{"title":"The Limits of Admittance and Diversity in Iraqi Kurdistan: Femininity and the Body of Du'a Khalil","authors":"S. Phelps","doi":"10.1080/14690764.2010.546119","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"Abstract Concerns of racial, ethnic and religious divisions and establishing a culture whereby people from diverse backgrounds can live together in peace are central issues within discourses and representations of Iraq today. The violent clashes between Yezidi and Muslims in Northern Iraq during 2007 bespeak the limits of tolerance and commitment toward living together with a respect for each other's differences that upholds the right to preserve and practice these. This violence gives voice to the terrifying and extreme consequences of the breakdown in peace between different people who occupy the same geographical space. Generally perceived as inflamed by the brutal killing of Yezidi teenager Du'a Khalil, this breakdown in the erstwhile – albeit short‐term – peace between Muslims and Yezidi undoubtedly concerns issues of the increasing politicisation of religion, sectarian and ethnic divisions, feminine sexuality and the boundaries of community. Sacrificed for the honour of her family, for some Du'a is the victim of ancient religious or tribal traditions, the brutality of the barbaric and an unthinkable human rights violation. 1 For others Du'a is a traitor to her family, to her community and to her religion. This article discusses the ways in which feminine embodiment signals the most valued possession and at the same time presents as the greatest threat to community. Paradoxically, as compellingly expressed by Rey Chow, the site of feminine difference both ensures divisions between diverse peoples and signals the potential erasure of these. 1Sanchita Hosali (ed.) Selected International Human Rights Materials Addressing ‘Crimes of Honour’ CIMEL/Interights Project on Strategies to Address ‘Crimes of Honour’ (2003). http://www.soas.ac.uk/honourcrimes.","PeriodicalId":440652,"journal":{"name":"Totalitarian Movements and Political Religions","volume":"7 1","pages":"0"},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2010-09-01","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"1","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Totalitarian Movements and Political Religions","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.1080/14690764.2010.546119","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"","JCRName":"","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 1
Abstract
Abstract Concerns of racial, ethnic and religious divisions and establishing a culture whereby people from diverse backgrounds can live together in peace are central issues within discourses and representations of Iraq today. The violent clashes between Yezidi and Muslims in Northern Iraq during 2007 bespeak the limits of tolerance and commitment toward living together with a respect for each other's differences that upholds the right to preserve and practice these. This violence gives voice to the terrifying and extreme consequences of the breakdown in peace between different people who occupy the same geographical space. Generally perceived as inflamed by the brutal killing of Yezidi teenager Du'a Khalil, this breakdown in the erstwhile – albeit short‐term – peace between Muslims and Yezidi undoubtedly concerns issues of the increasing politicisation of religion, sectarian and ethnic divisions, feminine sexuality and the boundaries of community. Sacrificed for the honour of her family, for some Du'a is the victim of ancient religious or tribal traditions, the brutality of the barbaric and an unthinkable human rights violation. 1 For others Du'a is a traitor to her family, to her community and to her religion. This article discusses the ways in which feminine embodiment signals the most valued possession and at the same time presents as the greatest threat to community. Paradoxically, as compellingly expressed by Rey Chow, the site of feminine difference both ensures divisions between diverse peoples and signals the potential erasure of these. 1Sanchita Hosali (ed.) Selected International Human Rights Materials Addressing ‘Crimes of Honour’ CIMEL/Interights Project on Strategies to Address ‘Crimes of Honour’ (2003). http://www.soas.ac.uk/honourcrimes.
对种族、民族和宗教分歧的关注,以及建立一种使不同背景的人能够和平共处的文化,是当今伊拉克话语和表现中的中心问题。2007年在伊拉克北部发生的雅兹迪教派和穆斯林之间的暴力冲突,表明了容忍和承诺的局限性,即尊重彼此的差异,共同生活,维护维护和实践这些差异的权利。这种暴力表明了居住在同一地理空间的不同人民之间的和平破裂所造成的可怕和极端后果。雅兹迪少年杜阿·哈利勒(Du'a Khalil)被残忍杀害,普遍被认为是雅兹迪的导火索,穆斯林和雅兹迪之间过去的和平破裂——尽管是短期的——无疑涉及宗教日益政治化、宗派和种族分裂、女性性取向和社区边界等问题。为了家庭的荣誉而牺牲,对一些杜阿人来说,是古老宗教或部落传统、野蛮暴行和不可想象的侵犯人权行为的受害者。对其他人来说,杜阿是她的家庭、她的社区和她的宗教的叛徒。这篇文章讨论了女性的化身是最有价值的财产,同时也是对社会的最大威胁。矛盾的是,正如周蕾(Rey Chow)令人难以置信地表达的那样,女性差异的位置既确保了不同民族之间的分歧,又预示着这些分歧可能被抹去。1Sanchita Hosali(主编):《关于“荣誉罪”的国际人权材料选集》(CIMEL/ interrights Project on Strategies to Address of honor)(2003)。http://www.soas.ac.uk/honourcrimes。