Type | Book |
Title | The Latent Transformation. Challenges, Resilience and Successes of Pakistani Women. |
Author(s) | |
Publication (Day/Month/Year) | 2011 |
URL | http://www.af.org.pk/pub_files/1366350926.pdf |
Abstract | Freidrich Engels, to quote from his seminal work of the 19th century, Origins of the Family, Private Property and the State, said that the first class antagonism is between man and woman and the first class subjugation is that of women by men.1 One can actually deduce from this assertion that women participating equally in decisions affecting our collective political, social and economic life will eventually challenge the overall power structures which oppress the working classes and minority communities in any society, for there is an inherent link between oppression of all kinds prevalent in human society to the subjugation of women. Pakistan is one of the successor states of British India formed in 1947. It is a predominantly Muslim society with huge resource deficits. What is unique about contemporary Muslim societies is that the richest of these nations, for instance of the Arab world, discriminate more against their women than some resource constrained nations elsewhere. Therefore, we find that in Muslim societies, it is not poverty alone, but dominant social norms in the name of culture and religion employed by powers that be to perpetuate absolute political control over the bodies and minds of girls and women. Pakistani women have not only endured an incremental and significant increase in social oppression in community and public life at large, there also came a time when the state of Pakistan, supposed to be modern and neutral in theory, deliberately acted against its women citizens by creating discriminatory instruments of power through draconian legislation and encouraging social conservatism through syllabus and public media. The aftermath of that period in Pakistan’s political history continues till day. The oppression experienced by women in Pakistan is multi-layered, and ranges from stifling legal frameworks instituted by the state to forcible following of primordial social norms in the name of Islamic religious orthodoxy and feudal and tribal cultures. However, in the face of these adverse circumstances, women have shown remarkable adroitness, determination and resilience across the length and breadth of Pakistan in different shapes and forms and in different areas of human endeavour. Through waging civil struggles for the realisation of their human rights and succeeding persistently in increasing their participation and space in the public sphere, women are, in the opinion of some analysts, latently sowing the seeds for 3 transformation and ensuring a better status for women in society. This paper, largely exploratory in nature, begins with briefly describing the socio-cultural, legal and structural, and economic constraints faced by Pakistani women. It then acknowledges and records the resilience and successes achieved by women by citing examples from the selected domains of educational attainment, limited but mentionable changes in social behaviour of men and communities brought about by their struggle through a couple of case studies, growing economic activity, improvement in legislation due to their struggle and increased political participation. |
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