Lara Prendergast writes:
The
kidnapping of the 276 Christian schoolgirls by Islamic terror group Boko Haram
is an atrocity, but it is not the first atrocity they have committed. It is
just the first one to trip the West’s interest switch.
A girl’s right to an education has become an important pillar in western ideology, and an important pawn in the battle against radical Islam. It is why Malala has seen herself elevated to an almost saint-like position.
A girl’s right to an education has become an important pillar in western ideology, and an important pawn in the battle against radical Islam. It is why Malala has seen herself elevated to an almost saint-like position.
The recent kidnappings have enraged western
sensibilities, because they desecrate hallowed ideas about female equality.
The
West has responded in the only way it knows how: a self-righteous selfie
protest using the hashtag ‘Bring Back Our Girls’. Michelle Obama, Cara
Delevingne, Jessica Biel and Anne Hathaway have all involved themselves in it.
On a more pragmatic front, Britain announced this week that it would send in a
small team of Whitehall experts (the subtext being that they are members of our
intelligence services and Special Forces).
In a toss-up between a selfie and
the SAS, I know who I’d back to ‘bring back our girls’.
But Boko Haram – whose name means ‘western education is
sinful’ [it is not in fact the organisation’ name, but let that pass for now] – does not distinguish between the education of girls and boys.
In February, the group attacked another Christian school. After boarding up every
exit, its men seized 59 boys and gunned them down or cut their throats with
machetes.
Some buildings were sealed up and set alight. The girls were ordered
to go home, abandon their ‘wicked’ schooling and seek husbands.
Where was the selfie protest then? Or does a savage
affront to male education matter less than a savage affront to female
education? The answer should clearly be no.
For equality to count, both boys
and girls need to feel safe in school. By focusing only on the girls – ‘Our
Girls’ – we forget the boys who are also in danger.
Boys can be harvested in neoconservative wars, we can fight the one in Afghanistan specifically in order to reinstall their sexual abusers to whom "the Talban" (for all their faults) had given no quarter whatever, their genitals can be mutilated right here in Britain and no one bats an eyelid, and there is the same indifference when those who kidnap and prostitute their sisters cut their throats with machetes.
No comments:
Post a Comment