Blog 4 – Whither (the fight for) Freedom?
Contemporary questions around the veil discuss whether that
is a reflection of her suppression or of her autonomy, and how the veil is a
backward religious symbol, perpetuating dangerous notions of patriarchy and
religious oppression. These ideas were also present as the French attempted to
extend their cultural and political domination over colonized Algeria. Fanon
highlights how the attempts by the colonized to suppress the local veiling
tradition, made the colonized more intransigent in this regard. This brings to
doubt the utility that the freedom struggle could bring to the women, and the
level of emancipation it could truly have for them. Under colonization, the
women of Algeria were trapped between two extremes, none of which truly
constituted freedom. For one could assume that the French cared less for their
empowerment, and intended more to employ those women as a means upending
Algerian culture. French attempts at
forcing the unveiling of women, whether through direct or indirect means, were
precisely that: they deprived the women of their own agency to choose a
particular lifestyle for themselves.
Rather, it brought them into the unsolicited gaze of the French man such
as the employer who wished to see the results of the program of cultural
imposition.
What then is our definition of freedom? Were the women who
then abandoned the veil to enter into European territory free from the previous
cultural imposition of the veil? Given that they were only permitted to unveil
themselves for the liberation struggle, one is doubtful if this constituted
actual freedom. They once again had to chain themselves to the struggle mainly
lead by men, who laid stronger claims to the struggle because they spent years
in imprisonment. Were they equal partners in achieving this freedom or was
their feminine identity used as a prop and a vehicle?
A similar dilemma is brought to the fore in Kenyatta’s piece
where he defends the practice of Female Genital Mutilation as imperative to
their local cultural identity. The Kenyan people eventually obtained freedom,
but the continuing prevalence of FGM reflects how the women of Kenya remained
subservient to cultural practices that were reinforced by those leading the
liberation struggle. What further deprived them of their agency in both cases
was the fact that the burden of preserving their entire cultural heritage
seemed to be placed squarely on the shoulders of their women. This had
long-lasting impacts as even after liberation, culture remained at the
forefront of postcolonial political discourse, particularly as a means of
drawing attention away from the tangible problems on the ground. Women were
forced to limit their choices to that, which in the eyes of the patriarchy, did
not undermine their cultural struggle. This
suggests that the struggle in and of itself was inhibiting and damaged women’s
agency. Even as they clamoured for freedom for the country, freedom for the
woman was nowhere to be seen.
Comments
I also think yoiur argument would have been stronger without Kenyatta's example altogether. Fanon was enough to establish your point.