “in solidarity.”
Women are divisive and should appreciate their right to shut up and take it. Gee, haven’t I seen this movie before?
More from WaPo:
The men – their number estimated to be at least double that of the women’s – broke through a human chain that other men had formed to protect the marchers. Women said they attempted to stand their ground – until the physical aggression began.
“I was grabbed in the crotch area at least six times; I was grabbed in the breasts; my throat was grabbed,” Coletu said.
She and several others said they eventually took refuge in a tourism agency office protected by Egyptian army members.
[…]
Nagla Rizk, also a professor at American University in Cairo, said she went to the march Tuesday full of hope but left within an hour after sensing the ugly mood of the counter-demonstrators.
“The whole event was not successful, and I am very disappointed,” she said. “This is totally alien to the spirit of Tahrir.”
Nima Elbagir’s report with CNN (post continues after the youtube):
[Edited to insert the following note: I meant to point this out… around the 2:40 mark, Nima talks about how just the leaflets alone were a point of contention–one of the leaflets said “we demand control of our reproductive rights”–and how men considered it shameful for women to be distributing materials with words like that printed on them.]
Some more reading on the march which I’m still combing through:
- The Guardian: Tahrir Square women’s march marred by rival protest
- Irish Times: March to highlight marginalisation of women marred by shouting match with men
- NPR/AP: Egyptian Women’s Rights Protest Marred By Hecklers
- The New Yorker News Desk: Women and Men in Tahrir Square (that’s the one I snagged the picture up top from)
Another related piece:
I wanted to leave you with something more uplifting from today before I go.
Below: A crowd celebrated International Women’s Day with a rally protesting violence linked to Ivory Coast’s ongoing political crisis, in the Abobo district of Abidjan, the country’s main city. The women are supporters of Alassane Ouattara, the man the United Nations, the African Union and most foreign powers say defeated Laurent Gbagbo in the recent presidential election. (Rebecca Blackwell/Associated Press)






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