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Barbara Walters Takes ‘Some Time to Enjoy The View’ from the
By Rima Abdelkader
The status of Middle Eastern women and their roles have often been undervalued and misrepresented in both the
These are just some of many perceptions of Middle Eastern women that were discussed and debated by female television reporters and journalists from the Middle East, including
In a political, stereotypical context, the moderator could be seen as ‘one liberator’ and the panelists as ‘oppressed women,’ but this was largely not the case. The panelists and moderator spoke candidly on the need for advancement in looking beyond the hijab or veil and discovering shared needs in each of their host countries.
Let’s get real. This topic, predominantly, has not been on the agenda of TV mainstream news media in both regions although it has been frequently debated and discussed in both public and in private spheres albeit through Western orientalist discourse. This panel discussion, though a public sphere and did on occasion fall into this type of “us” versus “them” discourse, was nonetheless distinctive in its framing of these issues since it included representatives from the mainstream TV news media world from both regions.
It was moderated by ABC’s Barbara Walters and included an impressive panel of women, including MBC anchorwoman Muna AbuSulayman, Pakistani media specialist Tasneem Ahmar, McClatchy’s Baghdad Bureau reporter Huda Ahmed, LBC journalist May Chidiac, Al Jazeera English anchorwoman Ghida Fakhry, and Iranian human rights advocate Mehrangiz Kar.
Far from a kumbaya-type of social, these panelists, notably AbuSulayman, Ahmed and Fakhry, fiercely debated Walters on several of her initiated discussions on the perceptions of Middle Eastern women.
“Americans think of woman in
Although not having this right to drive is challenging at times AbuSulayman explained, “it is not an inconvenience” as not having equal pay for women. She blamed the later on a male/female schism rather than a religious schism. On the subject of the veil in
AbuSulayman is an anchorwoman and woman’s rights activist in
Learning of this new TV program in the
Divorced and living independently with one child, AbuSulayman does not fit the old/modern political stereotype of an Arab woman. Although she only lives fifteen minutes away from her family, she explained it is still a challenge for her given the harsh restrictions imposed on women in her host country. In her discussion, she referred to Prophet Mohammed’s (phuh) first wife, Khadijah, who she considers best exemplified an independent, Arab woman. At the age of 40 years old, Khadijah was both a widow and a businesswoman who ran her own caravan trading business. It was at that age when she married Prophet Mohammed (pbuh) who was 25 years old at the time and working in that business under her supervision.
Barbara then asked Ahmar, “In
Ahmar disagreed with Walters on her description of Pakistani women and explained that it is more so about them being confined to domestic duties than liberation. “The men still believe that the women should not be allowed outside the home,” she said.
Ahmar is
In her work, she said, she tries “to sensitize the media on gender issues” to affect men’s thinking of women in
McClatchy’s Baghdad Bureau Reporter Huda Ahmad, who asked that her picture not be taken for fear of retribution and imprisonment by Iraqi authorities, discussed her role on the frontlines in covering war and carnage in her host country. “Anywhere you want to write a story, you have to gain their [Iraqis] trust,” she said. Her main fear, she told the audience, is that her “name will be published by the militia and Al Qaeda.”
“One story can kill you,” and added that she and her colleagues “try to avoid the cameras” and wait for the cameramen to give them clues on when the camera is turned off, so they can pass through with ease.
When asked if she will return to
AbuSulayman, adding to the discussion, said she does not watch television anymore, but instead watches YouTube. In
Iranian human rights activist Mehrangiz Kar, a visiting scholar of the Harvard Law School Human Rights Program, discussed her role and plight living in
“Promoting women’s human rights is impossible,” Kar said and added that “Women rights activists are working very hard through the Internet and email.”
LBC journalist May Chidiac, who lost her arm and leg in Sept. 25, 2005 in an assassination attempt in
On the subject of Middle Eastern women on Arabic television, Chidiac told AbuSulayman that she was shocked to learn from her Arabic version of The View that 99% of Saudi Arabian men are against having Arab women in the media.
Walters asked AbuSulayman why there are so many restrictions in
Fakhry responded to the generalization of Walters’ question of restrictions in Middle Eastern countries and said, “I think there is a tendency to generalize” [on the part of the
On the subject of media, Fakhry thought it was “unfathomable” that Al Jazeera English is not shown in the
Walters asked Fakhry, “Why is Al Jazeera International biased towards
Fakhry responded, “The mantra of Al Jazeera International is to show two sides” and added that the network shows the “reality of what you see out there.”
Ahmad, agreeing with Fakhry, went further into the topic of generalization and told Walters, the
Walters responded, “We were ignorant not only in your country, but in other countries. We’re learning slowly but surely.”
Fakhry contested and asked Walters what is being done. Walters answered, “The big question is, what do we do about this?” Fakhry persisted, “That is not raised in the
These women, in the end, pointed out that what one fails to realize is that Middle Eastern women share the same need as any other woman: the need to affect positive change in their lives. Yes, there are differences in which they live their lives (from social, economic, political, educational, religious, etc.) and what ‘positive change’ may consist of, but that with which they share is relatively the same.
Following the forum, I asked Walters if she would consider having such a panel on her show, The View, in the
Rima Abdelkader is a NY-based journalist and a graduate of
