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Women in a Maze ” second-place winning essay in the recent HAMSA essay contest”

This is the second-place winning essay in the recent HAMSA essay contest, written by Ahmad Ghashmary, the founder and director of LAHA (The New Mideast initiative for women rights).
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On August 31, 2006, Jordanian Supreme Court suspended Fatima Habib, 35, a Jordanian female judge, from her position as a judge. The decision came two days after she had sentenced Saleh Radwan, 27, to death for killing his younger sister Dana, 21, when he discovered that she has a male friend and that she has an affair with him.

“My sister dishonored the reputation of the family for having an affair with a friend,” answered Saleh when asked once by a journalist about the reason of the murder.

Most judges in Jordan were against the sentence and asked the court to cancel it and appoint a male judge in order to do justice for the dishonored man. “What would we expect from a woman judging a man for killing another woman. Of course she would have stabbed him herself if she could,” said Mohammad Awwad, the attorney appointed to defend the murderer.

Everyone has expressed their relief after the decision of the court.

Fatima Habib is believed to be biased to women because she has thrown behind her back any consideration for the “fit of fury” defense in “honor” crimes cases, even when the murder was clearly premeditated. So it is seen in Jordan, and everyone is satisfied, as they believe the penal code should condone these cases by providing the murderer with reduced sentences. But is this justice?

Manar Salameh, 21, a friend of the deceased said with tears: Dana was an angel. I can’t believe she is murdered, she was in love with Ayman and they were to marry after graduation. Oh! No we’re not savages, we’re civilized.”

Many other friends of the victim said that Dana had not done anything wrong, and that her relationship with Ayman was as pure as any other relationship of friendship and courtly love. “It seems that the story reported to her brother, by envious people, was so much distorted because the crime happened while Dana and I were strolling in the campus,” said Ayman who was kept under protection all the time lest the dishonored family harm him out of uncontrolled fury.

Fatima Habib considers the decision complete barbarism and primitivism. She adds that it will take us ages to convince people here that women are human beings, and they are as wise as men if not wiser sometimes. Fatima would never put her hands up and surrender. She said that she has the right to be a judge or even a prime minister without doing any harm to the criteria of justice.

“Extremists in our midst spread propaganda claiming that womens liberation is a western thought aiming at eradicating Islamic morals. This propaganda is false, and its purpose is to confuse you and justify acts of extremism against women. Those extremists know nothing about Islam because one of the major messages of this religion is to defend women and give them their rights to be as equal as men,” says Fatima.

I think the court including those self-centered men of law and the society as a whole are the murderers of Dana.”

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  1. From Die Zeit - joerglau | Jan 8, 2008

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