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From my experience this is a very credible account of life in the region. And most important -- it is not patronizing. Marrakech life is presented with humor, with that perplexing foreignness that is typical to Westerners in North Africa, and with respect for religious differences.
The book reads very well, it is full of curious data and also of excitment. A great read!
Chapter titles signal the children's bleak status. We learn of 'girls' participation in combat' (in Lebanon), of 'bodily mutilation of young females' (in Egypt), and of 'working children in Cairo.' According to Hassan al-Ebraheem of the Kuwait Society for the Advancement of Arab Children, there are 90 million Arabic-speaking children, of which 'half today are threatened in their physical health by the dangers of hunger, poverty, and war.' A majority of them, he reports, live in unsuitable dwellings, and 3,500 of them die each day from treatable diseases.
Then, of course, there is the particularly debased status of girls. A sixteen-year old Turkish girl who does piecework sewing for her father's business sums up the predicament of her sex: 'I work, but I have no value.' Nor are matters improving, for, as Fernea explains, 'in general colonialism intensified traditional family patterns, particularly those involving differentials of gender identity,' and matters have changed little since independence. Taking on new roles in society appears not to have helped the status of females.
Middle East Quarterly, March 1996
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The contents of the book were also radical: that of a female activist facing divorce in mid-life and her struggle to survive when her rights were perilously few in a society that did not accommodate her situation. Rather, it punished her for the failed marriage. I read this book back to back with Malika Oufkir's harrowing account of her family's 20 year imprisonment in Morocco. Abouzeid's story touches on some similar issues: that of revolt, torn allegiances, political and personal persecution in a country fraut with power struggles. Oufkir was a member of the elite who went from palace to prison, from being somebody to nobody. On the face of it, Abouzeid's heroine Zahra led a more ordinary life although her other life as an activist was extraordinary. She had to muster even more courage after her divorce and the near impossible task of rebuilding her life. Like Oufkir, she went from being somebody to nobody with the loyalties of family and friends in tatters. Zahra is divorced, illiterate and without economic resources, but finds strength within her Muslim faith. This is an illuminating account of Morocco's struggle for independence through the eyes of a working class woman on her own path to personal independence.
A must read for Western feminists and Western women in general. It is a window to another world where women fought and still fight different battles, and some that are the same.
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GUESTS OF THE SHEIK, being fully a product of Fernea's untutored description of her stay among the women of the village, is a deeply personal work, full of small details & emotional shading that might otherwise be omitted from a more scholarly tome. Her own failures & victories - nothing is hidden; the reader learns from her mistakes as SHE learned from them, & typically we find the cause of her blunders to be the values & ethics deeply entrenched in our Western culture. When broken down into its roots, the word 'ethnography' literally means 'folk story,' and that this is, being both a story of the 'women of the veil' in this tiny village in southern Iraq as they were in 1956, and also a story which goes far towards explicating our OWN culture, revealing the sometimes absurd nature of our OWN thoughts & desires. It is not meant to be taken as a universal tale, or some steadfast rule that we must measure ALL Iraqi villages by, but is a description of ONE woman's singular experiences in ONE small, unique village. Fernea's purpose here is simple; to give these women a voice, so that others might hear. In doing so she destroys many preconceived notions about their culture, & paints a vivid picture of these women, their intelligence & their way of life that will not be soon forgotten.
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Fernea writes from a very personal point of view in this book. Indeed, the book, with its details of such things as the food she ate and her misadventures with her hostesses' dog, comes across more as a travel journal than an academic survey. Throughout, she seems to go out of her way make it clear that she does not consider herself an expert on the topic, but rather as a curious seeker. She also laments frequently her limited ability in Standard Arabic. Coming from an author of her stature, this is a bit surprising. But then again, this is in line with her previous ethnographic studies on the Middle East, which described her and her family's personal dealings with the culture as much as they described the culture itself. And perhaps given the topic and the ethnicity of the author, this was the only possible approach for a book exploring these questions.
Fernea presents few clear conclusions in her search for Islamic feminism. Those generalities that are mentioned come mostly from the mouths of the women she interviews. The clearest message is that women in the Middle East seem leery of the term "feminist". To them, "feminism" seems to represent attitudes of Western women (of perhaps questionable morals) who want to subvert their culture. On the other hand, virtually all the women interviewed in the book are concerned about women's issues and would like to improve the lives of women in their communities. Several of the women stressed that there is no overall "Islamic" culture; each Islamic country has its own culture. The issues that are important for women in any given country arise more from the culture than from the religion. Nevertheless, the religion does provide certain rights and expectations for all Islamic women; whether the women can take advantage of these rights depends on the conditions prevailing where they live.
This book represents yet another chapter in the Fernea's growth in understanding about the women in this region. As such, it will be a welcome addition in the library of anyone who has read her previous books, or for anyone else who is exploring women's issues and Islam.
Those who complain about the emphasis on clothing are either apologists or fail to understand the meaning of such required restrictive dress to Western women: it means a lack of ability to move about freely (because of voluminous fabric or the heat of wearing such occulsive clothes) as well as, more seriously, the idea that women are objects to be kept secluded because they belong to a man. It means that women are responsible for men's morality and must pay for men's inability to exhibit self-control. I don't think Fernea did a good job of explaining her own view of such subjects.
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