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Honor Killing' Reflects Dark Side of Women's Struggles in Afghanistan
http://abcnews.go.com/International/story?id=986082&page=1 ^

Posted on 08/02/2005 7:57:18 AM PDT by Millee

She was a pretty, sophisticated young TV star with the controversial, wildly popular channel broadcast in war-torn Afghanistan. Then her killing sent shockwaves through the media and across the world.

Shaima Rezayee, 24, an MTV-style veejay for Afghanistan's popular independent Tolo TV channel, was slain in her home by a bullet at close range. For a time, her two brothers were held in custody for what was being called an honor killing. They have since been released. Despite several attempts to reach the Afghanistan Interior Ministry for an update on the case, it remains unclear if an investigation is ongoing.

Rezayee had been the center of controversy in conservative circles in Afghanistan since she tossed aside her burqa and wore Western-style clothing on air, with a headscarf and a swath of her shiny, carefully styled black hair. She was fired as host of "Hop" on Tolo TV in March. The reasons given have ranged from tardiness to complaints from the public over her appearance and demeanor.

(Excerpt) Read more at abcnews.go.com ...


TOPICS: Crime/Corruption; News/Current Events; War on Terror
KEYWORDS: afghanistan; honorkilling; islam; muslimwomen
21st century woman trapped in a 7th century mentality. Sigh...
1 posted on 08/02/2005 7:57:20 AM PDT by Millee
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To: Millee

Was just reading a week or so ago about the young girls and women going back to school in Afghanistan. Apparently, more schools are being open and more females are back to getting an education. A young girl or woman receiving an education, of course, was forbidden under Taliban rule.

In these countries, change comes slowly, and it often starts and stops...sometimes it regresses, then comes back. I'd like to think that, if democracy takes hold in this region, changes will come.

It's sad that it's too late for Ms. Rezayee.


2 posted on 08/02/2005 8:02:08 AM PDT by fatnotlazy
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To: Millee

Sounds like if she were going to wear western style clothes then she should have got out of Afghanistan.


3 posted on 08/02/2005 8:04:15 AM PDT by caver (Yes, I did crawl out of a hole in the ground.)
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To: Millee

I'm not sure I like the use of the term "conservative" in this context. These throwbacks are adhering to a pre-medieval theocratic rule, yes, but let's not give the modern day liberals yet another object to throw in their tantrums. I'm waiting for this to mutate into "right wing" or even "neocon". Sheesh.


4 posted on 08/02/2005 8:05:30 AM PDT by Wally_Kalbacken (Seldom right, but never in doubt.)
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To: Millee

F'in savages.


5 posted on 08/02/2005 8:05:56 AM PDT by Hotspur
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To: Millee
If you want to appreciate what Afghani women have faced in Afgnanistan, and evidently still face to a large extent, rent the 2003 movie Osama.
6 posted on 08/02/2005 8:13:24 AM PDT by Maceman (Pro Se Defendant from Hell)
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To: Wally_Kalbacken

Writers profound bias and intentional slandering are deliberate here.

Conservative is very inappropriately used but .. deliberately.

Writer is trying to link this radical throw back in behavior...honor killing ....with conservative and religious...so that when they accuse Christian Conservatives of wanting to establish a "Theocracy" the link is already established in the readers mind.

Conservative =Religious Extremist,
Conservative= Repressive Behavior.


7 posted on 08/02/2005 8:47:02 AM PDT by TASMANIANRED (Democrats haven't had a new idea since Karl Marx.)
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To: Millee
This type of thing makes me sick to my stomach. How anyone could kill their own daughter/mother to regain honor in the name of religion is just beyond me. It really does illustrate just how dark and twisted some of the more extreme teachings of Islams are.
8 posted on 08/02/2005 9:09:59 AM PDT by Ksnavely (Just bought my Club Gitmo Mug..can't wait to show it off!!)
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To: Ksnavely

I guess it's easy if you're raised to consider your mothers/sisters/daughters as important as a house fly. Sickening indeed.


9 posted on 08/02/2005 9:31:47 AM PDT by Millee (Earth First! We'll log the other planets later!)
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To: Millee

I'm going out on a limb here because I didn't read the entire article and what I write may get me flamed but I think we need to rethink how we deal with societies like Afghanistan and Iraq and Iran.

In this information age, it would be difficult but I think we should discourage people like Ms. Rezayee from trying to drag her society too far too fast into the modern age. Cultures take time to ripen. That doesn't mean she should have to wait thirteen centuries for it to catch up, but the work has to be incremental to be successful. Tragically, it only managed to get her killed and likely discouraged many other young women from trying anything similar.

This is one of my beefs with many of the do-gooders running around the Third World. They encourage those people to adopt the same values and morals of our society, especially values such as independence and arrogance without realizing that those values in our own society have been uncoupled from their restraining values of family, religion and honor. So they have taken the worse of our society, which only works now because we still have a substantial base of the traditional values to absorb the shock, and preach them to people whose societies are not so accommodating.

For example, divorce is so easy in this country partly because we have a culture where we have education, mobility, child care, supermarkets, malls and a thousand other conveniences that make it possible to get along without a spouse or supporting family. Preach the same independence to a Third World society and disaster happens (not that divorce isn't a disaster here, too, but that's another discussion). The point is that much of what we consider the perfect society today took centuries if not millennia to prepare the soil. Our Bill of Rights springs from the fertilizer of monotheism that accepts all mankind as brothers under one Father. Our ability to put ourselves first and leave spouses, parents and children to fend for themselves springs from our technological achievements. One could go on and on.

These values are no more translatable than most plants which grow only in certain soils and climates. So I hope the lesson from Ms. Rezayee's death is that change takes time. It is a lesson that today's liberals need to learn as they try shoving abortion and gay marriage down the throat of our culture. Not that I want to see that happen, but there is a lesson about preparing the soil and how, if you don't want to go to that trouble, then you resort to dictatorships--political or judicial, like we're seeing here in this country today.

Well, that's my rant. Please don't interpret any of this as justifying an honor killing or anything like it. I just think we need to deal with reality instead of fantasy when it comes to encouraging change in our society or anyone else's society.


10 posted on 08/02/2005 10:38:28 AM PDT by caseinpoint (IMHO)
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