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Tsunami, The Town Left Without Women
London Times Online ^ | January 12, 2005 | Richard Lloyd Parry

Posted on 01/11/2005 11:17:03 PM PST by XHogPilot

Tsunami, The Town Left Without Women By Richard Lloyd Parry in Indonesia

A community of 6,000 woke up to find the tsunami had swept away its womenfolk

WHEN the survivors of Lampuuk had picked themselves up out of the mud of the tsunami, several appalling facts became clear. The first was that their town no longer existed. The second was that four out of five of its former inhabitants were dead. But it took a while to realise the strangest thing of all: that among those who made it to higher ground, or who kept their heads above the surging waters, so few were women.

Out of a population of about 6,000, only 950 residents of Lampuuk had been accounted for yesterday and fewer than 200 of those were female. In one of the town’s constituent villages only four women were left alive, three of those because they were out of town when the wave struck.

The disaster has left children without mothers and teachers, old people without carers, husbands without wives, and young men with little immediate prospect of finding a partner. This is the cruel twist for Aceh: apart from their homes and fields, the people of Lampuuk have lost the women at the core of their community.

The reasons for this demographic tragedy are heartbreaking. Lampuuk’s men, being fishermen, were the stronger swimmers. And because of the timing of the tsunami, early in the morning, it was women who had the burden of saving the other great victims of the disaster, Aceh’s children.

“Women are weaker than men, but also many women tried to bring with them their children,” says Basaria Binti Hassan, a teacher from the inland village of Lam Lhom, where the survivors of Lampuuk now live in the local school.

“The men were out at their boats, and they could run away, but a woman will do whatever she can to bring her children with her. It was a long distance to run to escape from the wave with little ones, and that is why so many women died.”

Based on the present headcount, and assuming an even division between the sexes, 25 per cent of Lampuuk’s men survived compared with just under 7 per cent of its women. In the village of Lambaro, only one made it out alive from the wave, a shy 33-year-old named Atiyah Binti Ali Hussein.

Atiyah lost her brothers and sisters, mother and father. Her husband Em Nur made it, but their three children, Dara Satriana, 11, Titin Muaira, 9, and Taisir, 2, all drowned somewhere between their house and that of Atiyah’s mother. Yesterday, she crouched on the floor at the school pounding tamarind for the lunchtime cooking pot and wept as she talked.

“I am still young, but I am afraid to have another baby because this may happen again,” she says. “Every night I dream of my children. I can’t bear to see other people’s children because it makes me remember my own. I don’t want children any more because I cannot protect them.”

More than in most communities, the role of women is central to society in Aceh. Female guerrillas with assault rifles and Islamic headscarves have their own units within the Free Aceh independence movement. It is women who are the custodians of traditional ceremonies. In Lampuuk, at least, all of this is at risk of being lost.

“I don’t understand all the ceremonies, because that is what the old women know,” says Atiyah. “But the old women have all died. In a marriage ceremony, for example, women have many rituals but perhaps we cannot hold those any more. I am afraid of losing our culture, but at the moment we have too much else to think of.”

A team of French doctors from the relief agency Médecins du Monde visits Lam Lhom every other day. Having treated wounds and respiratory infections, they are now seeing signs of the invisible injuries inflicted by the wave.

“First there is the individual loss,” says Dr Guy Caussé. “Then there is the guilt. People talk about how they could not grip a child’s hand tightly enough, and wonder why they were able to move more quickly than their dead brothers and sisters.”

Even after the houses are rebuilt, towns like Lampuuk all over Aceh will lie in psychological ruins.


TOPICS: Extended News; Foreign Affairs; Miscellaneous; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: 72virgins; aceh; indonesia; islam; tidalwave; tsunami
Is Allah outsourcing to Indonesia for Islam's Virgins?
1 posted on 01/11/2005 11:17:03 PM PST by XHogPilot
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To: XHogPilot
More than in most communities, the role of women is central to society in Aceh. Female guerrillas with assault rifles and Islamic headscarves have their own units within the Free Aceh independence movement...In Lampuuk, at least, all of this is at risk of being lost.

So, besides the men running without regard to the women & children,they also 'risk' losing their Women's Auxilliary Mujahideen? And can't find mates to breed a new generation of fighters?

Satan...uh, I mean Allah must be laughing like he always does when he betrays his followers.

2 posted on 01/11/2005 11:50:04 PM PST by ApplegateRanch (The world needs more horses, and fewer Jackasses!)
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To: ApplegateRanch
I agree its a stupidly written article but the main gist of it is not so funny.....

the greatest lose of this tragedy is that it has killed off perhaps a large chunk of the next generation as well as diminished the ability to enlarge that generation....

3 posted on 01/11/2005 11:55:37 PM PST by cherry
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To: XHogPilot

Another big factor I'd bet on is that Muslim women have virtually no chance to learn to swim.


4 posted on 01/12/2005 12:05:27 AM PST by DB (©)
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To: XHogPilot
I am afraid of losing our culture, but at the moment we have too much else to think of.

Good perspective. Reminds me of Liberals in the US who prefer to sacrifice the country than a few freedoms in order to defeat Islamo-Facsists.

5 posted on 01/12/2005 12:12:56 AM PST by DTogo (U.S. out of the U.N. & U.N out of the U.S.)
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To: ApplegateRanch; SunkenCiv; Mo1
Female guerrillas with assault rifles and Islamic headscarves have their own units within the Free Aceh independence movement. It is women who are the custodians of traditional ceremonies. In Lampuuk, at least, all of this is at risk of being lost.

We are to lament the loss of the tradition of the female guerilla?
Does this writer even have a clue of the brutality of the massacres of Christians in Aceh recently by machete-weilding Islamic guerillas?

And STOP calling genocidal terrorism "independence movements." BARF

6 posted on 01/12/2005 12:22:25 AM PST by ValerieUSA
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To: DB

I bet you're right...I hadn't thought about that.

Pretty hard to swim wearing a chador or burka.


7 posted on 01/12/2005 12:43:54 AM PST by somedaysoon
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To: Calpernia; Velveeta

Ping


8 posted on 01/12/2005 2:16:28 AM PST by nw_arizona_granny (The enemy within, will be found in the "Communist Manifesto 1963", you are living it today.)
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To: XHogPilot

I bet that is one Island full of men who now fending for themselves will never take a woman's work for her family for granted again.

Irony.


9 posted on 01/12/2005 2:21:55 AM PST by oceanperch (2005 is going to be an Awesome Year, IMO)
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To: XHogPilot

Anyone remember a pre-tsunami thread about a report suggesting that global warming would hurt women most (because, when the coastal flooding starts, women won't have the upper body strength to swim to safety like men will).

Looks like those loons now have validation for their premise.


10 posted on 01/12/2005 2:33:51 AM PST by Larry Lucido
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To: oceanperch
I bet that is one Island full of men who now fending for themselves will never take a woman's work for her family for granted again.

That happened to me after my dear wife broke her leg.

I ended up hiring a maid, and a chef who prepared pre-cooked meals for the week every Monday.

Wife's leg is now fine, but we still have the maid.

-ccm

11 posted on 01/12/2005 5:11:21 AM PST by ccmay (Question Diversity)
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To: DB

Bingo...you can't swim very well covered from head to foot in miles of cloth so that those noble Muslim men aren't tempted to attack you because of your seductive ankles.
They didn't deserve their women. Let them now do women's work.


12 posted on 01/12/2005 5:18:01 AM PST by kittymyrib
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To: XHogPilot

A terrible story. So sad.

I wonder how much they appreciate the new UN condoms.


13 posted on 01/12/2005 5:20:49 AM PST by ko_kyi
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To: XHogPilot
Female guerrillas with assault rifles and Islamic headscarves have their own units within the Free Aceh independence movement.

Why is this nonsense even in the article?

14 posted on 01/12/2005 5:31:26 AM PST by Gritty ("earthworms are far more valuable than people"-Paul Watson, Sierra Club Board)
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To: kittymyrib
They didn't deserve their women. Let them now do women's work.

But they won't. They will demand that Western aid volunteers do it.

15 posted on 01/12/2005 5:35:57 AM PST by Alouette (Abu Mazen: Arafat after a shower and shave)
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To: cherry
"the greatest lose of this tragedy is that it has killed off perhaps a large chunk of the next generation as well as diminished the ability to enlarge that generation...."

It's not that bad when you think about it. The next generation of what? brainwashed Jihadists? There is no need to worry. Some of the men will just put on lipstick, Others will go and kidnap some of the Christian Dhimmi's from other regions to use as sex slaves and child bearers. It's the Islamic way.

16 posted on 01/12/2005 9:18:49 AM PST by Nuzcruizer
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To: ValerieUSA

"Traditional ceremonies" refers to "beheadings". ;')


17 posted on 01/12/2005 9:45:03 AM PST by SunkenCiv (the US population in the year 2100 will exceed a billion, perhaps even three billion.)
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