Which
is probably the saddest thing you can say about a man."
"One of the reasons why we crave love,
and seek it so
desperately,
is that love is the only cure for loneliness,
and shame, and sorrow.
But some feelings sink so deep into the heart that only
loneliness can help you find them again.
Some truths about yourself are
so painful that only shame can help you live with them.
And some things
are just so sad that only your soul can do the crying for you."
"Sometimes we love with nothing more than hope.
Sometimes we cry with
everything except tears.
In the end that's all there is.
Love and its
duty, sorrow and its truth.
In the end that's all we have
- to hold
on tight until the dawn."
"At first, when we truly love someone,
our greatest fear is that the
loved one will stop loving us.
What we should fear and dread instead is
that we won't stop loving them,
even after they are dead and gone."
Thursday, May 03, 2012
Saving Face
‘Saving Face’ is a short (40 min) award-winning documentary by Sharmeen
Obaid Chinoy and Daniel Junge, about acid attacks on women in Pakistan.
The film focuses on two aspects of the lives of acid attack victims:
their fight for justice, and the process of recovery.
In the span
of the film, we follow Dr. Mohammad Jawad, a London-based Pakistani
plastic surgeon, who returns to his homeland after hearing news of such
violence, to support the fight for justice for the victims and perform
reconstructive surgery to help restore their faces and their
self-confidence. The film also features the Acid Survivors Foundation,
who has been advocating for the parliament to pass a bill on acid
violence, to bring justice to the perpetrators. The heartbreaking
stories of two victims of acid violence by their husbands were also
highlighted in the film.
A short background of acid violence:
The
Acid Survivors Foundation has recorded about a hundred of such attacks
in a year, and they estimate that the numbers are in fact much higher
due to underreporting of such domestic violence. However, most of the
perpetrators get away scot-free –sometimes even supported by other women
from their own family!
While acid attacks occur in many places
across the world, majority of reported cases are found in Pakistan,
where there is very high unemployment and very low literacy. It can be
clearly observed that it is a deeply patriarchal society where women are
objectified. All reported acid violence victims are women, and their
attackers are always men – usually their husbands or sometimes even men
who wish to marry them.
Commentary: It was very heartbreaking to see how because of the society’s preference
for men, women can be treated like such inferior beings, in a way quite
similar to acts of violence on animals.
The dynamics of sexual
exchange can be witnessed in this film, which are affected by the
cultural beliefs and socioeconomic conditions of the Pakistani society.
Firstly, Islam allows for polygamy – a Muslim man is by Islamic law
allowed to have up to four wives – and this favors the sex drive of men
while aiding the objectifying of women as sexual objects to possess. As
we see in the video, many cases of acid attacks on women by their own
husbands were actually reported to be because their husbands wanted to
marry another woman. The acid violence against their wives was meant to
make them ‘invalid’ so that it would be justified for them to take
another wife to fulfill their sexual desires, which their wives had
perhaps failed to do so.
Aside from attacks by husbands, some
women have also been subjected to acid violence by other men who they –
or perhaps their family – have rejected for their hand in marriage. With
the poor socioeconomic conditions in Pakistan, many men lack the
extrinsic resources to exchange for sexual access. Since women have the
initial advantage, and yet these men lack the necessary extrinsic
resources to bargain with, some of them resort to acid violence with the
reasoning that if they are unable to marry a woman, no one else should
have her. As the man lack extrinsic resources to bargain for sexual
exchange, he thus seeks to remove the intrinsic resources –
i.e. her physical appearance of the woman desired, so that she will not be able to find another man.
The
clear objectification of women as possessions of men is stark here, and
this is not only apparent in the thinking of men. This highly
patriarchal notion has been so deeply perpetuated in the society that
women themselves believe so. Their looks seem to be truly their only
resources – at least in their self-perceptions. A woman who lost an eye
from an acid attack said, “It took one second to ruin my life
completely.” Another who was attacked by her husband in her own home
said, “My life was destroyed in this room.” It is quite saddening how
low the self-worth of some of these women is, that once their looks were
gone, they viewed their entire life to have similarly been destroyed.
It was also a huge shock to me when a scene, as earlier mentioned,
depicted how a man’s family, including his mother and sister, actually
came together to attack his wife!
On the other hand, we can also
see in the film that there are many women who are strongly advocating
and leading the fight for the criminalizing of acid crimes.
Unfortunately, the only male actor portrayed to be on the side of the
acid attack victims is Dr. Jawad, who is well educated and probably
undergone the enculturation of westernized ideas of gender equality. It
would seem that education for both the men and women in Pakistan would
be necessary in order for a shift in the persisting gendered status quo
in the society.
I would highly recommend this film, as it really
shows us an extreme side of a patriarchal society and how damaging
unequal relations – in this case it is gender, but it could well be
class, race, etc – can be. Aside from raising awareness to the world
about acid violence in Pakistan, the film also started ‘Saving Face’
campaign to eradicate acid violence worldwide. You can show your support
for these women too! Visit
http://savingfacefilm.com/the-campaign/get-involved/
(You can access the full 40-minute video here! It is amazing to view gender through a sociological lens after going through a gender studies module in school. I thoroughly enjoyed it and learnt a lot from it. There are many more videos on gender, just let me know and I can share what I know!)