Nigeria's Boko Haram kidnapped more than 200
schoolgirls in April [AFP/Getty Images]
Let's not turn the kidnappings and assaults on
young girls going to school into a debate that nobody can win. Instead, let's
focus on the issue and how to resolve it whether it is bringing home the Nigerian
girls, or keeping Balochistan's girls schools open, or keeping all children
secure and in school. It's not hard to see which avenue will be appreciated
more by the girls of Nigeria and Balochistan, and the entire Muslim world.
A bus taking girls to the Oasis School, a well-known private school in
Panjgur,
came under attack by the militants, who burnt
the bus and subjected its driver, the school's head, retired Major Hussain Ali,
to a violent beating. In reaction to the attack, all private schools have shut
down temporarily in the district.
Writing in "Boko
Haram in Balochistan", journalist Yousaf Ajab Baloch
reports: "This terrorist outfit has issued pamphlets warnings all private
schools in the district to shut down girls' education or to face the
consequences. The pamphlets declare female education as haram, an Islamic term
referring to things forbidden in Islam."
This in turn echoes the grim situation facing girls when the Taliban had
overrun the Northern Areas, particularly Swat. Schools were similarly shut
down, girls forbidden from pursuing their education. In Balochistan, the
location of a continuing conflict between the government and Baloch
separatists, Islamist groups are seeing opportunities to gain power; they are
doing so by attacking the most vulnerable population and robbing them of their
chance to make a better future for themselves. As Baloch reports, they are "using
religious extremism to push the secular and civilised Baloch society toward
ignorance and backwardness through use of force".
Despite an outcry by Baloch human rights and educational organisations, and
an outcry by the parents of girls affected by the threats to the Panjgur schools, many of which have shut
down out of fear of violent attacks, little international attention has been
given to this alarming situation. If any comment is passed on similar trends
anywhere in the Islamic world, it is only to assert that Muslims are silent,
they secretly desire the most hard-core interpretation of Sharia to be enacted
all over the world, and that only in the western world can girls truly find
emancipation and education - all of which are patently untrue.
When situations like the Boko Haram kidnapping, or the shooting of
Yousafzai, or any other assault on the human rights of girls are used to drive
home points about Islam's deficiencies, we are playing a game in which there
are no winners, only losers. Such commentary will not make Islam
"reform" itself, nor will it chase away the grim spectre of Sharia
being misunderstood by both Islamists and Islamophobes on every level.
Let's not turn the kidnappings and assaults on
young girls going to school into a debate that nobody can win. Instead, let's
focus on the issue and how to resolve it whether it is bringing home the
Nigerian girls, or keeping Balochistan's girls schools open, or keeping all
children secure and in school. It's not hard to see which avenue will be
appreciated more by the girls of Nigeria and Balochistan, and the entire Muslim
world.
*Bina Shah is an award-winning Pakistani writer
from Karachi. She is a contributing opinion writer for the International New
York Times and writes a monthly column for Dawn, the biggest English-language
newspaper in Pakistan. Her novel, A Season For Martyrs, will be published in
November 2014 by Delphinium Books.
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Friday, June 6, 2014
Girls' Education Under Threat by Religious Extremism
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