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In reply to the discussion: Her Father Shot Her in the Head, as an ‘Honor Killing’ [View all]prayin4rain
(2,065 posts)WHETHER it wins or not, the Oscar nominee with the greatest impact saving lives of perhaps thousands of girls may be one youve never heard of.
It stars not Leonardo DiCaprio but a real-life 19-year-old Pakistani woman named Saba Qaiser. Her odyssey began when she fell in love against her familys wishes and ran off to marry her boyfriend. Hours after the marriage, her father and uncle sweet-talked her into their car and took her to a spot along a riverbank to murder her for her defiance an honor killing.
First they beat Saba, then her uncle held her as her own father pointed a pistol at her head and pulled the trigger. Blood spewed, Saba collapsed and her father and uncle packed her body into a large sack and threw it into the river to sink. They then drove away, thinking they had restored the familys good name.
Incredibly, Saba was unconscious but alive. She had jerked her head as the gun went off, and the bullet tore through the left side of her face but didnt kill her. The river water revived her, and she clawed her way out of the sack and crawled onto land. She staggered toward a gasoline station, and someone called for help.
About every 90 minutes, an honor killing unfolds somewhere in the world, usually in a Muslim country. Pakistan alone has more than 1,000 a year, and the killers often go unpunished.
Watching the documentary about Saba, A Girl in the River: The Price of Forgiveness, I kept thinking that just as in the 19th century the central moral challenge for the world was slavery, and in the 20th century it was totalitarianism, in this century the foremost moral issue is the abuse and oppression that is the lot of so many women and girls around the world.
I dont know whether A Girl in the River will win an Oscar in its category, short subject documentary, but it is already making a difference. Citing the film, Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif of Pakistan has promised to change the countrys laws so as to crack down on honor killings.
Sabas story underscores how the existing law lets people literally get away with murder when honor is the excuse. After doctors saved Sabas life as police officers guarded the door so her father didnt return to finish the job she was determined to prosecute her father and uncle.
They should be shot in public in an open market, she told the filmmaker, Sharmeen Obaid-Chinoy, so that such a thing never happens again.
The police arrested Sabas father, Maqsood, and the uncle, Muhammad, and their defense was that they did the right thing.
She took away our honor, Maqsood said from his jail cell. If you put one drop of piss in a gallon of milk, the whole thing gets destroyed. Thats what she has done.
So I said, No, I will kill you myself.
Maqsood said that after shooting Saba he went home and told his wife, I have gone and killed your daughter. He added: My wife cried. What else could she do? I am her husband. She is just my wife.
Perpetrators of honor killings often are not prosecuted because Pakistani law allows families of victims to forgive a killing. So a man kills his daughter, the rest of the family forgives him, and hes off the hook.
Tremendous pressure was applied to Saba by community elders to pardon her father and uncle. In the end, her husbands older brother the head of her new family told her to forgive and move on. There is no other way, he said. We have to live in the same neighborhood.
Saba complied, and her father and uncle were released from prison. After this incident, everyone says I am more respected, her father boasted. I can proudly say that for generations to come none of my descendants will ever think of doing what Saba did. The families still live near each other, although the father insists he will not try again to kill Saba.
The way to reduce honor killings is to end the impunity. Saba tried to do her part, and lets hope Prime MinisterSharif does indeed end the legal system of forgiveness.
I wanted to start a national discourse about the issue, says Obaid-Chinoy, the films director. Until we send people to jail and make examples of them, honor killings will continue.
Since 9/11, the United States has spent billions of dollars reshaping Afghanistan and Pakistan with the military toolbox; I suspect we would have achieved more if we had relied to a greater extent on the education and womens empowerment toolboxes.
A starting point would be to encourage governments to protect teenage girls from fathers who want to murder them. Chipping away at this broad pattern of gender injustice is in the interest of all of us. It is our centurys great unfinished business.
And a link in the article. .....
Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif vowed Pakistan would eradicate evil honour killings as he congratulated director Sharmeen Obaid-Chinoy on her Oscar nomination for a harrowing documentary on the practice.
A Girl in the River: The Price of Forgiveness, which follows the story of a rare survivor, was nominated in the documentary short category of the Academy Awards on Thursday.
Sharmeen Obaid-Chinoys documentary bags Oscar nomination
Hundreds of women are murdered by their relatives in Pakistan each year on the grounds of defending family honour.
Their male murderers are then pardoned by relatives under the countrys controversial Islamic blood money laws that allow murderers to escape punishment.
A statement from the prime ministers office late Thursday offered Chinoy, who made history in 2012 when she won Pakistans first Oscar for another documentary, the premiers congratulations.
Honour killings, the theme of the film, afflict several segments of Pakistani society, it quoted Sharif as saying.
He expressed the governments commitment to rid Pakistan of this evil by bringing in appropriate legislation, the statement continued, adding that Chinoys insights could prove helpful.
Two women murdered by in-laws in honour killing in Rahim Yar Khan
Chinoy said on Twitter that she was delighted that PM Nawaz had made the commitment.
Next step is to push all the politicians to call a joint session & get the anti honor crime bill passed that has lapsed in parliament! she said in another tweet.
There is no Honor in Honor Killing- It is not part of our religion or culture- It is a stain on our society, she said.
Chinoy was feted across Pakistan in 2012 when she won the countrys first Oscar for Saving Face, a 40-minute documentary that exposed the horrors endured by women who survive devastating acid attacks.
It focuses on two women, Zakia and Rukhsana, as they fight to rebuild their lives after being attacked by their husbands, and British Pakistani plastic surgeon Mohammad Jawad who tries to help repair their shattered faces.
Sharmeen Obaid-Chinoys A Girl in the River shortlisted for Oscar
Acid attacks, which disfigure and often blind their overwhelmingly female victims, have long been used to settle personal or family scores in Pakistan, with hundreds of cases reported each year.
The attacks along with honour killings fit a wider pattern of eroding womens rights in the conservative Muslim nation, where women are frequently treated as second-class citizens and there is no law against domestic violence