Sunday, August 7, 2011

Honour Killings and Domestic Violence

On July 22, Shaher Bano Shahdady, was strangled. Her estranged husband, Abdul Malik Rustam, 27, was charged with first-degree murder.

The Shahdady murder at first seemed to be a typical, if especially brutal, instance of domestic violence.

Shahdady emigrated to Canada from Pakistan with her family as a baby. She was sent back to Pakistan to study at 13, and at 18 was married to Rustam, a cousin six years her senior.

The circumstances of her death are especially concerning. Tarek Fatah, a founder of the Muslim Canadian Congress, says she was killed because Rustam couldn't tolerate his wife's failure to wear a head-to-toe veil and because she associated with other men on Facebook.

Fatah says the death was an honour killing; if so the Shahdady case raises some very troubling issues.

From the standpoint of Shaher Shahdady it doesn't make much difference why she was killed; she is dead and nothing will change that. But from a societal standpoint why she died matters a great deal.

Honour killing is rare. There have been slightly more than a dozen or so honour killings in Canada in the last decade. That compares to over forty domestic violence killings in Ontario every year. A woman murdered by her partner is very unlikely to have died in an honour killing. But mere numbers do not reveal the nature of the problem.

Very few people are killed by terrorist acts in North America and Europe. But those rare deaths have had the effect of changing the behaviour of society in profound ways. The free movement of people and goods has been imperiled and friendly relations among people of different faiths and backgrounds questioned. And yet these changes have been brought about by a very few incidents. It is not so much the fact of terrorism as the threat of terrorism that is important.

It is the same thing with honour killings.

Honour killings are directed at forbidding women from living their lives as they see fit. The women killed are the victims of the murders but the crimes are directed at a much larger audience.

Recently a graduate student from the University of British Columbia was blinded and maimed, apparently at the hands of her husband, while visiting her family in Bangladesh. The apparent motive for the crime was her decision to go ahead with higher education. Although only one individual was attacked the lesson was directed at all women both here and in Bangladesh. The lesson was that women do not have the right to chose how to live. Women must be subservient to their fathers, brothers and husbands.

Ordinary domestic violence usually arises in the context of a dysfunctional power relationship. While wrong and immoral the purpose of the violence is to attack the immediate victim being the spouse. While usually domestic violence involves an attack on a woman, there are numerous cases of men being assaulted and gender roles are not invariably involved in the violence.

Honour killings (or honour violence more generally) involves an attack for the purpose of showing that the actions of the victim, who is almost always a woman, are such as to deserve punishment. The lesson is that stepping out of line can lead to death or maiming. The immediate victim is somewhat irrelevant as the goal is deterrence of other women who may be considering such conduct. As the conduct almost always involves the exercise of a life choice by a woman the deterrence is an attempt to limit rights of women.

As a result honour killings have a broader effect on society and need close scrutiny. Domestic violence is wrong and must be curtailed -- honour killing takes domestic violence to a new height and needs to be rejected even more strongly. That does not mean we need another statute but it does mean that community leaders, and judges at sentencing, have to recognize honour killing for what it is, a form of domestic terrorism.

10 comments:

Anonymous said...

It's pretty amazing that Tareh Fatah has done what the police force could not do -- which is know exactly to the point what the intent and reason for the killings were, right down to comments about Facebook behaviour by the victim.

It's truly sad that someone like him with an obvious agenda and bias and no real data or evidence to support his claims gets quoted so frequently in matters such as this.

Truly ruins the integrity of the article and the blog.

BTW, the whole assumption of "honour killing" as something tied to Muslims or people of a certain national or ethnic origin verges on racism or prejudice. When a "white" man (for lack of a better term) kills his spouse because of jealousy or infidelity or other similar behaviours, never is the term "honour killing" used, yet even without evidence, that is applied here.

Perhaps you should really look hard at why that is the case, in general, but also on your blog.

Peace

Anonymous said...

A murder is a murder is a murder and a murderer is a murderer is a murderer. Neither honour nor jealousy are mitigating circumstances. Muslims wanting leniency in these matters should think twice first and then escape back to their origin countries. I am appalled at judicial "cultural" considerations worldwide in these matters.

Anonymous said...

First anon;

The police are refusing to comment. This does not mean they don't know the details.

Often honour killings have co-conspirators. It goes beyond one man killing his spouse in a rage. It is planned in advance and usually involves other family members.

It is different and it is cultural. Playing the R card won't work. The debate will continue without you.

James C Morton said...

I agree that the facts are still indeterminate and maybe Tarek is wrong. My point though is far broader than the single case. Yes, killing (or hurting) a spouse is wrong regardless of colour and creed. And such killings often are influenced by gender based stereotypes. But honour killing are not motivated by rage as much as by the intent to use violence to impose a political agenda. The KKK was a terrorist organization -- the Nazis started as a terrorist organization. It's not the race of the terrorist that matters -- it's the use of violence to impose a political agenda.

Anonymous said...

To: Aug 7, 9:17 AM Anonymous --

Whether the police are saying or not, how does Tarek Fatah know all what he claims to know? Inside info?

His input is a bigoted one and adds no value, yet for some reason, people, media outlets etc. seem to quote him all the time. Always good to have an "Uncle Tom/Tarek" on one's side.

His Canadian Muslim Congress was going to sue the Toronto School Board for allowing Muslim students to pray in a public school. Too bad the Charter of Rights got in his way.

I absolutely agree with the first sentence of the second Anonymous (Aug 7, 4:51 AM) - A murder is a murder. I don't know where he thinks people are asking for leniency.

As the person in the article said himself -- There is no honour in killing someone.

Anonymous said...

BTW, the last line about "domestic terrorism" is crap unless you apply the same standard to all murders.

i.e. someone shot in the street -- that's civic terrorism.

someone shot during a bank robbery -- that's criminal terrorism

someone shot during a drug deal -- that's pharmacological terrorism.

someone shot over an art dispute -- that's cultural terrorism

Why redefine the criminal code at your whim an use en vogue terminology.

How about when police kill an innocent person as happened recently in toronto. What kind of terrorism is that?

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