Women: The Libyan Rebellion's Secret Weapon
They helped overthrow Qaddafi by smuggling arms and spying on the government. Now the women of Libya are fighting for a greater voice in society
- By Joshua Hammer
- Photographs by Michael Christopher Brown
- Smithsonian magazine, April 2012, Subscribe
(Page 5 of 5)
Despite their wartime achievements, most of the women I interviewed believe that the battle for equality has barely begun. They face tremendous obstacles, including a deep-seated resistance to change commonplace among Libyan men. Many women were outraged when the first chairman of Libya’s National Transitional Council, Mustapha Abdul Jalil, in his Declaration of Liberation, failed to acknowledge women’s contributions in the war and, in an apparent bid to curry favor with the country’s Islamists, announced that Libya would reinstitute polygamy. (He later softened his position, stating that he personally didn’t support polygamy, adding that women’s views should be taken into account before any such law was passed.)
Two of 24 members of Libya’s new cabinet, appointed in November by Prime Minister Abdel Rahim el-Keeb, are women: Fatima Hamroush, the minister of health, and Mabruka al-Sherif Jibril, the minister of social affairs. Some women told me that represents substantial progress, while others expressed disappointment that female participation in the first post-Qaddafi government isn’t greater. Yet all the women I interviewed insisted there will be no going back. “I have political aspirations to be in the Foreign Ministry, to be in the Ministry of Culture, which I didn’t think I could ever do, but now I believe I can,” says Amel Jerary, the U.S.-educated spokeswoman for the transitional council. “You have charity organizations, aid groups, in which women are very active. Women are initiating projects now that before they could not dream of doing.”
In Misrata, Asma Gargoum now works as national projects coordinator for a Danish development group that administers a training program for teachers working with children traumatized by war. Her house has been damaged, her brother lies buried in a local cemetery. Tripoli Street, once the vibrant main thoroughfare, is an apocalyptic wasteland. Yet schools and shops have reopened; thousands of displaced residents have returned. Perhaps the most heartening change, she says, is the ascendance of female power.
Misrata now boasts a half-dozen aid and development groups run by women, who have channeled organizational skills honed during the three-month siege into rebuilding post-Qaddafi Libya. In concert with women across the country, Gargoum wants to see more women in the new government and enactment of legislation that would protect women from violence, as well as guarantee them access to justice, health care and psychological support. She, like many others, is prepared to fight for those rights. “We have a brain, we can think for ourselves, we can speak out,” Gargoum told me. “We can go to the streets without fear.”
Joshua Hammer is based in Berlin. Photographer Michael Christopher Brown travels on assignment from New York City.
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Comments (4)
This article left me simultaneously elated (by the accomplishments of these brave and resourceful women), proud (of NATO's help to the rebellion), and ashamed (that NATO is not helping the rebellion in Syria).
Posted by Barry K Rosen on April 27,2012 | 10:16 AM
I admire all that these women did in the time of the war. It would be really nice if someone could make a movie of this great amazing story or something that could trully acknowledge all women works during the rebelion.
Posted by Andrea on April 23,2012 | 10:41 PM
I agree that Arab women have played an immense role in the Arab Spring, and they continue to do so and willing to take the necessary toll to reach what they aspire to. I attended a conference this January in Cairo--Change Your World, and the first panel was formed of women--all exceptional Arab women. "The Arab Spring through women's eyes" is the article I was inspired to write. Well done, Arab women, keep up the good work. http://azzasedky.typepad.com/egypt/2012/01/the-arab-spring-through-womens-eyes-the-hook.html
Posted by azza sedky on April 6,2012 | 04:42 PM
please move quickly to release a app for android users. Thank you....
Posted by A Forsberg on April 1,2012 | 02:10 PM