I read an interesting article in the New York Times about how many Afghan families are fooling society into thinking that they have a son by treating treating their daughters like boys. They are not referred to as son or daughter, but instead "bacha posh" which means "dressed up as a boy."
In Afghan, boys are seen as much more important and are highly prized. Mothers face immense pressure to conceive a male child, and people will pity them if they have only daughters. Mothers who don't want to have another child, like a woman named Azita Raffat, who wanted instead to advance her political career, decided to change her daughter into a son. She introduced the idea of being a boy by saying, "Do you want to ... do more fun things like boys do, like bicycling, soccer, and cricket?"
The gender roles in Afghanistan are much more pronounced and strict than they are in the U.S., and these girls-turned-boys are able to practice "masculine" traits such as athleticism, aggressiveness, and defiance without fear of breaking cultural norms. Mrs. Raffat says of her daughter, "[She has] adopted all the boys' traits very soon ... the attitude, the talking. She has nothing of a girl in her." This of course implies that "girl" traits are submissiveness, obedience, and subdued.
It was interesting to read about how these girls, raised as boys, had to eventually change back as they went through puberty and their bodies changed. They had to start wearing burqas and learn how to socialize with women. The girls interviewed in this article were not particularly happy about changing back. A woman named Shukria Siddiqui was raised a boy until her parents arranged a marriage for her. She refers to her male years as her "best times" because she was able to be more outspoken. The man she married allows her to wear trousers around the house sometimes because he knows it makes her happier (cue for the "aww"). He once tried to beat her, but never tried it again after she hit him back. Retaliation is seen as a masculine trait and is taboo for a woman to exhibit.
Unlike in the United States where defying gender roles is becoming more of the social norm and can have more to do with personal choice and preference, in Afghanistan, your gender identity can make or break your economic welfare. A ten year old girl named Miina dresses like a boy and works to earn money for her family. Being a boy is the only way for her to work, as girls are not allowed to. Having a son also increases the family's status in society, if only temporarily.
To be a male in Afghanistan is to command respect, be able to work and earn money, to have more freedoms. One girl-turned-boy says she would rather be a boy and doesn't want to change back: "People use bad words for girls. They scream at them on the streets. When I see that, I don't want to be a girl. When I am a boy, they don't speak to me like that." She is the same person; it is just her gender that decides how society will treat her.
Pictures here.
This phenomenon is amazing. The gender inequality is unreal. It sounds like women are worthless in Afghanistan ((IRONY: ..except when they produce boys of course. One of the thoughts in this article that stands out the most to me is this one: "It is a commonly held belief among less educated Afghans that the mother can determine the sex of her unborn child, so she is blamed if she gives birth to a daughter." because even when a man is completely responsible the woman is often blamed. )) which is why I found it amazing that this trend is even possible. If there is such a gender role divide in Afghan culture, i would expect it to be severely punishable to try to pass off a girl as a boy.
ReplyDelete->Yes, the article mentions that people are secretive about doing this with their kids; and some correspondents in this article withheld their identity
BUT
->when Manoush/Mehran returned to school, it "went by without much reaction by her fellow students." That is, they knew she breached the gender boundaries. They knew she was female. And they didn't mind that she was now a "boy"?! Considering what I thought I knew about Afghani culture, this is astounding for me.
Another instance: when the headmistress found out that Manoush/Mehran was a girl, she said only, "It was quite a surprise for me."
This seems like a MILD reaction for someone who is used to a culture with extremely rigid gender rules.
HOW CAN THE GENDER DIVIDE BE SO DEEP AND YET SO SEEMINGLY EASY ENOUGH TO ACCEPTABLY CROSS??
(This is not rhetorical. This is a serious question. if anyone knows more about Afghan culture than I do, please comment back; i'm really curious about this apparent incongruence.)
I found this article interesting as well, it was a huge piece in the Sunday New York Times.
ReplyDeleteI wonder if this has anything to do with the nature v. nurture argument. If you are a little girl (wherever it may be that you are from) and are raised as such, will you feel a connection to the gender? If you are one of these "bacha posh" do you feel more of a connection to your "male side" rather than your "female side"? It could be that this phenomenon is in fact encouraging gender-bending and (consequentially) homosexuality. This is highly strange when considering that punishment for homosexuality has been as extreme as death in the past.
ReplyDeleteWhat I would also like to know is this: Do these girls face repercussions for posing as boys?