|
KurdistanObserver.com
Culture Clash For Returning Kurdish Women
Many young women who have lived abroad find it
hard to adjust to social strictures as well as economic difficulties when they
come back to Iraqi Kurdistan.
By Aziz Mahmoud in Sulaimaniyah (ICR No. 154,
29-Nov-05)
After six years in Germany, Fenk Kamaran
returned with her family to Sulaimaniyah last year. But she now finds herself
fantasising about going back to a country she didn't much like.
"They called us 'black heads'," said Kamaran, 20, "and they blamed everything
bad that happened on the 'black heads'. We returned to Kurdistan because we
couldn’t get along with them. They don't behave like us, and even though we are
Kurds, we couldn’t live as Kurds."
Yet recurring electricity cuts, the shortage of water and what she sees as the
restricted freedom enjoyed by young women in northern Iraq are often too much
for Kamaran to bear. She is now weighing whether to leave her family and return
to Germany.
Kurdish families living in the West have begun returning to Sulaimaniyah, widely
considered the safest city in Iraq, to resume their lives in their homeland.
The adjustment from Europe and North America is particularly difficult for
Kurdish girls and young women, who have often been torn between the conservative
values inside the home and the western way of life outside it.
Many have returned together with their families, who did not want them to stay
abroad on their own, fearing they would adopt western values and abandon their
traditional values.
Young women interviewed by IWPR said they were still caught between the two
worlds. And as they get older, they are torn between remaining with their loved
ones and seeking opportunities and freedoms that they do not believe exist in
Iraqi Kurdistan.
Shnyar Jabar, 18, attends the Gasha ("shining") school, a private
English-language institution for returnees in Sulaimaniyah. The school, which
offers elementary to preparatory level education, opened last year and has about
300 students.
Jabar's father decided in 2003 that the family should return to Sulaimaniyah
after living in the Netherlands for 10 years. She wants to study fashion design
but like many girls at the school, feels that schooling in Iraqi Kurdistan is
not on a par with education in the West.
"My living conditions were much better there, but because my father decided to
return I had to agree with him," said Jabar. There was no question of her
remaining behind in the Netherlands, as "they were worried about me getting into
trouble".
Bakr Rashid, 45, a taxi driver in Sulaimaniyah, returned in 2004 after living
for a decade in Sweden. As the father of two girls, he decided to come back
because he did not believe that Sweden was good for them.
"Kurdistan is better for us, because in Europe the girls might deviate morally
and culturally when they grow up," he said. "We returned so that we wouldn't
lose my girls. We couldn't behave like the Swedes."
Binayee Abas' blonde hair and green eyes attract unwelcome attention whenever
she enters Sulaimaniyah's market. The youngest of four children, she lived in
the United States for 14 of her 17 years.
Her mother has hidden her short skirts and all the other clothes that are
popular with teenage girls in California, where they lived. Although
Sulaimaniyah is one of the most liberal cities in Iraq when it comes to the way
women dress, Abas is frustrated that she can't wear what she likes or walk
around the market alone.
She speaks with disdain about the stares and insults she gets, "I'm sick of
people looking at me. If you wear something different, people look down on you,
and you cannot block their gaze…. When I speak to my sister in English, they
think it's weird."
Abas said she was an alien in the United States, but she also feels like a
stranger here.
"I can't live in Kurdistan," she said. "After I complete my studies, I will
return to the States. The American lifestyle is now part of me."
Bekhal Rauf, 47, had the reverse experience. She lived in Britain for three
years but never really adjusted, and has returned to Sulaimaniyah to head the
nursing department in the technological institute.
Rauf, who has been engaged for two years, said that although she cannot get
married because of the rising cost of housing in Sulaimaniyah, and she suffers
without electricity and water, she still prefers life here.
"Europe doesn't suit Kurdish women," she said. "European family values are quite
different from ours, which is why I returned."
Aziz Mahmoud is an IWPR trainee journalist in Sulaimaniyah. |
|