The Cunning of Gender Violence in Israel’s War on Palestinian Women

Palestinian feminists and allies march in NYC on January 12, 2024 to "shut down colonial feminism". Courtesy of the Palestinian Feminist Collective. Palestinian feminists and allies march in NYC on January 12, 2024 to "shut down colonial feminism". Courtesy of the Palestinian Feminist Collective.

The Cunning of Gender Violence in Israel’s War on Palestinian Women

By : Sarah Ihmoud

The testimonies emerging from Palestinians held captive by the Israeli military in Al-Shifa hospital, which was under persistent siege for 14 days, are harrowing: torture, starvation, executions, the mutilation and burning of bodies, and the destruction of life saving medical equipment. Today, we are asked to watch, over and over again, the mass violation of Palestinian bodies, including sexualized torture, to consume testimonies of Palestinian women being raped while in Israeli military custody, to digest the public displays of women’s lingerie in the bombarded streets and homes of our cities. How do we read and understand this violent spectacle, even as it is still unfolding?

War is always about a performance of hypermasculinity, as feminist scholars remind us, and sexual atrocity transforms women’s bodies into a method of communication between men. In our own history, gender and sexual politics have played a central role in Israel’s genocidal violence since its inception; rape was used as part of an attempt to terrify Palestinian communities into fleeing their ancestral homes and villages. Indeed, in 1948 it was our great grandmothers recounting their violation in Deir Yassin; today it is their granddaughters in Gaza. In war and military conflict, women’s bodies are always situated as symbolic national peripheries; in genocide, Indigenous women’s bodies and sexualities are targeted because of what they represent: land, Indigenous reproduction, sovereignty, and the possibility of Indigenous futures. While rape or sexual violence might be inflicted on the bodies of women, its broader purpose is often to humiliate and punish the collective to which they belong. The gendered logics of the militarized performance that is unfolding in Gaza today is precisely to force us, through mass violence and psychological terror, to recognize and accept our defeat.

We as Palestinian women and feminists are consistently asked to participate in our own pathologization and criminalization by colonial powers; to reproduce the culturalized narratives that contribute to the protracted violence directed at our communities, and to internalize our oppressors’ own fear.

And yet, the persistent efforts by Palestinian feminists to call attention to the pervasive gendered logics that animate Israeli settler colonialism have been met with little political interest by feminists in the West, making feminism “a silent bystander for many everyday forms of state criminality.” [1] Instead, we as Palestinian women and feminists are consistently asked to participate in our own pathologization and criminalization by colonial powers; to reproduce the culturalized narratives that contribute to the protracted violence directed at our communities, and to internalize our oppressors’ own fear. Today, these politics have played out in the demands that Palestinian feminists and our allies condemn sensationalized accounts of mass rape on October 7, to which, as of yet, no actual evidence exists. In the twisted logic of Zionist colonialism, a refusal to “admit” that mass rape occurred on October 7 becomes a form of further incrimination, even as the Zionist state actively rapes and pillages our bodies and our lands.

There is perhaps no clearer example of this logic than the recent “suspension” of Professor Nadera Shalhoub-Kevorkian, one of the preeminent Palestinian feminist scholars of our time, from the Hebrew University of Jerusalem. In a letter addressed to the social work community on March 20, Dean Asher Ben-Arieh wrote that: “The decision [to suspend Shalhoub-Kevorkian] is rooted in one key element - the denial of the rape and murder of civilians, women, and children on October 7…Those who deny cases of rape and murder cannot teach in the school of social work. Just like those who claim that same-sex relationships are a deviation that requires conversion therapy, or those who argue that beating women in a family is an acceptable way to put them in their place, cannot teach the profession of social work and rely on the faculty of a school for social work.” Not only is this a gross mischaracterization of Shalhoub-Kevorkian’s actual words, an attempt to discursively constrain the professor’s attention to the criminality of the Israeli state in a moment of intensified genocidal war, while marking her as a proponent of violence, colonial gaslighting of the first degree.  It must also be understood as part of a growing wave of disciplinary action targeting Palestinian scholars within Israeli academia, a system already deeply complicit in the settler colonial project and its entwined violent suppression of Palestinian scholarship (indeed, the Hebrew University was founded before the 1948 Nakba, as a “comprehensive university and center for the formation of a new collective Jewish-Zionist identity and nation”). 

While Professor Shalhoub-Kevorkian’s case is the most visible today, there are others that fall under the radar. Just three weeks ago, colleagues and I received notice that a conference at Yale University we were scheduled to speak at, on “Pinkwashing and Feminism(s) in Palestine”, had been “indefinitely postponed”. We learned that the Yale Office of Student Affairs had opened an investigation into the Women’s Center, the student-led organization on campus organizing the conference, for “anti-Israel sentiment”, after a Zionist group on campus complained that the conference did not address the alleged sexual violence committed by Hamas on October 7. According to the organizer, who resigned from her position in protest, Yale’s administration threatened disciplinary action against all staffers at the Women's Center, even those that weren't involved in planning the conference, if the conference went on as planned. The pressure placed on students to cancel the conference, denounced for its “exclusion of Jewish women’s voices and its libelous portrayal of Israel and Israelis”, underscores the intertwined logics of pinkwashing, the mobilization of LGBTQ rights to obfuscate the ongoing settler colonization of Palestine, and Israel’s war on Palestinian women, where the centering of a Zionist narrative, and in particular, that of the Jewish female subject threatened by a dangerous Arab masculinity, longstanding racial and Orientalist tropes that have enabled colonial violence, is elevated over that of Palestinian women and queers, who are today made distinctly vulnerable to Zionist violence and oppression. 

The Hebrew University of Jerusalem announced it had reversed its dismissal of Nadera Shalhoub-Kevorkian on March 27, after a meeting in which, according to the administration, she “clarified” that she was not dismissing the possibility that cases of rape occurred on October 7, and the Yale conference has been reorganized with the support of faculty and academic departments, in spite of Zionist and administrative attempts to shut it down, evidencing that the gendered logics of Zionist repression do not go unchallenged. Even as attacks on women and feminists are mounted, we keep pushing back and refuse to be silenced, and we must continue to do so. These small victories invite us to consider how we comprehend and analyze the complexities of the gendered logics of Zionist colonialism and its unfolding. 

The feverish attempts (or perhaps more accurately, desires) of the Zionist movement to discipline, criminalize and terrorize Palestinian women and feminists, including our scholars, activists, and movement leaders, from naming and exposing the gender violence that sits at the very core of the colonial project, and which we are witnessing on a mass scale, must be recognized and named for what it is: a recycling and retrenchment of the very gendered logics of Israel’s genocidal politics in another form. As I have written previously, many of us have faced Israel’s violent attempts to silence our voices and, in doing so, discipline us into erasure, with punitive ramifications politically, professionally, and personally, when writing or speaking out about the injustices facing our people, including histories of gender and sexual violence that continue into the present. In fact, the gendered and sexualized backlash we face as Palestinian women and feminists when writing or speaking out about ongoing histories of gender and sexual violence highlights the fact that this backlash is in fact an extension of colonial politics; “indeed, the same rhetoric targeting Palestinian women’s bodies and sexualities are remade in a new context, evidencing the libidinal economy of Zionist colonialism. These gendered forms of violence not only endanger the lives and agency of Palestinian women and feminists, they also impede the critical debate, analysis, and heterogeneity within our own communities that are always necessary to grow and sustain liberatory movement-building.” [2]

As feminists, we know that rape and sexual violence are endemic to armed conflict, and we condemn gender violence in our own communities as essential to our liberation as a people. We have been fighting for gendered liberation in our own communities as we fight against colonialism for decades, recognizing that colonial and patriarchal violence are, in fact, deeply intertwined. Still, we recognize the cruel irony that the very language and discourse of feminism is being used to justify our own elimination as a people by the very powers decrying gendered violence. We must, then, ask the question: What is Zionism performing when it simultaneously rapes and violates our women, mass murders our children and attempts to starve us to death while disciplining us for naming this as genocidal? 

Those of us who have been doxed, targeted, and fired from our positions, know exactly what this is about. We who have received the Dean’s moralizing and recriminatory letters; we who have had our names and reputations smeared in Zionist newspapers and websites; we who have had our faces plastered next to the word “antisemite” in public spaces. We who have received emails from the public calling us “terrorists” who deserve to die; we who have been threatened with rape and violence against our families. (I will never forget the email I received from a man after being doxed by a Zionist organization in Boston who wrote that he knew where I worked and thought that I should be cut up into pieces. The article that prompted this harassment, titled “Sexual violence, women’s bodies and Israeli settler colonialism,” was written alongside Dr. Shalhoub-Kevorkian herself in the midst of Israel’s 2014 military assault on Gaza, and highlighted the very logics I draw attention to again today). We know that this is an attempt to break our spirits, to make us too afraid to continue speaking, writing, and acting defiantly as Palestinian women and feminists for our people’s freedom. We see this as a further attempt to demonize us as Palestinian women, to monsterize and pathologize our Palestinian men, to break apart our sacred kinships with each other and our homeland; to invade our intimacies, assault the senses and orchestrate affects of widespread fear, terror and defeat. To undermine the power and authority of our truths, to belittle the beauty of our voices, and to break the role that we must continue to take up in this liberation movement.

This disciplinary violence is precisely a key element of what Professor Shalhoub-Kevorkian calls the “cunning of gender violence.” [3] Ironically, the very rhetoric and recognition of gendered violence exercised by authority figures in the global governance community (Western nations and their allies), can too often hide or elide the gendered violence and criminality of powerful state actors, hiding it in plain sight. The repression of Nadera Shalhoub-Kevorkian, one of the most internationally renowned and distinguished Palestinian feminist scholar-activists of our time, whose trailblazing work has centered the experiences of Palestinian women with settler colonialism and military occupation for the better part of three decades, and who has widely condemned Israel’s genocidal policies today, is both a message and a test case. The zionist project’s instrumentalization of rape claims to inflict more violence on Palestinian women and feminists speaking out against mass atrocity is meant to terrify and disempower us, to discipline us into silence and complicity, and to show us that, if they can do it to Nadera, they can do it to any of us at any time. These are precisely the abusive gendered tactics that are so central to weaponizing rape and sexual violence during intensified military conflict and the genocidal policies the Israeli state carries out in Gaza today. 

When we allow colonial feminist discourses and practices to shore up genocidal violence, militarized warfare, and the violation of Indigenous lands, bodies, and lives, all of us stand to lose. If we are serious about ending sexual violence in genocide and armed conflict, then we must take seriously the well-documented claims of sexual violence against Palestinian women, men, and children that Palestinian women and feminists have been decrying since 1948. The ongoing Nakba must be stopped. Rejecting the violent reproduction of the cunning of gender violence is a feminist responsibility that allows us to name the gendered logics of settler colonial genocide while honoring the living, embodied memories of those who survive. 

Cited: 

Abu-Lughod, Lila, Rema Hammami and Nadera Shalhoub-Kevorkian (2023). The Cunning of Gender Violence: Geopolitics and Feminism.  

 Elia, Nada. (January 19, 2024). “Weaponizing Rape”. Jadaliyya. https://www.jadaliyya.com/Details/45725

 Ihmoud, Sarah. (2022). “Palestinian feminism: analytics, praxes and decolonial futures.” Feminist Anthropology, Vol. 3(2): 284-298.

Shalhoub-Kevorkian, Nadera, Sarah Ihmoud and Suhad Daher-Nashif. November 17, 2014. “Sexual Violence, Women’s Bodies and Israeli Settler Colonialism”. Jadaliyya. https://www.jadaliyya.com/Details/31481

Wind, Maya. (February 27, 2024). “Israel’s Universities are a Key Part of its Apartheid Regime.” Jacobin. https://jacobin.com/2024/02/israel-universities-palestine-apartheid-academia

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[1] Abu-Lughod, Hammami and Shalhoub-Kevorkian 2023, 15.

[2] Ihmoud 2022, 292.

[3] Abu-Lughod, Hammami and Shalhoub-Kevorkian 2023.

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In the Shadow of Malala: The West’s Unsaved Others

Malala Yousafzai has made a number of headlines in the past few weeks: Nominated for a Nobel Peace Prize, addressing the UN on the occasion of “Malala Day” dedicated to youth education, meeting with the Obamas in the Oval Office, chatting with Queen Elizabeth at Buckingham Palace, speaking at the World Bank’s “International Day of the Girl,” and receiving the honorary Canadian citizenship. In case you missed it, even The Daily Show’s Jon Stewart declared his wish to adopt her.

Many have written about Malala’s fame. Journalist Assed Baig argued that Western journalists and politicians have used Malala to appease their white man’s burden, to hide their sins in Afghanistan and Iraq, and to divert attention from the Western-caused suffering of many in the region. In a recent piece on Al-Jazeera, Murtaza Hussain compared Malala to nine-year-old Pakistani girl Nabila Rehman who came to Washington D.C. to testify before Congress about the drone attack that killed her grandmother last year. Only five out of 430 representatives came to hear Nabila’s story. For Hussain, Malala Politicians and pundits used Malala as the human face of the American-led War on Terror, on behalf of whom “the United States and its allies can say they have been unleashing such incredible bloodshed.” Nabila, on the other hand, had become, “simply another one of the millions of nameless, faceless people who have had their lives destroyed over the past decade of American wars.”

By shedding light on the suffering, past and present, of people in the Middle East, such critical interventions expose Western political propaganda’s use of Malala. But who are Malala’s others? For she has many. And they are not just those in the Middle East, but in the heart of the West itself. Certainly, Malala’s near-canonization diverts attention from the chaos and injustice of the War on Terror in the region. But what about those black, brown, and white poor bodies, in the West, that remain in Malala’s shadow?

Malala rose to international fame following a failed assassination attempt by the Taliban on 9 October, 2012. Taliban gunmen shot her in the head and neck as she was returning home on a school bus in the Swat district of Pakistan. The attack received worldwide media coverage and prompted condemnations from President Obama, US Secretary of State Hilary Clinton, and British Foreign Secretary William Hague. Days after the attack, Malala was flown to the Queen Elizabeth Hospital in Birmingham for surgery and rehabilitation. Former First Lady Laura Bush wrote a Washington Post op-ed comparing Malala to Holocaust diarist Anne Frank. Angelina Jolie donated 200,000 dollars to the Malala Fund. The young girl received the Simone De Beauvoir Award (previously given to Ayaan Hirsi Ali). Foreign Policy voted her among the top one hundred global thinkers in 2012. Time magazine listed Malala among the one hundred most influential people in the world in 2013. She had also made it to the magazine’s shortlist of Person of the Year in 2012. At sixteen, Malala has already published her first autobiography, I am Malala, and has her portrait commissioned for the National Gallery in London.

As the French magazine Le Point put it, Malala had become “an enterprise,” one that is run by the world’s largest independently owned public relations firm, Edelman. The multimillion dollar firm had allegedly dispatched five employees to assist Malala and her family, pro bono, in managing the media interest in her campaign. McKinsey, the renowned American global management consulting firm, is also involved in the campaign, handling the Malala Fund for the education of girls.

Of course, Malala is a modern-day heroine, and a great model to many. She was shot by the Taliban for speaking up against their ban on girls’ education, most famously in a 2009 series of blog posts commissioned by BBC’s Urdu service website. But Malala’s message of girls’ right to education cannot but be eclipsed by her larger-than-life persona that Western states, international organizations, public figures, and public relations firms have manufactured. This essay is not about Malala, the person, as much as it is about her international circulation as an icon. It is not about Malala’s deeds, unquestionably noble, but about Western politicians and media figures’ fascination with this young girl.

The history behind Western media narratives about Muslim women’s plight is by now all too familiar. As Lila Abu Lughod has shown, in the context of the post 9/11 War on Terror, Western political projects, including the United States War on Afghanistan, justify themselves by purporting to liberate and save women. Decades earlier, Frantz Fanon wrote about France’s project to colonize Algeria by unveiling/civilizing its women. Laura Bush’s unwavering commitment to brown women attests to the tenacity of the narrative. In fact, the former First Lady explicitly framed her Washington Post op-ed, “A Girl’s Courage Challenges Us to Act,” as a follow-up to her first presidential radio address. During that address in November 2001, Laura Bush justified the invasion of Afghanistan in the name of the liberation of its women, claiming that “the fight against terrorism is also a fight for the rights and dignity of women.” Bush ends her most recent op-ed with the following words: “Today, for Malala and the many girls like her, we need not and cannot wait. We must improve their world.” Plus ça change…Eleven years after the invasion of Afghanistan, Bush is still bent on saving Muslim women. Eleven years after asking her initial question, “Do Muslim Women Really Need Saving?” Abu Lughod is still trying to explain why, in fact, they do not.

Activists, artists, and intellectuals have repeatedly challenged everyone from Bush to the bare breasted women of FEMEN in their imperative to liberate Muslim women by speaking on their behalf. One recent example is thisbeautifully-executed Muslim superhero cartoon. Third world feminists have powerfully formulated these critiques for decades. But there is something peculiar about Malala that cannot be explained only by exposing the fetish of saving the brown woman. The critique must move further into the underbelly of this affective excess, to recuperate those other brown women that the “we” of Laura Bush does not want to save Otherwise, the analysis remains politically incomplete and critically lopsided, further reproducing the fixation on brown women “over there.” There is something about this sixteen-year-old amassing award after award and prize after prize that says much more about the West than it does about Malala, Pakistani girls, or the right to universal education.

This painful story “over here” is particularly poignant given the collapse of public education in the United States. The US president commends Malala on her “inspiring and passionate work on behalf of girls education in Pakistan" just as twelve-year-old Laporshia Massey died because the government did not find it necessary to pay a full-time nurse at her under-funded Philadelphia school. To be sure, no one will award Laporshia a Nobel Peace Prize. She is not Pakistani, not a Middle Eastern Muslim girl shot in the head by the Taliban. No one will send Laporshia a helicopter to fly her to a hospital. She is just a poor black girl from Philly. She suffocates quietly in her classroom. She is told “there’s no nurse, just be calm.” She is ordered to wait even as Laura Bush implores, “we need not and cannot wait. We must improve their world.” The world that must be saved is far away over there; ours is doing just fine. In his meeting with Malala, president Obama signed a proclamation to mark Friday as the “International Day of the Girl.” The proclamation reads: "on every continent, there are girls who will go on to change the world in ways we can only imagine, if only we allow them the freedom to dream." Young girls from American public high schools are pleading with their government to build schools, not prisons. They are dreaming out loud, but who is listening?

Muslim girls’ right to education must also be brought into relief in France, which bans Muslim girls donning the headscarf—the one Malala wears—from attending public schools. Many believed that the 2004 law, which instituted a ban on “conspicuous signs” of religious affiliations in French state schools, was specifically targeting Muslim girls wearing headscarves, and through them, the country’s Muslim minority. The secular republic ostensibly banned the headscarf to safeguard France’s laïcité. But many intellectuals and public figures couched the ban in a rhetoric of gender equality whereby the secular law saves women from the tyranny of their religious communities. Lest we forget, the headscarf controversy itself dates back to 1989, as Joan Scott shows in The Politics of the Veil, when three French Muslim girls (of Moroccan origin) who refused to remove their headscarves were expelled from their Middle School in the Parisian suburb of Creil. Canada will not grant them honorary citizenship, but the King of Morocco himself will intervene to convince them to remove their headscarf when entering a classroom. But, as Scott shows, in a clear demonstration of their personal conviction, they continued to wear the hijab in the school’s hallways and courtyards. Their struggle did not go down in history as a story of Muslim girls’ fight for equal education. Nor did that of fifteen-year-old Cennet Doganay (of Turkish origin) who shaved her head to be able to attend class. Following the ban in 2004, Doganay tried to substitute a beret and a bandana for her headscarf, “but they still refused to let her into class." The BBC, who reported her story, did not ask her to blog about her experience.

There is something about Malala, and it is not the white savior complex,” or not only that. It is the erasures that are enacted by her global circulation as an iconic brown, Muslim girl. Malala screens from view the Laporshias and Cennets in our midst. There is something about her hypervisible presence that further enacts a symbolic violence against the poor, black, and brown bodies, in our midst in Europe and the United States. These bodies are constantly erased from public, undeserving as they are of collective “white” middle-class attention and care. These bodies are ordered to enact their own self-erasure: by being quite, not blogging about injustice; by hiding their difference, not flaunting their scarves; by accommodating dominant social values, not subverting them. Would a million prizes for Malala wash away the hefty price of an American or European education?

Yes, Philadelphia may not be the Swat Valley, but one has to wonder, given the history of mass school shootings in the United States that have taken the lives of American children and teenagers. The Pakistani government, following Malala’s shooting, ratified the Right to Education Bill; the United States has yet to pass a law on gun control. Yes, the girls of Creil were not shot in the head. But the comparison is not meant to suggest similarity. The juxtaposition of these differently-situated young brown female bodies is necessary if we are to grasp the connections between the injustices they face. Mapping these connections does not equalize experiences; it reveals how education is a common discursive thread, differently-deployed, across these stories. It forces us to contemplate the terms of “girls’ right to education,” of which Malala has become the poster child. It impels us to specify the subject of these rights, and to identify those whose exclusion is masked in the process.

Exclusion is universal; it is historical and contextual. In Jim Crow America, black girls were not allowed in public (white) schools. In Taliban-dominated Swat Valley, girls are not allowed in public (boy) schools. In republican France, veiled girls are not allowed in public (secular) schools. In many places around the world, from Philadelphia to Santiago, poor girls (and boys) are not allowed public schools altogether. Schools are places where the exclusionary logics of racism, republican secularism, Islamism, and neoliberalism, as different as they may be, become manifest. Schools are the locus where such exclusions are enacted, learnt and normalized. Schools are where children become versed in the grammar of national culture. They are where “others” are taught that they are unwelcome into the fold of the nation, society, and community.

Exclusion is not a Taliban-created exception. It is all around us. And there is something about Malala, as a poster child for girls’ right to education that is meant to make us think otherwise. There is something about an internationally-endorsed, officially-supported, generously-funded, Nobel-prize nominated, and branded campaign for education, starring a brown Muslim girl, that sharply contrasts with recent student protests in QuebecChile,France, the United StatesSpain, and the United Kingdom (among other places). There is something deeply wrong when gender is deployed as the sole source of inequality that must be addressed (albeit in far-away places). There is something deeply wrong when transnational state feminism displaces class inequalities, deeply felt in the languishing state of public education, onto the body of a Taliban-shot sixteen-year-old girl. Such a displacement undermines Malala’s just cause against religiously-inflected social injustice by making it exceptional, by severing its links to global demands for equal and free education. If feminism is not to be co-opted by a neoliberal discourse, as Nancy Fraser recently argued, we must be aware of the fetishization of gender inequality that makes moot all other inequalities.

Western governments have used the figure of the victimized brown woman in the past to justify overseas action, intervention, expansion. Here, they are also using it to whitewash and legitimate the withdrawal of the state from the public domain. As if this child’s small body, stretched and overblown by awards and honors, is supposed to hide the ever-shrinking state; as if Malala’s inflated body will cast a large enough shadow over the growing pool of bodies the state has abandoned.