Scars Are an ‘Honor’ Victim’s Sole Testimony
Bryan Denton for The New York Times
KABUL, Afghanistan — The stitches and bandages are gone, but scars
streak across one side of the girl’s face, across her cheek and behind
her ear: stark testimony to the brutal attack she barely survived three
months ago.
When the girl, Gul Meena, is with other people, even those whom she
knows at the shelter where she now lives, she pulls a veil across the
damaged side of her face, often touching it gingerly and sucking in her
breath.
“It hurts,” she said softly.
The man who swung an ax over and over into her face and neck
was her brother, according to the Afghan police and her neighbors. His
reason, as best it can be pieced together from people who know the
family, was that he believed Gul Meena had dishonored their family by
running away with a man to whom she was not married.
What made her perceived crime worse — and, in the eyes of some, what
made the “honor killing” necessary — was that she, barely past
childhood, was married, said relatives and people in her village.
With the thin, small wrists of a child and large eyes looming sadly, Gul
Meena’s emotions flicker between the occasional smile and a solemn,
distant look, as she seems to retreat into herself. While the doctors
who treated her when she was first admitted to a hospital thought she
might be 20 years old, now that her bandages are off, she looks far
younger; her caretakers at the shelter in Kabul believe that more likely
she is about 16.
When talking to people she sometimes sounds confused, even surprised at
her situation, like a person who wakes up for the first time in a new
place and cannot remember getting there. “I don’t know how this happened
to me,” she said as she traced the scars’ raised welts with her index
finger.
Neither the doctors nor hospital orderlies who saw her in the days and
even weeks after she was brought to a hospital in eastern Afghanistan at
the end of September — with her brain protruding from her skull —
thought she would survive, much less regain the ability to walk, wash
herself, eat and speak. The surgeon who first treated her said he was
unsure she would ever regain her motor skills.
She does remember where her family comes from, and talks about it all
the time: she has four brothers and two sisters, and they grew up in the
border area between Pakistan and Afghanistan. On the Afghan side of the
border, the area is in Naray district in Kunar Province; on the
Pakistani side, it is in Chitral.
She says she cannot recall, however, what led to the attack. She has no
memory of running away from home or of going with a man who was not her
husband to Nangarhar Province, where her brother is said to have found
her 10 days later.
“We had her see a counselor, but we don’t want to push her,” said Manizha Naderi, the executive director of Women for Afghan Women,
a human rights group that runs the shelter that is caring for her. “She
says different things at different times. At the beginning she said she
was married and had four children, now she says she has never been
married.”
Loss of memory after traumatic events is a response seen sometimes in
Western victims of violent rape who have had head injuries or in cases
of child abuse, but that kind of amnesia is less frequent in
Afghanistan, said several women’s advocates.
“I can’t remember a case where a person had lost her memory, but I am
sure it is possible with time and treatment for her to recover it,” said
Belqis Roshan, a female senator from Farah Province who has been
outspoken on women’s issues.
Asked what she wants to do now, Gul Meena says that all she wants is to
return to her family. “I will go as soon as you will take me,” she said
to Ms. Naderi.
For a woman in Afghanistan who has broken every taboo, however, there is no going home.
Instead of returning to a haven, it is far likelier that at least one
family member if not more would feel compelled by duty to enforce
Pashtun tribal law and kill her to regain the family’s standing in the
community, women’s advocates say.
That is what happened to Nilofar, another young woman being cared for in
one of Ms. Naderi’s shelters. Her father and brother tried to kill her,
slashing her throat with a knife and stabbing her in the stomach after
she refused to marry an older man they had picked out to be her husband.
They left her for dead, but with enormous effort she managed to reach
some farmers who took her to a hospital. When she returned home, she
soon learned from her sister-in-law that her brother had started hiding a
butcher knife under his pillow and was plotting to kill her in the
middle of the night. A few days later she fled.
“I don’t think Gul Meena can go home,” said Hassina Nekzad, the director
of the Afghan Women’s Network in western Afghanistan, where there have
been 22 “honor killings” in the last nine months. “I am sure that they
will try to kill her again. If her brother did this and they did not put
him in jail, why would he have changed? And maybe he will even feel
more strongly.”
With all the trauma she has endured, it is no wonder that Gul Meena has a
wish to find her way home, to be safe from the treachery of the world.
And yet, even she seems to realize that it could be dangerous.
Asked if she was able to sleep at night, she responded: “I fall asleep,
but then every night I have a dream of my older brother coming to me and
saying, ‘It’s time for you to come home,’ and then I wake up and I feel
so afraid.”
Labels: Afghanistan, Child Abuse, culture, Human Relations, Islamism, Pakistan, Security, Sexism
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