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UNITED
NATIONS POPULATION FUND: ADDRESSING HARMFUL TRADITIONS IN A REFUGEE CAMP
IN CHAD:
12/11/2008
(MaximsNews Network)
|
UNITED
NATIONS - / MaximsNews Network / 12
November 2008 -- The air
at the Touloum refugee camp in eastern Chad, is eerily calm. Many of the
23,000 refugees have been here since 2004, when they fled violence in the
Darfur region of Sudan.
After
four years, they have settled into daily routines: buying goods from the camp
market, collecting water from the dwindling supplies, sleeping in temporary
structures. Many hold little hope of returning to their homes − or what
is left of them.
Touloum
is one of twelve camps scattered across the eastern border of Chad;
collectively, the camps provide shelter for over 250,000 Sudanese refugees
dependent on aid workers for the simplest things, including daily meals. Until
last February, armed rebels cruised the border pointing guns at, and sometimes
shooting, camp dwellers, aid workers − anyone within range. These
threats have now diminished.
Nevertheless,
women and girls in refugee camps are still in danger, not just from outsiders,
but also from deeply entrenched cultural norms − such as early marriage,
female genital mutliation/cutting and domestic violence. Although they
jeopardize the health and rights of women and girls, these traditions and
practices have been a part of Sudanese and Chadian culture for centuries. But
group sensitivity trainings, supported by UNFPA, the United Nations Population
Fund, are helping both men and women understand that harmful traditional
practices compromise basic human rights.
Harmful
traditions: widespread and deeply rooted
According
to national statistics, 52 per cent of adolescents in Chad are married by age
16, and 58 per cent of girls have already had a child by the age of 18. Early
childbearing is a leading cause of obstetric fistula and maternal death. The
dangerous practice of female genital mutilation/cutting is also widespread and
deeply rooted, and national statistics report that 45 per cent of women have
undergone the procedure in Chad. Sudan has a prevalance rate of about 70 per
cent.
“Gender-base
violence is unfortunately widespread in this region,” said Cheikh Tidiame
Cisse, the UNFPA representative in Chad. “And communities accept early
marriage and female genital mutilation.” But cultures are not static, as
UNFPA’s State of World Population
2008 report argues, and people are continuously involved in reshaping
them. Changing deeply entrenched mores requires cultural fluency, patience and
creativity, the report explains. And under the tents of the Touloum camp,
cultural attitudes and practices are being examined, and new perspectives are
slowly emerging.
Days
in Touloum are long, hot and uneventful − with few job opportunities and
even fewer social gatherings. But one group of 40 or so older Sudanese male
refugees, mainly from the Zaghawa tribe, is using their free time to question
their own perspectives on women and human rights. They meet three times a week
in the only building available in Touloum to take part in trainings.
Many
concepts taught at the men’s trainings clash with traditional beliefs.
However these men − who have lost so much − are open to
alternative ways of looking at the world. “The only good that has come from
this conflict is that we’ve learned from the violence,” said Abraham
Souleymane, one of the refugees who attends the training sessions. “We feel
that we have come out of the dark and learned a new way. After this violence
ends in our region we will be able to go back home, and it will be a better
place. ”
After
their own sensitivity trainings, the men walk through the the camp and invite
families to participate in a friendly and informative dialogue about violence
against women and women’s rights, even though talking about such concepts
openly, and with both men and women, has long been a cultural taboo.
Spreading
the word
Intrigued
by the conversation, adult community members wander into the hot desert sun,
and even curious children and young people stop their outdoor games to listen
in. The men have a goal to educate at least 10 households a week, and for this
work they receive about $30 per month from UNFPA to help support their
families.
“We
are happy to have this work and help our people at the same time,” said Mr.
Souleymane. He’s been in Touloum since 2004 and has seen a positive impact
on his community as a result of the discussions and trainings.
Some
of Touloum’s refugee women are pleased as well. “We are happy now that our
husbands treat us better and we don’t have fear,” one said.
Breaking
barriers
In
a room next to where the men meet, a group of refugee women gather every
Thursday for discussions and trainings on similar topics relating to their
health, cultural barriers and harmful traditions. These are also supported by
UNFPA in partnership with the Christian Children's Fund. At a meeting in
September, the subject was the rights of the child. These mothers and
mothers-to-be were learning for the first time that their offspring possess
certain inalienable rights recognized by the international community.
Some
of these women will take what they learn and become community educators or
even pursue additional training to become birth attendants. Others will simply
− yet profoundly − take the new concepts home in hopes of
influencing their children and, especially, their husbands so that abuse
within the family stops. Even if this doesn’t work, there is the chance that
their children will grow to grasp the concept of equal rights and stop the
cycle of abuse.
“For
the moment, community awareness has progressed and gender equality is more
respected during community activities,” said Mr. Cisse. “More than 60
leaders are committed to reducing the prevalence of gender violence, and, at
least in their families, the domestic violence is scarce. However, it will
take time to have a more direct impact on these behaviours and their ensuing
cultural problems.”
Quest
for equality
Harmful
cultural beliefs usually run deep, and often require time, patience and
cultural fluency to snub them out, as the State of the World Population
report affirms. Mr. Cisse emphasized that because of this, the road ahead will
not be easy for these refugee women and girls. “Culture and tradition have a
lot of weight on how these women are treated and viewed. And any change in the
perceived inferior status of women needs to be negotiated at the community
level,” Mr. Cisse said.
“Attitudes
towards these traditions and women’s rights in general must change first in
order for harmful traditions to evolve,” he continued. Otherwise, those who
challenge traditions may face rejection or stigmatization. They might be
misunderstood by their families and friends, endure more beatings at the hands
of their husbands, or even be divorced. That’s one of the reasons why it is
strategic to involve older, well-respected men, who may stand a better chance
of influencing attitudes.
—
reported by Micah Albert in Chad and Shannon Egan in New York
Labels:
United
Nations, U.N.,
MaximsNews,
UN Population
Fund, UNFPA, Women's
Rights, Gender
Inequality, Darfur, Chad,
Refugees, Human
Rights, Female
Genital Mutilation, Gender-Based
Violence, Christian
Children's Fund, Cheikh
Tidiame Cisse, The
State of the World Population Report
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