The Sexual Misery of
the Arab World
AFTER
Tahrir came Cologne. After the square came sex. The Arab revolutions of 2011
aroused enthusiasm at first, but passions have since waned. Those movements
have come to look imperfect, even ugly: For one thing, they have failed to
touch ideas, culture, religion or social norms, especially the norms relating
to sex. Revolution doesn’t mean modernity.
The attacks on Western
women by Arab migrants in Cologne, Germany, on New Year’s Eve evoked the
harassment of women in Tahrir Square itself during the heady days of the
Egyptian revolution. The reminder has led people in the West to realize that
one of the great miseries plaguing much of the so-called Arab world, and the
Muslim world more generally, is its sick relationship with women. In some
places, women are veiled, stoned and killed; at a minimum, they are blamed for
sowing disorder in the ideal society. In response, some European countries have
taken to producing guides of good conduct to refugees and migrants.
Sex is a complex taboo,
arising, in places like Algeria, Tunisia, Syria or Yemen, out of the ambient
conservatism’s patriarchal culture, the Islamists’ new, rigorist codes and the
discreet puritanism of the region’s various socialisms. That makes a good
combination for obstructing desire or guilt-tripping and marginalizing those
who feel any. And it’s a far cry from the delicious licentiousness of the
writings of the Muslim golden age, like Sheikh Nafzawi’s “The Perfumed Garden
of Sensual Delight,” which tackled eroticism and the Kama Sutra without any
hang-ups.
Today sex is a great
paradox in many countries of the Arab world: One acts as though it doesn’t exist,
and yet it determines everything that’s unspoken. Denied, it weighs on the mind
by its very concealment. Although women are veiled, they are at the center of
our connections, exchanges and concerns.
Women are a recurrent
theme in daily discourse, because the stakes they personify — for manliness,
honor, family values — are great. In some countries, they are allowed access to
the public sphere only if they renounce their bodies: To let them go uncovered
would be to uncover the desire that the Islamist, the conservative and the idle
youth feel and want to deny. Women are seen as a source of destabilization —
short skirts trigger earthquakes, some say — and are respected only when
defined by a property relationship, as the wife of X or the daughter of Y.
These contradictions
create unbearable tensions. Desire has no outlet, no outcome; the couple is no
longer a space of intimacy, but a concern of the whole group. The sexual misery
that results can descend into absurdity and hysteria. Here, too, one hopes to
experience love, but the mechanisms of love — encounters, seduction, flirting —
are prevented: Women are watched, we obsess over their virginity, the morality
police patrols. Some even pay surgeons to repair broken hymens.
In some of Allah’s
lands, the war on women and on couples has the air of an inquisition. During
the summer in Algeria, brigades of Salafists and local youths worked up by the
speeches of radical imams and Islamist TV preachers go out to monitor female
bodies, especially those of women bathers at the beach. The police hound
couples, even married ones, in public spaces. Gardens are off-limits to
strolling lovers. Benches are sawed in half to prevent people from sitting
close together.
One result is that
people fantasize about the trappings of another world: either the West, with
its display of immodesty and lust, or the Muslim paradise and its virgins.
It’s a choice perfectly
illustrated by the offerings of the Arab media. Theologians are all the rage on
television and so are the Lebanese singers and dancers of “Silicone Valley,”
who peddle the promise of their unattainable bodies and impossible sex.
Clothing is also given to extremes: At one end is the burqa, the orthodox
full-body covering; at the other is the hijab moutabaraj (“the veil that
reveals”), which combines a head scarf with slim-fit jeans or tight pants. On
the beach, the burqini confronts the bikini.
Sex therapists are few
in the Muslim world, and their advice is rarely heeded. So Islamists have a de
facto monopoly on talk about the body, sex and love. With the Internet and
religious TV shows, some of their speeches have taken monstrous forms,
devolving into a kind of porno-Islamism. Religious authorities have issued
grotesque fatwas: Making love naked is prohibited; women may not touch bananas;
a man can be alone with a female colleague only if she is his milk-mother, and
she has nursed him.
Orgasms are acceptable
only after marriage — and subject to religious diktats that extinguish desire —
or after death. Paradise and its virgins are a pet topic of preachers, who
present these otherworldly delights as rewards to those who dwell in the lands
of sexual misery. Dreaming about such prospects, suicide bombers surrender to a
terrifying, surrealistic logic: The path to orgasm runs through death, not
love.
The West has long found
comfort in exoticism, which exonerates differences. Orientalism has a way of
normalizing cultural variations and of excusing any abuses: Scheherazade, the
harem and belly dancing exempted some Westerners from considering the plight of
Muslim women. But today, with the latest influx of migrants from the Middle
East and Africa, the pathological relationship that some Arab countries have
with women is bursting onto the scene in Europe.
What long seemed like
the foreign spectacles of faraway places now feels like a clash of cultures
playing out on the West’s very soil. Differences once defused by distance and a
sense of superiority have become an imminent threat. People in the West are
discovering, with anxiety and fear, that sex in the Muslim world is sick, and
that the disease is spreading to their own lands.
Comentarios
Publicar un comentario