OCTOBER/NOVEMBER 1999, pages 33-34
Central Asia
As Islam Replaces Communism in Uzbekistan, Economy
Stagnates, Men Remain “More Equal” Than Women
By Lucy Jones
Narsha Myohamasteva guzzles vodka as she swats the 50 or so flies
swarming above the dinner table in the richly carpeted front room
of her mother’s home in the Ferghana Valley in eastern Uzbekistan.
“I like to enjoy myself and go to parties,” says Narsha, a Russian-language
teacher, competing with a video about the Princess of Wales dubbed
in Uzbek playing in the background. “I’d be bored if I didn’t,”
she adds, her mouthful of gold teeth glinting in the dim light.
Narsha’s sister, Nadira, however, by contrast sits silently at
the corner of the low-lying table, which is covered with colorful
plates of carefully arranged sausage, cheese, salads and the rice
dish plov.
She doesn’t participate in the toasting and covers her head and
neck with a scarf when her brother-in-law enters the room. She leaves
early because her in-laws ask her not to stay out late.
Nadira married into a Namangan family which, since the former Soviet
republic of Uzbekistan gained independence in August 1991, has reverted
to Muslim traditions banned under communism. She rises at dawn to
read the Qur’an and divides her day between looking after children
and her in-laws. Her husband forbids her to work.
“This is my life,” she says, adding that relations with her in-laws
are difficult. “But I can’t do anything to change it.”
An Islamic revival in Central Asia is fundamentally changing the
position of women in the region. And in the Ferghana Valley, encompassing
parts of Uzbekistan and Kyrgyzstan, a conservative, rural area that
has experienced a particularly vibrant resurgence of Islam, women
are seeing their rights eroded more than those of their counterparts
elsewhere in the former Soviet Union.
They are working less and earning less (although in part this also
reflects the region’s economic difficulties). They are becoming
less likely to enter higher education or hold a position in parliament.
They are also increasingly under pressure to fully cover themselves
in public. Arranged and plural marriages are becoming more widespread.
“Women are losing everything they gained in the Soviet period.
In some regions they are practically being sold. Men are increasingly
regarding women as objects,” said Svetlana Garfareva, head of the
Kyrgyz women’s organization “Vimka”—the Center of Mass Information
on Women in Central Asia, based in the city of Osh in the Ferghana
Valley.
In the Ferghana Valley, more than 40 percent of marriages in 1998
are thought to have been arranged—a significant increase since Soviet
times when the illegality of arranged marriage, although it did
not prevent the practice, certainly made it a dangerous business.
(The handing over of a dowry was considered particularly risky because
it could be used as evidence of an agreement.) During the Soviet
period, people usually met their future spouses at the weddings
of friends or relatives.
An increase in arranged marriage is thought to have led to a wave
of “bride suicides” since independence. Last year, women’s organizations
in Uzbekistan estimated that more than 800 women committed suicide
because of desperately unhappy arranged marriages, involving tyrannical
mothers-in-laws, drunken and violent husbands, and financial pressures.
There are non-governmental organizations (NGOs) helping women in
such situations, including a recently opened hostel for battered
wives. But in general, women tend not to trust such quasi-official
groups—a legacy from Soviet times, when people had little respect
for public bodies.
Marital problems are also not a top priority for these NGOs. These
groups devote most of their energies to tackling the most basic
of women’s issues—such as the right to decide how many children
to have and when, decisions normally taken by Uzbek husbands. (Families
are large in Uzbekistan. According to the 1989 census, 55 percent
of families had 5 or more children.)
There is also very little political weight behind women’s issues.
The percentage of women in the Uzbek parliament has dropped from
32 percent to 5 percent since 1991. The only woman in the cabinet
heads the Office of Women’s Affairs.
And the situation is unlikely to change. Despite his concern at
the rise of conservative Islam, President Islam Karimov has done
little to improve the status of women in Uzbekistan. Indeed, the
University of World Economy set up by his office excludes women
from the International Relations and International Law department
on the grounds they will marry and have children. More than 80 percent
of students at the establishment are male.
But perhaps the most visible indicator of how the lives of women
in Islamic Central Asia are changing is their dress. In 1927 the
Bolsheviks forced women to publicly burn their veils. From that
date until independence, women (especially in rural areas) dressed
modestly in brightly colored pantaloons and dresses, sometimes covering
their heads with scarves in the manner of a Russian babushka.
Since 1991, some women have started covering themselves fully from
head to foot—including the throat and face—especially on the Uzbek
side of the Ferghana Valley. For some this has been by choice, as
a way of expressing their Islamic faith. For others it has been
at the behest of their husbands.
The Ferghana Valley acts as a naturally controlled experiment in
how governments can affect the manner in which people practice religion.
Women in the Kyrgyz region of the valley live under a relatively
tolerant political system. Kyrgyzstan is the most liberal and free-market
republic in Central Asia. The government has even passed a law permitting
women to wear the veil. Interestingly, they are less likely to do
so than women living in the Uzbek side of the valley, where it is
discouraged or forbidden.
There, Uzbek women live under a regime bent on preventing the rise
of an Islamist opposition and which has clamped down on veil wearing.
Veils are now prohibited on public transport. Female teachers wearing
veils in the classroom have been sent home, and veiled students
expelled from university. Such policies, it seems, have resulted
in more women choosing to wear the veil.
In relatively relaxed Kyrgyzstan, women also appear to have more
equality when they practice Islam. They can enter the mosques, whereas
in Uzbekistan women are excluded from attending Friday prayers,
and from the hajj (the pilgrimage to Mecca), and are forbidden
to enter most madrassas (Islamic education centers).
Officially, there are only “love” marriages in Kyrgyzstan (an assertion
women’s groups deny). Certainly, for better or for worse, there
is greater sexual freedom. In contrast to Uzbekistan, which has
one of the world’s lowest rates of adolescent pregnancy, an international
health organization has felt the need to set up a clinic in the
Kyrgyz city of Osh to treat sexually transmitted diseases, which
are on the increase there.
But while Kyrgyzstan is still one of the poorest nations in the
Commonwealth of Independent States—only faring better than states
which have been torn apart by civil wars—women have started to work
in traditionally male jobs, in areas such as sheep, cattle and horse
breeding. According to 1998 government statistics, 42.6 percent
of employees in small businesses in the Kyrgyz Ferghana region were
women.
“Women are just as likely to set up a small business as a man.
They virtually run the bazaars. But there has been a backlash,”
said Toktokan Borombaeva, head of the governmental Commission on
Women, Youth and Family in Osh, Kyrgyzstan. “Some men have not liked
seeing their wives make more money than their husbands and have
turned to drink.”
The economy of the region is likely to be as much of a deciding
factor as religion in the future position of women. Recession across
Central Asia over the past decade has led to huge job losses, particularly
among women (although some women, such as the Kyrgyz, have managed
to carve out new existences in commerce).
Under communism, women received considerable benefits—maternity
pay until the child’s third birthday, leave when a child was sick
and cheap childcare. There was always a “glass ceiling” preventing
women from attaining decision-making positions, but they held important
jobs in the medical profession, schools and academia. All that is
gradually changing, and not for the better. Private companies are
unable to provide such generous benefits, and high unemployment
rates mean that what few jobs there are go to the men.
But it is also true that, given the choice, many women would rather
stay at home, especially as having a job often means working long
hours in the cotton fields or at some other strenuous task. It would
take an improvement in the economy to change this state of affairs.
There is also a belief among many women that they cannot alter
their situations. There is very little discussion of feminism and
no feminist movement to speak of. Even those working for women’s
NGOs prefer not to class themselves as “feminists” because the term
is widely seen as a Western concept, not suitable for the Oriental
world.
“People have a very definite idea of what a woman should be like.
She must be domestic, attractive, subordinate,” said Marfua Tokhtakhodzhaera,
a leading Uzbek feminist author. “Given such prevailing views, feminism
cannot be strong for many years.”
The status of women is also low on the agendas of people struggling
to make ends meet. For them, discussions about a woman’s social
role look like a luxury.
The outlook for Uzbek women, therefore, seems gloomy. Under communism,
men still were “more equal” than women. Now in a newly Islamic but
politically rigid Uzbekistan, that gulf appears to have widened.
The position of Uzbek women has deteriorated because of political
and economic factors as well. Clearly any improvement in the economy
would help both women and men.
Lucy Jones is a free-lance journalist based in Tashkent. |