Islamic Misogyny Surging in Pakistan
Sat, Jun 2, 2007 at 2:54:38 pm PDT
One of the main driving forces of Islamic supremacism is a Dark Ages misogynistic obsession, and in Pakistan this atavistic impulse is spreading and gaining in power, crushing the bodies and souls of countless women: Radicals Target Pakistani Girls’ Schools, As Militancy Surges In Remote Tribal Areas, Girls’ Schools Have Become Targets.
All throughout the North West Frontier Province (NWFP), Pakistan’s impoverished western border with Afghanistan, lie the ruins of barbershops and music and video stores – symbols of Western-oriented life that religious extremists have destroyed in a growing wave of violence.
Now Islamist militants have a new target, and if they are successful, observers say their campaign could be disastrous for Pakistan’s future.
In what appears to be an escalating spree over the last year, extremists have bombed at least four girls’ schools and circulated violent threats warning girls to stay at home. While no girls or school staff have been killed, girls in some areas have stopped attending classes – marking a direct blow to Pakistan’s national enterprise of “enlightened moderation,” which posits female education as a central pillar.
Pakistan finds itself at a precarious tipping point: Tremendous gains have been made in female education in recent years, but a considerable gender gap remains. Extremists’ efforts to undermine education for women, who are historically one of Pakistan’s most potent forces of moderation, could further empower Pakistan’s growing ranks of Islamist militants.
“Because girls are the ones suffering from these oppressive ideas, if they are educated they will be a better ally in the promotion of liberal ideas and secularism,” says Farzana Bari, who heads the gender studies department at Quaid-e-Azam University in Islamabad.

