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Current
Cooperatives Activist
Women Global
Food Resources
Our Sister Amina
By Garda Ghista
Our sister Amina was freed from death by stoning on the last day of
September, 2003. Many of us did not know Amina Lawal was a divorced
woman from Katsina State in Nigeria, sentenced to death by stoning for
adultery on the grounds of becoming pregnant out of wedlock. Many of us
did not even know that our sister was in danger – we did not even know
that we had a sister. We live in an age that is called post-human - an
age wherein humanity is posthumous. For many of us, Amina was a
flickering figure that appeared on a news sound byte. This is what
post-human means. People are reduced to disposable, ephemeral images
manipulated by a remote. These images describe her in the traditional
modernistic labels of “Nigerian,” “Muslim,” and “woman.” What these
labels do is to create a feeling that she is “alien,” and hence we have
no responsibility to even care. Essentially the nationalism of the
modern era of humanism is, as former UN General Romeo Dallaire said,
just another kind of racism.
But, our sister Amina is very closely connected to us in ways we do not
wish to understand. Every time we go to the gas station to fill up our
car, we are in touch with Amina. Nigeria is an economic colony of oil
companies like Shell and Chevron. Our governments have supported these
companies’ support of a string of dictators who have cleansed oil-rich
lands by brute force. In our global economy, Nigeria gives so much oil
away that it actually suffers from fuel shortages. Nigerians do not need
Henry Kissinger to tell them that globalization is just another word for
US world domination. Their dictators have been able to keep power by
dividing and ruling the people on ethnic and religious lines. Countless
clashes between Muslim and Christian Nigerians have been engineered by
politicians. Those Christian killers forgot to love their Muslim
neighbors as themselves, and those Muslim killers forgot to see the face
of God wherever they turned in a Christian neighborhood. Fundamentalists
in Nigeria have been sponsored as seeds of chaos by political leaders,
just as global political leaders sponsor fundamentalism worldwide. And
all this is done so that oil companies and their puppets in the White
House and in Nigeria can make money. It is fortunate for us that the
color of oil is so black that we cannot see the red blood of Nigerians
coursing into our gas tanks.
Our sister Amina was condemned because of this very fundamentalism.
Fundamentalism, or religious fascism, has resulted in the imposition of
Shariah law in 1999, starting in Zamfara and then spreading to other
Nigerian states. Because of this newly imposed Shariah law, in 2000 a
man’s arm was amputated for stealing a car. The victimization of Amina
Lawal has played into the hands of Christian fundamentalists in America
as part of the process of demonization of Islamic peoples. For these
fundamentalists, Amina is an image to justify hate, to justify the
conquest of the Middle East. Women like Amina are an image that can be
discarded, just like the women of Afghanistan are an image discarded by
the post-human media - though their suffering is at its height. For
Islamic apologists, Amina is a reminder that makes them squirm. It is a
reminder of the inhuman sections of pre-modern scriptures.
Ernest Lorca, in his book, One God: The Political and Moral Philosophy
of Western Civilization, shows that in the scriptures of Christianity,
Islam and Judaism, genocide, ethnic cleansing and the oppression of
women are sanctioned as God’s work. In the case of Amina, the
fundamentalists in their zeal went beyond the letter of Shariah law,
which demands evidence for adultery aside from pregnancy. On this
technicality, Amina gained her life. However, as Amnesty International
and other human rights organizations point out, there are others in
Nigeria under the bondage of Shariah who have not been so fortunate.
All those vigilantes in Nigeria who implement Shariah on the streets -
where were they when Amina was alone having to support her children in a
society where most social institutions were in a state of collapse?
Where were they when a man took advantage of her plight? Why do they not
also hunt down married men who prey on women? Where were they when she
was condemned and her innocent babies were were facing life as orphan
street children? Where were we? Why could we not have had the courage to
say that ethnic, religious and national differences are like clothes –
and that no matter what people wear, they are still our brother and
sister? That is the simple truth - too simple for us to face, let alone
speak.
Our sister Amina lives with dignity because she has grown up in an
atmosphere of social chaos in which the pre-modern tribal religions,
modern nationalistic politics and the postmodern pursuit of oil power
all thrive like leprous wounds on the Nigerian psyche. But Amina not
only shines with nobility, she has endowed so many across the globe with
dignity. Countless people signed email campaigns and letters in her
defense. They were a sign of the resurgence of humanism – not the
abstract hierarchies of the past, but a neo-humanism. People did not
merely sympathize with her, they empathized with her as a single mother
surviving with the silent serenity that comes from inner surrender. The
hyper speed of the letter campaign shows how fast the feeling of a
global family can spread – how fast we can become neo-humanists. The
speed arose from the neo-human frustration with the bonds of nationality
that allow women in Muslim countries to be victimized by petty
traditional prejudices masquerading as “law” or “religion”. Neo-humanism
not only makes us feel the oneness of our global family, it urges us
onward to push for one global set of laws for everyone in our world
family, based on those cardinal human values that are at the heart of
real justice.
Prabhat Ranjan Sarkar, that great lover of humanity, envisioned
neo-humanists as being those people who are devoted to the diversity of
existence based on the mystical realization of the inner oneness of all
created beings. Neo-humanism enjoins us to make such moments as the
Amina campaign manifest themselves in our society continuously, to make
the feelings of wholeness and mystical love well within us and
throughout our tiny planet. This vision of society as an ocean of
oneness and love can bloom today from the seed of our love for sister
Amina.
Garda Boeninger is a freelance journalist based in Kentucky, USA. She
can be reached at gkg2000@msn.com. Copyright Proutist
Universal 2003 |