An Honor Killing In Algeria
A moving and tragic tale, "A crime against my neighbor in Algeria. June 1986," by Kahina:
Sara was 20, just finished her first year of collage in Batna. She was in love with a boy from school. But as her father had arranged a marriage for her with a Muslim man. Sara was to be married as soon as she turned 20 to this man who was 53 years old. His wife had died giving birth at home....The day came for the marriage of Sara to General Djbar. Sara was preparing herself in her room, crying the whole time. Her mother was tormented that she had no say in her daughter's marriage or life because Sara's father had already arranged the marriage.
Sara's mother went down to start to prepare the henna for the festival. Sara packed her bags and jumped out the window. She ran to our house, where I would transport her to Constantine. I drove so fast, I felt like my heart was going to explode. We met her lover in the center of the city, where he had gotten papers for him and Sara saying they were married in order to get Sara into Tunis and then into France. They papers were forged, but were the only way we could get her out safe.
I drove home so that no one would miss me. It was a good 3 hour drive back to the mountains of Aures. Once I arrived everyone questioned me. I used the excuse that I went to get a gift. They saw the gift in the auto and did not question me any more.
But then I heard screaming coming from Sara's house. Everyone went to see what happened. We found Sara's mother black with bruises on her face and arms. Her husband had beaten her because Sara was gone. How was he going to explain this to the family and the man whom she was to marry? It was a disgrace to his honor.
Read the rest at the link.
About honor killings, they are not to be punished under (barbaric) Islamic law. Robert Spencer writes:
"...a manual of Islamic law certified by Al-Azhar as a reliable guide to Sunni orthodoxy [over 80% of the world's Muslims are Sunni] says that "retaliation is obligatory against anyone who kills a human being purely intentionally and without right." However, "not subject to retaliation" is "a father or mother (or their fathers or mothers) for killing their offspring, or offspring's offspring." ('Umdat al-Salik o1.1-2)."In other words, someone who kills his child incurs no legal penalty under Islamic law.
...Why does it matter that the practice of honor killing has Islamic sanction? Because if the roots of honor killing are never discussed and always ignored, the practice will never stop. Until the Islamic roots of the practice are discussed openly and human rights groups begin calling for reform, honor killings will continue in the Islamic world -- and in Muslim communities in the West.
And the idea that this is a racial issue or racial term is absurd. Islam is not a race, and the victims of honor killing are Muslim women. It is racist now to want to protect Muslim women from being murdered?







And these people want to participate in the civilized world?
Jim P. at August 28, 2010 4:37 AM
Actually, honor killing goes back far before islam. It has tribal roots in the pre-islamic Arab world.
What's in the koran is merely a post-hoc rationalization to allow the practice to continue unabated.
I don't know if that's worse or not.
brian at August 28, 2010 6:58 AM
Islam is not merely a religion. It is a political philosophy with religious overtones, similar to the Nazis. Both are equally acceptable to me.
MarkD at August 28, 2010 8:03 AM
Its worse brian, because it gives "devine" clemency to the worst impulses of our stone age mentality.
Without such 'moral' justification the middle east and the arabs and persians wouldnt be such a small minded cruel people and area. Theyd have developed at the same pace as the rest of the world.
Indeed they may have outpaced Europe while their culture stagnated under the leach of the catholic church
lujlp at August 28, 2010 8:44 AM
This just shows once again that you can get away with anything if you encase a practice or behavior, no matter how horrible, barbaric, stupid or archaic, within a religious wrapping.
Tony at August 28, 2010 12:58 PM
And yet, Ramadhan is celebrated in the White House, and Michael Bloomberg (may he be sent to Israel to know what it's really like!) supports the Ground Zero Mosque. Go figure.
mpetrie98 at August 28, 2010 7:45 PM
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