Hamas' campaign among women helped victory (AP) Updated: 2006-02-04 09:59
Pollsters now say that the secret to Hamas' victory in Palestinian elections
was support from women, who voted in record numbers. One reason was Hamas' army
of women campaigners — veiled university students knocking on doors and
promising housewives a better future.
Hamas activated female supporters in unprecedented numbers. It
staged rallies for women, and also reached them through mosques and
female preachers, particularly in rural areas.
"Hamas had the most organized campaign targeting women," said pollster Nader
Said of the West Bank's Bir Zeit University.
Thousands of volunteers, including female university students, were sent
door-to-door to deliver Hamas' message — that Islam protects women, that it
offers them equal partnership with men, on the job and at home. While short on
details, Hamas campaigners also promised free education for girls.
"We had many activities, such as visiting women in their houses, giving them
advice on how to vote," said Hamas campaigner Sahar as-Sharif, 29, who has a
science degree from the Islamic University in Gaza City and works in a private
laboratory. "Our ideas are what they were looking for."
Women voted in record numbers, the Bir Zeit pollster said. About 46 percent
of those casting ballots last week were women, compared to 42 percent in the
parliament election a decade ago and 44 percent in the 2005 presidential vote.
Hamas believes it had an edge among women voters, a view supported by Said
and another pollster, Nabil Kukali of the private Palestinian Center for Public
Opinion.
The Bir Zeit pollster said Hamas won such a decisive victory, 74 of 132
parliament seats, in part because Fatah candidates competed against each other
in most districts, with some running as independents. Hamas won about 440,000
votes in total, compared to 403,000 for Fatah, he said. Yet in the districts,
where 66 seats were up for grabs, Hamas won 45 mandates, mainly because of the
internal Fatah competition.
Rabiha Diab, a Fatah lawmaker, said her party did not do enough to reach out
to women, particularly in villages, where religion plays a strong role.
Seventeen of the 132 new legislators, or nearly 13 percent, are women. That's
twice as many female legislators as in the outgoing parliament — ostensibly a
breakthrough in the male-run Palestinian society.
However, with Hamas commanding a majority parliament and women lawmakers
divided over their agenda, change is unlikely. Some women's rights campaigners
even fear a backlash against efforts to curtail polygamy, raise the age of
marriage for girls or get tougher on men who kill wives or daughters over
"family honor."
"It's not just a question of numbers," said liberal legislator Hanan Ashrawi.
"There will be more women (in parliament) who are conscious of women's rights
... There will also be women who are not committed to equality."
The female Hamas legislators are newcomers to politics, recruited by the male
leadership because of their appeal in their communities.
Mariam Saleh, an Islamic law professor from Ramallah, said she was drafted
because of her work with the wives and mothers of Palestinians imprisoned in
Israel.
Another rookie legislator, Mariam Farhat of Gaza, won fame when she appeared
in the farewell video of one of her sons who later was killed in a suicide
mission against Israel.
While many of the female Hamas activists are educated and accomplished, the
group is pushing a conservative agenda.
Saleh said she would not oppose polygamy, which is practiced in the West Bank
and Gaza, because it's in line with Islamic law. While under current practice,
only men can end a marriage, Saleh believes a women should be able to end
matrimony if she agrees to leave without a penny.
In Ramallah, local Hamas women celebrated victory in a small social club,
separate from the men. One of the activists, Kifah Amaaz, a 32-year-old mother
of two, said the Quran should be the legislators' guideline. She said Western
countries are trying to destroy Islamic nations by pushing for legislation that
gives women too much freedom. "To fix a television set, you need a handbook,"
she said. "And to fix humans you need the Quran."
At a nearby Internet cafe, manager Amal Shaker, 30, who grew up in Michigan
City, Ind,. said she hoped Hamas would be pragmatic. She said people voted for
Hamas to make things better.
"If it gets worse, I will buy my ticket and go back to America," she
said.
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