Blog Entry #1
Sudan: Darfur and the Displacement of Women
Name: Dua Saleh
Course:
WST250_2013SEM1-S12
Due
Date: 17 October 2013
Darfur is often used as a focal point for
socio-political analysis on racial strife that eventually transcends into
genocide-- which is a result of many interlocking axes of oppression. Such
forms include covert institutionalized racism, overt tribal tensions,
internalized classism, and many more factors. The analysis that goes into
research about racial warfare in Darfur is very important, but such research
often overlooks the effects that the conflict and war has had on women who are
from this infamously known region. Women’s’ issues are often put onto the back
burner of all political agendas and are often left out of the discussion of
human rights or only discussed at a shallow or hyper fetishized manner.
Internal conflict arose between nomadic Arab
tribes and domestic African cattle farmers in Western Sudan that eventually
proliferated into the formation of warfare in 2003. The Arab-lead Sudanese
government sided with the nomadic Arabs, arming Arab militias (the Janjaweed)
alongside the national government to prevent an up rise from the African
farmers and the African rebel groups (the Sudan Liberation Army [SLA] and the
Justice and Equality Movement [JEM]) who were fighting for rights to land.
Approximately 400,000 people were killed in this war and about 3 million were
displaced as a result of large efforts taken by the government to stifle any
form of resistance and attempts at social reform from rebel groups and their
associates. Some of the crimes against humanity that are recognized in this
genocide are ethnic cleansing, systematic rapes, the pillaging of towns, the
exploitation of children for warfare and sexual pleasure, etc. Eventually, this
war was declared to be the 21st century’s first official genocide by UN
Security Council Resolution 1564 of 2004 by authorizing an International
Commission of Inquiry on Darfur.
Women have been particularly easy targets for
people on both the Arab militia and the African rebel groups. Women and young
girls are often raped, physically tortured, psychologically traumatized,
widowed, and ultimately marginalized by male counterparts on either side of the
playing field. The social residue of the war may have left the girls
susceptible to violent attacks, but institutional and domestic violence has
always played a role in the lives of rural women of Darfur—just as they have in
nearly every single society on earth.
Many
people who are victims of the war in Darfur are often left without a home
because their village or town was destroyed by militias. A large sum of
Sudanese people from Darfur are displaced and stripped from the right to live
in their indigenous and ancestral homelands. This is one issue that often goes
unaddressed in the overarching conversation about Darfur: There are a
tremendous number of internally displaced persons (IDPs) -- specifically
women-- who migrate from Western Sudan to shantytowns in the southern division
of the capital of Sudan, Khartoum due to the preposterous level of violence in
the area.
Let us take into consideration the implications
encrypted in a migration from far West Sudan to far East Sudan. Imagine being a
rural, illiterate, impoverished woman who has recently been displaced from home
because of guerilla warfare. Now, say this woman wants to have a chance at a
more prosperous future, she must now travel approximately one thousand kilometers
to get to Khartoum-- mind you, this is a journey through war zones,
conflict areas, rugged terrains, and completely unfamiliar land. Now, imagine
having to travel throughout the terrains of Sudan without knowing any possible
means of transportation, without being literate, without any money to travel
from place to place, without the liberty to be independently mobile because you
must be weary of your children, without reasonable safety from any predators
and thieves, without any contextual framing to societal norms outside of a
rural area. This is a terrifying feat that would be intimidating to any person
placed in that situation, but because of unfettering determination and lack of
other options, this is what millions of women have done in order to survive.
Many people that migrate to Khartoum are often forgotten about in the grander
scheme of government reparation and are often pushed into IDP camps, or more
appropriately shantytowns. People who have been displaced are usually
unfamiliar with the city and usually seek refuge in shantytowns and
impoverished and squatter areas to survive. These squatter areas are placed in
many different regions of the city, but the primary places that people squat
are in the Southern Khartoum. The conditions of these shantytowns are very poor
and badly kept. People who stay in those areas are usually surrounded by urban
debris, trash, famine, and unhygienic drinking water. These are problems that
play a prominent role in the lives of squatters that live in those areas.
Although many of the powers of women from Darfur were stripped from them
through an intermixing of injustices, women still retain dominant roles of
power within their communities. Women of Darfur stay true to native
administration power structures that were present in their rural areas. The
IDPs that migrated use tribal roles of traditional governance within the IDP
camp sites and shanty towns to uphold a sense of control over their livelihood.
Women outnumber men in these IDP camps, which leaves many women with more
opportunities to gain a leadership position in their small societies. An
example of a leadership position held by women of Darfur is a Sheika. A Sheika
is a women assigned to represent women’s issues and concerns that links them to
the overarching patriarchal system of governance. These representatives act as
a link between the males in the IDP camp sites and the women at the sites. This
may only be one minute role to some, the fact that there is a power that allows
women to have a say in law systematic ruling and law making is remarkable.
Women also play a large role in creating solutions for systematic injustices
such as displacement. Humanitarian efforts taken by people in the city of
Khartoum to assist women who have been displaced have been set in place. Many
of these programs provide people with many different resources to assist them
with the after effects of displacement. Some programs are specific to the
psychological needs of victims of the genocide. Psychological impairment is
often caused by large sums of terror, usually due to violent acts. If they are
not addressed accordingly, long term effects could put a hamper on the lives of
those who are inflicted by it. These programs offer counseling or therapy to
women and children who have witnessed or been inflicted with a traumatizing
event.
Other
privately funded programs directly provide women and children clean drinking
water, sanitary food, proper fuel and cooking oil, and grains to help maintain
nutritional value. Another program is known to provide women with free sexual
education classes and health classes. These are important resources that are
provided by Sudanese women and men all throughout Khartoum to displaced people
from Darfur.
The leadership positions that women hold within the IDPs and outside of the
IDPs are important for helping to erode some of the oppressive injustices that
are forced onto displaced victims of war. Women in power are aware of the
issues that are important to other women and are more successful at
understanding how certain tactics are more effective than other tactics. The
methods that the women take to create solvency in their communities are usually
ones that are sensitive to the geographical contexts of other women who are in
a similar position. Creating administrative roles for women in IDPs and people
who assist other women in IDPs is an important step that ought to be taken in
order to help create change for the problem.
Works Cited
Abusharaf,
Rogaia Mustafa. "Competing Masculinities: Probing Political Disputes as
Acts of Violence Against Women from Southern Sudan and Darfur." Human
Rights Review 7.2 (2006): 59-74. Web.
Puente,
De La. "Women's Leadership in Camps for Internally Displaced People in
Darfur, Western Sudan." Community Development Journal 46.3
(2011): 365-77. Web.
Badri, Alia,. "Experiences and Psychosocial
Adjustment of Darfuri Female Students Affected by War: An Exploratory
Study." International Journal of Psychology 48.5 :
944-53. /z-wcorg/. Web.
Kim, Glen, Rabih Torbay, and Lynn Lawry.
"Basic Health, Women's Health, and Mental Health among Internally
Displaced Persons in Nyala Province, South Daffur, Sudan." American
Journal of Public Health 97.2 (2007): 353-61. Web.
Bechtold,
Peter K. "Darfur, the ICCand American Politics." Middle East
Policy 16.2 (2009): 149-63. Web.
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