I was stunned by the incident, stood there in disgust with a shared sense of humiliation and hurt besides the woman who was crying and explaining something to the crew in French. What shocked me the most was not only the incident but that I would never have imagined to see such a thing in a European airline.
The apathy and indifference of the passengers in general was deplorable and extremely upsetting. To be frank, it was worse than what I would expect in Pakistan. I am sure if a woman is beaten up in a public space like this, many will come forward to protect her. I realised how deeply entrenched patriarchal and individualistic values have shaped the western psyche. Everyone on that plane, passengers, the crew and even the woman herself behaved in such a typical and gender insensitive manner, which was terrible.
The indifference of the passengers was appalling. Perhaps the assumption was that if a man hits a woman in public, she must be related to him. Thus, it’s a private matter and no one should interfere. Even though hitting and beating is a crime in law in western countries, no one felt the moral obligation to do something to make sure that the man who committed a crime in public did not get away with it. I wondered had he beaten up another man, whether the passengers would have reacted the same way?
The Air France crew seemed incapable of handling the situation. They acted like dumb spectators and did not act at all. They let all the passengers leave including the man who committed the crime and then started inquiring from a woman about the incident. When I asked members of the crew why the man wasn’t detained, they became defensive. One of them quite simply lied, saying that they did not see what happened. Another said that the passengers should have done something about it. It was quite obvious that the situation had taken them by surprise and they didn’t seem to know how to respond. Either they were not trained, or they did not have the gender capacity to deal with such a situation in a professional manner. In a letter that I wrote later to the airline explaining what had happened, I strongly recommended that all crew be given gender training.
The woman who was violated also behaved in a typical manner. She started crying instead of crying out for help and demanding the arrest of the man who had hit her. The sense of humiliation perhaps was so deep for her that she could not think beyond the incident itself, as often is the case with battered women.
Subsequently, I could not but help think about the woman and the child who were travelling with the man. Both quietly followed him out of the plane. I was thinking what kind of life that woman must have had with such a man. A person who could behave in such an aggressive and violent manner with a woman who is a stranger to him, how would he behave with a woman with whom he has a relationship and a sense of ownership? And the poor child — what a role model he has to follow in his life.
The gory incident symbolises the collective psyche of the West and this is one of a singular lack of gender and political consciousness. The incident is a sorry reminder to those who claim that Western societies have entered in a post-feminism phase. Women in the West may have a certain amount of autonomy to make choices in their lives because of their ability to earn. However, as they are concentrated mainly in the secondary sector of the market doing lowly and low-paid jobs, their economic dependence on men continues. The inferior economic status of women continues to shape their gender consciousness and reinforce their dependence on men in a material and ideological sense in the industrialised world. The feminist movement in the West has lost its momentum and many women in the developed world seem to live under the illusion that they have fought and won the battle against patriarchy. This is clearly contrary to the reality that a western woman faces in her daily life.
This incident reminded me of gender issues in Pakistan. While away from the country, I managed to follow the way International Women’s Day was celebrated in Pakistan at the official as well as unofficial levels. This was contrary to the West where the day came and went by without anyone really taking note of it. There was no notice of it, either at the societal or the government level. Perhaps the lack of interest in commemorating International Women’s Day in the West shows that there is a false sense of security vis-à-vis gender equality, with citizens falsely believing that men and women in the West are equal. By and large, I felt that gender inequality was considered an issue that plagues only developing countries and that the so-called developed world had overcome it.
What I experienced on that Air France flight is a reminder to all of us that patriarchy is a global phenomenon and a continuing challenge to human societies and the women of the world. The material and social basis of women’s oppression and exploitation lies in the dual system of patriarchy and capitalism, which thrives on the free domestic labour of women. Therefore, the women of the world should realise that the battle for gender equality cannot be fought and won at the national level alone.
Published in The Express Tribune, March 19th, 2013.
COMMENTS (61)
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women are weak every where it may be France,or other places. only pakistan is on the target of western media.
@Ali S: I don't know any woman here asking for "special rights." I agree often guys end up getting the short end of the stick in divorce and I don't agree with it. Neither do many self respecting women who believe in fairness. That's not to say some feminazi's don't exist, but that's not the majority of them by any means. I don't want princess treatment because I'm a girl; I want my gender to be irrelevant when it makes sense to do so.
@G. Din: Your argument lacks logic. I don't know how it is where you live, but here, if you are hired on a SALARY basis, your actual QUALITY of work is not taken into account when salary is initially chosen as they cannot yet know before hiring you. Your past experience and credentials are looked at. Now say if you have consistent poor ratings and poor quality work after being employed for some time, you might get reprimanded or even fired, but they do not deduct your salary on that basis. And for the sake of argument let's say they did deduct salary for poor quality work, then there would also be men who are paid unfairly low wages. Gender would not even be a factor. The fact that it is means women need to be pushier in demanding fair wages for quality work.
As far as women being equally intelligent, I don't think it, I know it. Take a look around you. Go to any college campus, or school building, or office building here and do a compare and contrast. Fair pay ought to be merit based, plain and simple. I don't now why the appendage one has in their pants, or lack thereof, is a consideration when deciding wages for positions women fill as well as men. Like I said, an uncomplicated issue people have muddied.
How many women or girls in the west have been shot because they want an education?
What you describe is a rare occurrence - my guess is the guy was either drunk and/or of a foreign background. Either way, chances of charges being pressed against him are very high - the same cannot be said about here. Equal rights for women have been achieved in the West - at least in the legal sense - by the 1980s. And while the rest of the world still has to catch up, what Western so-called 'feminists' demand these days aren't equal rights, but special rights for women, which is gender discrimination in itself. Don't take my word for it, ask any Westerner male going through a divorce.
Your evil manner does not amaze me at all.
@Razi: your stupidity amazes me.
@gp65
Madam, there is hardly anything on which I agree with you. In this case too, let's agree to disagree.
@ Samia The problem is not that writers should be open to positive or negative reactions but that the commentators themselves should have some semblance of objectivity, consistency and balance in their comments. But if one consistently sees certain commentators using a particular lens, having a single-point agenda, and commenting with a thinly-veiled bias against a people, then the least one can do is to point that out. If you want to call that bringing victim-hood and religion into the discussion, then may I ask why do some people feel the uncontrollable urge to defend the 'West' at every cost, especially if they happen to live their?
And my statement that you have quoted does not "exemplify generalization". If you had read a little closely, you could have fathomed that I was referring to a few Indians here. So nice attempt but an attempt at best!
@Jinnah Lover Trust me, it's way better in the West, mark my words, bro/sis ... You seem to live in a superficial world, hence, your name --> Jinnah lover haha
@umar: Please tell us just where you live in THE WEST where "no women is free", and please also elaborate why you think that!!!!
@Nobody: to ahmad " In a white collar setting where mind is more important over body, a woman who puts in equal hours is to receive equal pay. If she doesn’t get it, she should demand it." How are you sure that a woman's mind is as good as a man's or vice-versa? Then, quality of mind is only one factor that plays into deciding what compensation should be paid. Ultimate arbiter is what are the results. Whether those results come from the mind of a person or his/her social skills or the intuitions gained over a long period or combination thereof is beside the point. So, putting in equal hours does not, per se, entitle one to equal wages. Incidentally, the incident described by the author is rather peculiar. There is something called "citizen's arrest". You can place a person under a citizen's arrest if you inform him so. If he/she does not submit, he/she is liable to be prosecuted. It is especially so in a scenario such as this where a pilot of the plane enjoys this privilege. May be French don't have it or they just don't care.
I'm living in West and no women is free. They are just playing and lieyng for their own case.
@Razi: "All those Indians who are crying about the writer’s inappropriate generalizations are themselves much more guilty of the same. That’s exactly what they incessantly do and support when it comes to Pakistan and Muslims. But then we can’t really expect anything better from them."
There might be a few people who make sweeping generalizations about Muslims but that is definitely very uncommon. Most comments from Indians speak directly on the subject posted. Also if you notice no-one makes sweeping generalizations about Pakistanis. The statements may refer to Pakistan establishment and political leadership but even then that would be fact based and not dependent on a single incident and most likely related to the specific news item or OpEd.
@Mirza: The states that give half the property to women (community property states) do not give alimony to the woman. Also half the property only refers to the property that was created during the marriage - not inherited property or property that was already owned by either party before getting married.
Let's not mention the vitriolized women In Pakistan. Even men are not spared and beaten up by landlords or influential lots, what to say about that? A superficial generalization of West not only France on the basis of a minor incident, without knowing the details, simply guess work.
@F, We know the women expolitation in the name of date and marriage in west. and dare to touch woman in PIA he will know what he gets.
@F:
The young indian woman on France 24cable net work was asked this question by the anchor during news time, if she would prefer to live in France instead. Prompt came the answer that this is a dream, in france the husband can be charged for a rape offence if he has forced sex with his wife, whereas in India we have been living with it quietly, our recent protests are directed to being raped publicly now. The news item was the swiss woman rape.
Rex Minor
After world trade center incident we have seen many times true faces of west ....
Despite the deplorable incident, ask yourself: if women (and men) had a choice would they stay in Pakistan or live in France? False comparisons are misleading. There is no comparison between the plight of women in France / West and that of Pakistan / Islamic countries.
Last, despite the bystander phenomenon, you should publish your letter with all details. In the West, arrest is not predicated upon the victim to press charges all the time. This happened in public. There are plenty of witnesses. And the incident might even be captured on the inflight camera. If nothing else, at least Air France will be forced to respond, change their training and make the airlines safe for everyone.
The bystander effect...more common than you'd think
@Razi: And why do we always have to bring religion and victimhood into every topic and discussion. A writer publishing in the news media is expected to have done better research, with writing being more factual, hopefully more objective and less biased in the analyses plus the authors should be open to reactions from their readers, whether positive or negative.
And your statement ..."That's exactly what they incessantly do and support when it comes to Pakistan and Muslims. But then we can't really expect anything better from them....." exemplifies generalization... The same mistake that you were blaming the other side for....yeah?
This is such an eye opener. I am now convinced that the condition of women in Western countries is no better than it is Pakistan or in any Islamic country. Pakistan should send more such experts on officially funded tours so we can know how good we actually are and don't realize it.
All those Indians who are crying about the writer's inappropriate generalizations are themselves much more guilty of the same. That's exactly what they incessantly do and support when it comes to Pakistan and Muslims. But then we can't really expect anything better from them.
Where did you buy your degree. Nobody claims that men are equal to women. Equal rights yes. Sad story if true. But your logic needs an update. One swan black all swans black?
Two observations: Just two. One the woman must be from our subcontinent. That explains the apathy of other passengers, Two: Men and women were never equal in all respects and never will be, And now this one for a supplementary. The author has expressed her outrage. She even took the lead in calling for the offender to be arrested. But I can bet my last rupee (there are no more paisa in Pakistan) that if actually police had come to arrest him the woman would have requested them to leave him alone! I know this from personal experience. It happened with me when I was young and imbued with do-good ideas.
When I was living in Karachi as a kid and seeing our maid continuously tortured by her husband, I felt that why she is living with him and than my mother used to tell me that she is illiterate and poor women she has seen her mother beaten by her father so she thinks it is normal. I am living in UK and to my amaze very literate and right conscious women of this society get beaten by their drunken husbands/boyfriends quite regularly and further to my amaze to continue to live them. My mother words come back to me that ‘she has seen her mother beaten by her father so she thinks it is normal’. So may be its normal for the educated and enlighten women of the west to be beaten by their husbands and boy friends.
And all this from one incident? The situation may not be perfect (is it anywhere else), but women in western society have far more more respect than they do in the sub-continent.
@amir jafri: Take off those cute rose colored glasses of self righteousness, fogging your judgment to believe the regurgitated rehearsed dialogue of typical eastern men ("eastern women have it easy; they are soooo protected and respected; western women have to WORK for themselves (gasp) and be independent (gasp) and go out into the world unprotected without a big brawn muscle man to protect their dainty selves.."), and please, join us in 2013 mate. cheers.
@ahmad: When it comes to pay scale, women are completely justified demanding and expecting equal pay for equal work. In a white collar setting where mind is more important over body, a woman who puts in equal hours is to receive equal pay. If she doesn't get it, she should demand it. In a blue collar position, or more specifically a job requiring heavy manual labor, biology is a deciding factor and I don't think it's unfair for a woman who cannot do the same quality work or work the same hours to receive less pay. There's a reason why the playing field is far more level in white collar settings and not in manual labor jobs. Not to say women cannot work hard; in fact in rural parts of Pakistan, I've witnessed more women doing work and men sitting on their behind doing nothing. Those women, in an ideal world, would be getting paid more than a man. Point is people have muddled the concept of the equality and made it far more complicated than is necessary. This absurd conversation piece ought to have been over and done with yet it goes on and on. How demanding plain and simple fair treatment is a challenge, I'll never know. It's a black and white issue that people have made grey and muddy.
Why we are comparing West, East, North and South? Gender inequality is a bitter truth. We all must fight to give equal rights to women. That's all.
I respect the fact that you wrote about an important topic, however it seemed more based on generalizations than actual fact. Since when do the majority of women here work in lowly or low paying jobs? I don't think I know a single woman here, Pakistani American and NON Pakistani American alike, who are dependent financially on anyone else once they finish their education. Even the percentage of women who fall into blue collar jobs still eanr enough to sustain themselves. There's also a growing percentage in white collar positions making more than enough to take care of themselves. The majority of women here are financially INdependent, not DEpendent. As far as this once incident, this sounds like an extreme case as I've never seen people non-responsive to a person, man or woman, getting pummeled by someone else publicly. I'm not saying it doesn't happen, but that incident is in no way an indication that women are publicly beat up in the west day in and day out. It's not perfect, but it's not as awful as it is in some eastern cultures. Personally, I've never had any hurdles due to my gender partly because I've done the same quality of work throughout college as anyone else. And partly because I don't give a damn what people's ideal woman is supposed to be. The day women stop caring about society pressures and just do what they want, their problems will be cut in half. To clarify, I'm in no way belittling or dismissing the VIOLENT aspect women face all over the world, but referring more to the self imposed restrictions women SOMETIMES (not very often in the west anymore) place on themselves. Stop doing that. And stop waiting for someone to hand you what you want or pave the way. You want something. Work hard and go get it. Ok, rant over. Cheers.
Generalizing one incident to whole nation or group is unjust.
This world is full of crazy people and they exists in every national.
By the way I can tell you of an incident I witnessed in US. Saw a south Asian man outside a club slapping his wife/ girlfriend. Some bystander called the police, the club workers did not let the couple drive away, Police arrived in less than a minute, talked to couple of witnesses, apprehended the guy right then and had someone drop the woman home.
So just like you have drawn all the inferences from one incident, what inferences should I draw about the whole west and then about all the south Asian men from this single incident?
Very biased view. Like others mentioned, yes gender gap is everywhere but the width of that gap varies a lot from country to country, region to region. As a woman I personally feel much safer, less anxious, more respected in west (US) than in South Asia. In US I also have lot of trust in police and law that they would not discriminate against me just because of my gender. And finally, in my regular interactions and observations, I find Americans in general to be much more respectful of their women, their decisions and choices. Society does not try to either glorify or demean women instead try to look at them as similar human beings as men. Hence men are less entrenched with the idea of controlling or being overprotective towards their women.
The well articulated article about the incident happen in French airline. The writer as a women herself feels sorry about the post behaviour of the incident. The question is how many man suffer this kind of treatment from women but the issues are not highlighted,why.
Give women education and economic empowerment see the results.
village chamyati villagechamyati@gmail.com
i was born in pakistan, and i quite sadly I have to admit that I never felt any sort of respect from my people while living in Pakistan, moved abroad and have no intentions of moving back, because I dont want my daughter to go through everyday turmoils that i had to go through just because of her gender :(
"chirag tale andhera" doners now need to invest money in their own countries for gender mainstreaming. its time to ponder. AND Pakistani women only need RESPECT
Dr Farzana Bari is a very brave lady just like Asma Jahangir, they are so vocal and truthful that even most men fear to say. May God protect them.
'The gory incident symbolises the collective psyche of the West and this is one of a singular lack of gender and political consciousness.'
This assumption is wrong on so many levels. Agreed there certainly a bias and will be there forever but to equate one incident and make it as representative of west is downright wrong.
I can appreciate the horror and disgust felt by the writer about the incident. No place in the world is perfect. With the air travel laws and confusion about the jurisdiction, the use of alcohol, drugs, and other reasons can lead to this kind of behavior. The man might have two women and the other would not mind him being abusive to the other. The common men cannot indulge in the family affairs unless there is a complaining victim. There are bullet proof laws in the West to protect the rights of women. In fact the laws are such that they "discriminate" against men now. Any woman in the US/Canada can call the police and get rid of her husband with one phone call. All she has to say that she feels threatened by him. The woman/wife whether she has worked or not owns a minimum of half of all the assets. If she has kids then in addition to half of the assets she would get a decent child support till the kids are over 18 and alimony for lifetime in many cases. In short there are laws if one wants to avail them and many women do when they want to.
So our gender expert writes an article on how she saw a women got beaten up in a plane ride to France! ....Yes those incidents occur everywhere in the world...Such profoundness by the author. There needs to be some filter to the quality of opinions in this section. Why could not this section go in one of the ranting in the Tribune Blog section. Ofcourse, gender issues are real everywhere but there is more to them then just an incident of a women being beaten up.
It is all speculative. For a non-european tourist it is not easy to understand the European cultures and vary by country! What Dr Bari expected was what we call civil courage! This was definitely absent in the Air France flight!
In case of a squable, the Air France personnel were supposed to call the airport police, however, they could not detain the passenger iwhile waiting for the police arrival. This is not permissable by law.
In any case both men and women have equal rights in France.
Rex Minor
moral of story PIA is better than Air France...
@amir jafri: You say that "Western woman are the most oppressed and fooled in the world..."!!! Wow, please provide some credible examples where Islamic women are so much less "oppressed", and just HOW are western women "fooled"???
Generalization/Statistics requires a good representative sample size.
They are not as you have rightly pointed out. Indeed, both men and women are continuing to suffer fro outdated roles attributed to them in the stone age. Just look at the tragic cases of men of men losing custody battles over their children, with them ending up in the households of women who are only interested in receiving the child benefits. Or the amount of time it takes to convince the police, the neighbours even a whole town that sometimes in a fight between a man and a woman it is the woman who is the aggressor ... long way to go to reach equality. Yet, a country where a woman is required to produce four witnesses in a rape trial should not be talking about such things as equal pay. Without physical safety all other things are meaningless ....
One freak incident and the writer is quick in passing judgment on the western society. Well tried, as there is nothing to be happy about the home country in the present times. I have been living in Europe for the past 30 years and I feel we can never match their society. At times, I feel that the first 35 hears of my life in India was a sheer waste.
Western woman is the most oppressed and fooled one in the world...and with their "value" system of singlehood, childlessness and gayhood they'll soon be extinct...good for grand and glorious civilizations
That was a lot of generalising from a random incident...............not expected from someone with your credentials. The point should have been ' why do people behave the way they do in public when confronted with a sudden situation ( irrespective of what the situation is ) '
It is so so obvious that the author has made this story up.Either the man hitting the woman was a muslim and she was either his first,second or third wife or the author is a liar...as simple as that.I CANNOT beleive that a man in Europe would hit a stranger and nothing would be done about it..That is NOT the way the civilised world behaves or maybe it was a PIA flight and the incident happened in either Lahore or Karachi
The story mentions a 'man' hitting a 'woman'.And another 'Woman with Child' just meekly following the man. And the 'woman' instead of calling the police, just crying.
I am not ruling out a white man hitting a white woman, but I am ruling out a white woman not retaliating by calling the police. We have plenty of them at airports.And white women are known to have sued even their husbands/ lovers for much less.
So the most likely scenario is, it must have been one of the non-white/brown French citizens. Hitting one wife, while the other meekly follows with the child. And the one hit takes it lying down as she does not want to hear the Triple T word.
Mystery solved.
I really like thos article, whoch does not speak for equality of the genders but for respect of women.
Our xulture is about respecting women. The west has truly established an equality inbthe two sexes and hence the man beat up the woman, thinking she is equal.
Women should not ask for or expect equality, but for respect.
I am a man, howvwer I believe women are superior on tjeir own unique way and respect is wha they are looking for, but just cant find the words and end up askig for equality.
When it comes to payscale, they want equality. But when it ia about putting the equal physical labour they cant. That is because men and women are different.
Appreciare the aarticle.
what a beautiful eye-opening article for women of Pakistan who think they are living in an unjust and in-equal society. Guess what, you are not alone. Equality doesn't just lie in shorts (pun not intended).
O yeah, and do some reading about the bystanders effect. This sounds like a classic example.
One incident and you judge not just all people in France but in all of West. Equality does not exist anywhere but the difference is in magnitude of gender gap and secondly the direction in which things are going. A single point in time incident does not give you information about either.
This is an interesting past time in Pakistan - finding out whether the West is all it is made out to be, or whether we will feel at home there as well. I cannot understand how this incident becomes a template for gender-bias with which to label the entire West, so it would have been most convenient if you had shared the definition of the term as well. (The most hilarious line is this one - I wondered had he beaten up another man, whether the passengers would have reacted the same way?),; also, since you had so much of free time, why didn't you ask the victim of assault what the whole issue was about? I have seen people in even trams and metros stick up for women who feel that a co-passenger is behaving badly (and I live in Europe), so the questions that you didn't ask may have helped save all of us some time.
Of course they aren't equal. Far from it. One look at the man to woman ratio in the CEO's of the Fortune 500 companies says it all on its's own. But whats important is that there is a conscious effort towards achieving equality, and that the wheels are in motion. Nowadays, stay-at-home wives do not command the same level of respect as working women in western countries, and that is a huge step itself.
Unfortunately, I can't say the same for us.