Authors: Mia Bloom
Among the Tamils, Irish Republicans, and Palestinians, there has been little need to convince women to join the movement. The women themselves pressured the leadership of the terrorist movements to allow them to participate in violence. Eventually, the leaders agreed. Both the pressure and the agreement occurred within a supportive environment: a majority of Catholics in Northern Ireland expected, even demanded, that everyone step up and do something for the good of the community. Similar conditions applied among Tamils, Palestinians, and Chechens. Siobhan, Darshika, Puhalchudar, Zura, and Ahlam, were not coerced. And yet, the subtle pressures exerted by the culture of violence in their societies may have limited these women's options from the very beginning. Such a culture perpetuates more violence and the cycle may appear impossible to break.
WOMEN'S STATUS
Given the increasing prevalence of women on the terrorist front line, it is curious that so few women have achieved leadership positions within terrorist organizations, as they did in the 1970s. Both Astrid Proll and Ulrike Meinhof, for example, held crucial leadership positions in the BaaderâMeinhof Group.
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We have seen no comparable development in Palestinian organizations, for example, where patriarchy remains the rule.
Women's involvement in terrorist groups has not helped level the gender playing field after all. Even in groups where women comprise from 30 to 60 percent of the bombers, they are rarely in charge. Few organizations have female ideologues who might
include something about women's equality in their manifestos. Even in the groups where women play a larger role, they are still the second string. Women tend to become necessary when men are incapacitated, but they are an expedient choice at best. Until women's lives are valued as much as their deaths, women's participation in violence will not create more opportunities for other women; it might actually hurt a society in ways we cannot fathom. If the only way intelligent and politically motivated women can participate in politics is through death, these societies are losing their most capable women. They will not be able to run for office, have satisfying careers, or contribute in other, more positive ways to building or enhancing their communities.
Almost all of the women whose stories have been examined in the course of my research for this book agreed on one thing: feminism was not the basis of their participation in the terrorist movement. Many of them were decidedly antifeminist. Several confided in me that they felt betrayed by the feminist movement in their respective countries, because the feminist agenda conflicted with nationalist agendas. Those committed to the terrorist cause tended to look upon women's issues as either irrelevant to the nationalist cause or as a lesser priority. When asked whether they felt any unique experiences as women terrorists
qua
women, they found the question to be puzzling, and eventually all answered no. They had no unique experiences of being women, just of being oppressed. When a terrorist movement treated women as equals, feminist motivation was not part of the calculus. Jihadi women like Umayma Hasan, the wife of Al Qaeda's second-in-command, do not consider themselves particularly oppressed, regardless of whether Westerners see them that way. Thus participating in violence is not intended to level the playing field in their societiesâthis is not one of their goals.
These findings contradict those of at least one observer, Anat Berko, who argued that Palestinian women bombers were seeking
equality with men. Among the women with whom she spoke, several reported that they were fighting for their rights as women. “Whatever a man can do, a woman can also do,”
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said one; another claimed: “There is no difference between a man and a woman in the Intifada. We all want to protect our land, there is no difference in the recruitment of a guy or a girl, but the percentage of women that are recruited is lower because there are women that have another role in society as homemakers.”
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The women with whom Berko spoke might reflect the specifics of Palestinian society and women's roles in it. Certainly, Ahlam at-Tamimi is a model of women's liberation and leadership. She does not consider herself unequal to men even though she works for a conservative religious organization with no female leaders. Yet with her fame or notoriety she is winning office for Hamas in local elections by becoming the face of Hamas's women. She chooses to do this while wearing traditional Islamic robes and the veil.
Western assumptions are not always helpful in this context. Not all women aspire to Western-style equality (where it exists!). The fact that many terrorist women are at loggerheads with the feminists in their society was, for me, completely unexpected. Apparently, the desire by some women to show a terrorist organization that women are just as dedicated to the cause as men does not mean that they want to be the same as men, or be treated as men.
MEETING THE TERRORIST THREAT
To avoid the impossible dilemma of either invasively checking women for explosives and causing popular outrage or of not checking women at all and getting bombed, Coalition forces in Iraq established the Daughters of IraqâIraqi women who conduct searches at checkpoints. In other parts of the world, security services are increasingly drafting women to prevent attacks by female terrorists. Indonesian police employ women to look out
for JI militants; the Israeli Defence Forces makes sure that female recruits are stationed at border crossings; and Turkish police have hired a handful of women police officers in case they have to search potential Kurdish Worker's Party operatives. Women can no longer pass through checkpoints without scrutiny. Still, the number of female terrorists continues to rise. Innovations in security technologies and practices will be only short-term solutions at best.
We will also soon see new kinds of operatives emerge as terrorists adapt to changing security environments and as their targets become more difficult to penetrate. Already some terrorist groups have turned to young children, either coercing them into becoming bombers or “volunteering” them without their knowledge. In Iraq and Afghanistan, this manipulation of young operatives has already started. In Indonesia, the women of JI are preparing a new generation of child militants. In the West Bank and Gaza, Hamas has television shows that feature a fundamentalist Mickey Mouseâlike cartoon character, Farfour, who tells children that the ultimate goal is to be a
shahid
. In Afghanistan in May 2006, the Taliban tried to dupe a six-year-old boy, Juma Gul, into becoming a suicide bomber. They forced him to wear a vest that they said would shower flowers when he pushed the plunger. They told him that as soon as he saw a group of American soldiers, he was to “throw [his] body at them.”
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In Iraq, terrorist organizations are recruiting girls as young as fourteen and may soon try to find even younger girls to carry out attacks.
While counter-terrorist units like the Daughters of Iraq may have some short-term effect, a more fundamental approach is needed for the longer term. I suggest responding to the four plus one Rs with three Ds:
delegitimize
,
deglamorize
, and
demobilize
. This entails showing what involvement in terrorism is actually like and, in the process, undermining the basis upon which women (and men) become involved. In order to combat the lure of
terrorism, and the support and appreciation women martyrs receive from their communities, we need first to
delegitimize
violence by showing that violence is sanctioned neither by the
Qur'an
nor by the Hadith. We need to challenge involvement in terrorism at the level of image and undermine its attractiveness. Doing so might involve having former terrorists tell their stories, showing how they became disillusioned.
The media has all too often inadvertently glamorized terrorists, depicting them as very evil but also very powerful. Instead, they should be
deglamorized
, shown to be corrupt and hypocritical. According to John Horgan, director of the International Center for the Study of Terrorism, there is no shortage of celebrity ex-terrorists who can deglamorize and demythologize the terrorist lifestyle. Detailing how the women participate against their will is key. This can also be done by stressing the devastation caused by terrorist attacks against other women and children. Finally, we need to show the futility of terrorism. Terrorists rarely if ever succeed in achieving their primary political or religious goals, whereas negotiation and reconciliation have a significantly better track record.
Most of all, we need to provide pathways for women's exit from terrorist organizations. Few of the current deradicalization programs (whose effectiveness remains an open question) have facilities or programs specifically for women or children. Yet it is the women and children who will carry on the conflict in the future. We need to
demobilize
the women so that they are no longer involved in shooting, killing, and bombing. Given that often the women are more radical than the men and that some are true believers, it is too lofty a goal to try and change their minds, but we can certainly aim to change their actions. By eliminating the immediate source of violence from the community while simultaneously undermining its very legitimacy, we might finally break the cycle of violence.
Much of the groundwork needs to be laid by the local women themselves. An organization in Indonesia led by Lily Munir has the right idea: they have set up several Islamic schools for girls. The girls learn the
Qur'an
, but they also learn the positive things that the
Qur'an
has to say about women. At the same time as they are empowered by the curriculum, the girls learn practical skills like mathematics, computer science, and English.
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They will have the resources to become future leaders of their communities. They are learning enough about Islam that, in the future, no charismatic leader can manipulate the text and convince them that Holy Scripture endorses the killing of other Muslims. At the same time, they are also learning the skills to be successful in the modern world. The women in these schools have a chance to do something great with their lives, not their deaths. Some of the women in this book, like the Irish operative Siobhan, have shown that a peaceful transition is possible and that they can make a positive contribution to the future instead of being the shells for the bombs that they carry for men.
NOTES
Prologue
1
Magomed Abdurashidov and Yuliya Rybina (Makhachkala), “They Found a Conductor for the Bombed Subway Trains,”
Kommersant Online
, April 30, 2010, p. 5.
2
Irina Gordiyenko, “What Anvar Sharipov, Suspected of Organizing the Terrorist Acts, Had to Say,” Moscow
Novaya Gazeta Online
(in Russian), April 12, 2010.
3
www.jamaatshariat.com/ru/content/view/406/29
4
momento24.com/en/2010/04/02/moscow-bombing-teens-widows-and-suicide-bombers
5
Reuters, “Suicide Bomber Spotlights Russia's Islamist Battle,” May 18, 2010,
www.politicalscandalnews.com/article/Suicide%20bomber%20spotlights%20Russia%27s%20Islamist%20battle/?k=j83s12y12h94s27k02
6
www.cnn.com/2010/WORLD/europe/04/06/moscow.subway.bombings/index.html
7
http://english.aljazeera.net/news/europe/2010/04/201045142533794297.html
8
www.nytimes.com/2010/04/07/world/europe/07moscow.html
9
Several months later, a reporter from
The Guardian
newspaper interviewed the family; Luke Harding, “Dagestan: My Daughter
the Terrorist,”
The Guardian
, June 19, 2010,
www.guardian.co.uk/world/2010/jun/19/dagestan-suicide-bombers-terrorism-russia
10
www.rttnews.com/Content/GeneralNews.aspx?Id=1304458&SM=1
11
www.rttnews.com/Content/GeneralNews.aspx?Id=1304458&SM=1
;
www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/news/world/europe/article7125906.ece
1Â Â A Brief History of Terror and the Logic of Oppression
1
Cited in Deeana J. Resse, “The Trouble between us: an uneasy history of white and black women in the feminist movement.”
Women's History Review
, Vol. 18, issue 3, July 2009, p.513.
2
“Ulrike Meinhof calls for a move from protest to resistance,”
http://germanhistorydocs.ghi-dc.org/sub_document.cfm?document_id=895&language=english
.
3
Mia Bloom,
Dying to Kill: The Allure of Suicide Terror
, New York: Columbia University Press, 2005, chapter 1.
4
Philip K. Hitti, “The Assassins,” in George Andrews and Simon Vinkenoog (eds.),
The Book of Grass: An Anthology on Indian Hemp
, London: Peter Owen Press, 1967, writes that the whole mysterious legend of the Assassins was most fancifully presented by Marco Polo, who passed through Persia in 1273. For the full text see Charles E. Nowell, “The Old Man of the Mountain,”
Speculum: A Journal of Mediaeval Studies
, vol. 22, no. 4, October 1947, pp. 497 passim.
5
Bernard Lewis,
The Assassins: A Radical Sect in Islam
, New York: Oxford University Press, 1987, p. 127.
6
Mako Sasaki, “Who Became Kamikaze Pilots, and How Did They Feel towards Their Suicide Mission?” Quoted by Roman Kupchinsky, in “Smart Bombs with Souls,” in
Organized Crime and Terrorism Watch
3, no. 13, April 17, 2003.
7
Ibid, p. 1.
8
Scott Atran, “Genesis and Future of Suicide Terrorism,”
Interdisciplines
, 2003,
www.interdisciplines.org/terrorism/papers/1/6
see also
Science
, March 7, 2003, vol. 299, no. 5612, pp. 1534â39.
9
Peter Hill,
“
Kamikaze: Pacific War, 1943â45,
”
Department of Sociology, University of Oxford, unpublished manuscript, pp. 2â4.