http://www.policymic.com/articles/65041/officials-claim-tunisian-women-are-waging-a-sexual-jihad-in-syria-but-what-s-the-real-story

Officials Claim Tunisian Women are Waging a 'Sexual Jihad' in Syria, But
What's the Real Story?

   - Sana Saeed <http://www.policymic.com/profiles/81547/sana-saeed>
   - in
   - World <http://www.policymic.com/world>
   - 3 days ago
   -

Mic 
this!16<http://www.policymic.com/articles/65041/officials-claim-tunisian-women-are-waging-a-sexual-jihad-in-syria-but-what-s-the-real-story#>

   -
   
<http://www.facebook.com/sharer/sharer.php?u=http://www.policymic.com/articles/65041/officials-claim-tunisian-women-are-waging-a-sexual-jihad-in-syria-but-what-s-the-real-story>
   - 4580


   -
   - 893


   -

58<http://www.policymic.com/articles/65041/officials-claim-tunisian-women-are-waging-a-sexual-jihad-in-syria-but-what-s-the-real-story#comment-anchor>
[image: officials, claim, tunisian, women, are, waging, a, sexual, jihad,
in, syria,, but, whats, the, real, story?,]

Officials Claim Tunisian Women are Waging a 'Sexual Jihad' in Syria, But
What's the Real Story?
© The Telegraph

By now you have probably already heard of the harem of Tunisian sex-warrior
slaves heading to Syria in order to give up their young bodies to the
appetites of deprived rebels to fulfill *jihad al-Nikkah* — “Sexual Jihad"
— and are coming back to the country with bellies full of Jihadi babies.
Unfortunately for what seems to be that blind spot people have when it
comes to stories on Muslims and sex, there doesn’t seem to be any evidence
of Tunisian female warriors going to fight a holy sex war.

Sucks, I know.

Despite the lack of clear evidence of a sex war pandemic, this hasn’t
stopped news media outlets all over the world from grabbing, expanding, and
running with this story.

In December, Lebanese news channel Al Jadeed
reported<http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6Qvo4_hMrF4> that
hardline and popular Salafi scholar Shaykh Mohamad Al Arefe, a loud and
inciting opponent of the Syrian regime, had issued a fatwa (a non-binding
religious opinion <http://www.islawmix.org/glossary/fatwa/>) allowing the
gang rape of non-Sunni Syrian women by rebels. Not only did the scholar
vehemently deny expressing any such opinion, on
Twitter<https://twitter.com/MohamadAlarefe/status/285242319404421120/photo/1>
and
in later sermons <https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xS2DNIeCIeU> (both links
in Arabic), but the story was debunked by the Electronic Intifada’s Ali
Abunimah<http://electronicintifada.net/blogs/ali-abunimah/how-progressive-alternet-and-salon-fell-gang-rape-fatwa-peddled-islamophobes>
.

On March 27, 2012, the Pan-Arab news site *Al Hayat*, published a
piece<http://www.al-monitor.com/pulse/culture/2013/03/tunisia-girls-syria-sexual-jihad.html>
discussing
the apparent crisis of young Tunisian girls and what was being referred to
as “Sexual Jihad.” It claimed that the impetus behind this was another
fatwa from Al Arefe, in which he urged young women to go in engage in the
so-called sexual Jihad by offering themselves to the rebels. There was,
however, no proof of this fatwa and those close to Al Arefe also thoroughly
denied the cleric had ever made such a ridiculous statement.

According to the report, 13 young Tunisian girls had gone missing, believed
to be in Syria engaging in the sexual Jihad. The story gained traction in
Arabic social media circles <http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=j0AJ3RI77WA> when
in a video, parents of one of the girls claimed that their 17-year old
daughter, who had since returned home, had been brainwashed by friends with
Salafi Jihadi leanings who told her to go to Syria to temporarily marry and
have sex with rebels. Iranian news station Al-Alam also released a video
claiming to be interviewing one such
girl<http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9cxOfRy7Ee0>
 (Arabic).

While Tunisia's Minister of Religious Affairs Noureddine El-Khadimi
condemned such religious opinions, there seemed to be no actual evidence of
anyone — Al Arefe or any other scholar— issuing such a decree.

In July, sexual Jihad popped up again in headlines when following protests
by Muslim Brotherhood supporters in Rabaa, reports emerged — based on a
questionable Facebook post— that female Brotherhood supporters were
preparing themselves for sexual Jihad. Saudi-owned Al Arabiya, which
supported the crackdown on Brotherhood supporters, was one of the first to
report on the 
issue<http://english.alarabiya.net/en/variety/2013/07/13/Pro-Mursi-protesters-are-awaiting-signal-for-sexual-Jihad-report-.html>
.

Sexual Jihad, however, didn’t go viral until last week when
AFP<http://www.google.com/hostednews/afp/article/ALeqM5iPZX9ZAGNg0utxSaSZ1rA-RvgQ_Q?docId=CNG.302971c39f9eedb440c82e636ea66c8d.101>
 and Al 
Arabiya<http://english.alarabiya.net/en/variety/2013/09/20/Tunisia-says-sexual-jihadist-girls-returned-home-from-Syria-pregnant.html>
were
amongst the first to report that that in an address to the National
Assembly last Thursday, Tunisian Interior Minister Lotfi ben Jouddou
mentioned how young Tunisian women were being lured into a sexual Jihad in
Syria, having sex with “20, 30, 100” rebels and were returning to Tunisia
pregnant.

The story, like any story involving Muslims and sexy time, quickly caught
on fire in the American press. *The Atlantic* (“Tunisian Teens Are Helping
Out Syrian Rebels with ‘Sexual
Jihad’<http://www.theatlanticwire.com/global/2013/09/tunisian-teens-are-helping-out-syria-rebels-sexual-jihad/69665/>
”), *TIME*(“Tunisian Women Go On ‘Sex Jihad’ to Syria, Minister
Says<http://world.time.com/2013/09/20/tunisian-women-go-on-sex-jihad-to-syria-minister-says/>
”), *Business Insider* (“Tunisian Girls are Coming Home Pregnant After
Performing ‘Sexual Jihad’ in
Syria<http://www.businessinsider.com/syria-sexual-jihad-tunisians-2013-9>
”), *The Global Post*(“Tunisian Women on ‘Sexual Jihad’ Return Home
Pregnant’: 
Minister<http://www.globalpost.com/dispatch/news/regions/middle-east/130920/tunisian-women-sexual-jihad-return-syria-pregnant>
”), *Jezebel* (“Tunisian Minister Warns of Women Going to Syria on ‘Sex
Jihad’<http://jezebel.com/tunisian-minister-warns-of-women-going-to-syria-on-a-s-1366099109>
”), *Huffington Post* (“‘Sexual Jihad’ in Syria Cause Rise in Pregnancy
among Tunisian 
Women<http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2013/09/20/sexual-jihad-syria-tunisian-women_n_3961904.html>”)
and *The Daily Beast* (“Syria’s ‘Sex
Jihad’<http://www.thedailybeast.com/witw/cheats/2013/09/20/syria-s-sex-jihad.html>”)
are amongst just few of the names of the media outlets that covered the
story with great zeal and over-played images that would make the late great
Edward Said convulse from horror and despair in his grave.

Despite the story having gained traction of the viral variety, and despite
the concerns and facts expressed by Tunisian officials, there seems to be
actually very little evidence to suggest that the so-called sexual Jihad is
actually a thing (and *Jihad al-Nikkah* is *not* a thing in Islamic
jurisprudence).

The story of Tunisian women returning from waging sex on holy warriors (thanks
RT <http://rt.com/news/sexual-jihad-tunisia-syria-133/>) in Syria
impregnated with future warrior babies itself is, at best, just incredibly
questionable and many, from the onset of the story’s break into the English
press, expressed deep
skepticism<http://stream.aljazeera.com/story/201309202249-0023059>.
In a civil war that has had many ideological fronts, the most pernicious in
is salience has perhaps been that of information. Syria has been a cluster
of misinformation, misattribution and
propaganda.O’Bagygate<http://swampland.time.com/2013/09/17/the-rise-and-fall-of-elizabeth-obagy/>
 and Mint 
Press-gate<http://thelede.blogs.nytimes.com/2013/09/21/reporter-denies-writing-article-that-linked-syrian-rebels-to-chemical-attack/?_r=0>
are
two of the most recent headlines to highlight the problems in not only
reporting on the conflict but also how easily questionable, untrue,
unverified information is gobbled up to serve ideological biases and
wishful thinking.

Lauren Wolfe <https://twitter.com/Wolfe321>, director of Women Under
Siege<http://www.womenundersiegeproject.org/author/profile/lauren-wolfe>,
emphasized in an email exchange that WUS, while unable to investigate on
the ground, had looked into the rumors of a ‘Sexual Jihad’ sporadically
over the past year and found “no hard proof of anything.”

She added:

“We've seen all kinds of horrors in this war though, so who's to say
whether this is happening too. Then again, we've also seen massive amounts
of propaganda tainting both sides in this conflict. So who's to say this
isn't more of that?”

Ruth Michaelson <https://twitter.com/_Ms_R>, a freelance reporter who spent
time in Syria in September 2012 and has written extensively about the role
of sexual exploitation in the
conflict<http://rhrealitycheck.org/article/2012/10/09/road-to-hell-is-paved-with-good-intentions-syrian-refugees-and-marriages-conveni/>,
not only expressed concern, in an email, over the veracity and strangeness
of the story, but also the several long-standing racist Orientalist tropes
being pulled together into the story:

*“The first thought that struck me on this is that now that Western media
has exhausted the vein of "female refugees being…exploitatively married to
men from the Gulf"-type stories, this is the new wave. It seems like there
has to be a story in the Western media that plays into the dynamic of
sexually rampant Arab men and submissive women, and this is the 2.0
version.

As with the 1.0 version it's not to say that there is not a problem. In the
case of sexual exploitation of women in refugee camps, there are definitely
problems happening, but the framing of the issues in the media made it
sound like a pandemic of uncontrollable sexual violence. This was actively
unhelpful- it made the…occurring problems more difficult to locate and
discuss sensitively [and] it also was framed in the media in a way that
directly disenfranchised and silenced Syrian women, portraying them as
unending numbers of mute and stupid victims of sexually voracious men… “*

The sex Jihad story playfully weaves together a history of fatwa
misreporting (like the famousfaux phallic
fatwa<http://www.patheos.com/blogs/mmw/2011/12/the-faux-phallic-fatwa/>),
haphazard research and knee-jerk reactions (the Queendom of Saudi Arabia
debacle<http://www.patheos.com/blogs/mmw/2012/08/queendom-of-saudi-arabia-actually-a-result-of-kneejerk-journalistic-illiteracy/>,
the Yemeni child bride hoax<http://www.majalla.com/eng/2013/07/article55243853>
 and the guy too handsome for, again, Saudi
Arabia<http://www.islawmix.org/the-man-too-handsome-for-saudi-arabia-who-wasnt/>)
and a weird, uneasy obsession with Muslims and sex. It especially feeds on
the trope of Muslim women’s bodies as disposable for the unquenchable
appetites of Muslim men. This in turn also obscures the agency of Muslim
women in sexual relations — as ones to only ever serve males.

Michaelson additionally asks:

“*Why would women coming into Syria prioritise sexual favours when there is a
large body of evidence showing that there are female fighters on the ground?
*”

So what then can we make of the Interior Minister’s statements? Dismissing
them is not an option, yet questioning them certainly is as ultimately we
don’t have enough details about the story from the source itself, Ben
Jeddou, whose information more than likely came from within the
intelligence service in his ministry and not (hopefully) from online gossip
sites. How did these young girls, some allegedly as young as thirteen, get
out of Tunisia, into Syria, out of Syria (pregnant) and back into Tunisia
with what seems to be ease? Why are only Tunisian women being sent to wage
this sex war? Why not Pakistani? Chechen? Libyan? Who is escorting these
women? Or are they traveling alone and if so how and where are they getting
across the borders into Syria?

What we do know is that, according to the Tunisian government, at least
thirteen Tunisian girls are missing, several hundred Tunisian men have
allegedly gone to join Syrian rebels, several thousand have been stopped
from going to Syria and we know that sex (especially in terms of sexual
violence and exploitation) is an inseparable part of any conflict and war.
Yet the near exclusiveness of *only* Tunisian young girls being groomed for
a holy sex war brigade (perhaps unwittingly building on the stereotype of
North African women amongst Gulf/Levantine Arabs), the lack of evidence and
corroborating reports from journalists, aid workers and activists on the
ground in Syria, false fatwas and the history of delegitimizing groups,
ideas and movements through accusations (whether these are true or not is
irrelevant) of ‘sexual deviance’ (i.e.
Here<http://www.foreignpolicy.com/articles/2009/11/25/the_militarization_of_sex>
,here<http://swampland.time.com/2013/07/03/five-new-revelations-about-anwar-al-awlaki-prostitutes-pizza-and-more/>
 and 
here<http://maxblumenthal.com/2011/05/did-bin-laden-borrow-his-porn-stash-from-manuel-noriega/>)
call into question how this story is being used by the Tunisian government
itself. After all, it has a strong interest in countering the growth of
Salafist ideas and sympathies within its own borders.

When it comes to stories that involve Muslims and sex, international news
media are quick to publish and gloat about the varying ways in which
Muslims (by extension generally any and all brown folks) are so incredibly
sexually repressed that they resort to sexual deviance, which is always at
the expense of their women. The words *sex* and *Jihad* are two SEO-happy
terms that elicit strong emotional responses and outrage as well as clicks
and news-makers are well aware of this. Instead of putting in some time to
verify information or, at the very least, offer cautionary language most,
if not all, American news media reported the sexual Jihad story as the hard
(no pun intended), cold, exploitative truth. As I’ve written
elsewhere<http://www.patheos.com/blogs/mmw/2012/08/queendom-of-saudi-arabia-actually-a-result-of-kneejerk-journalistic-illiteracy/>
:

*“Predisposed ideas and conceptions of Muslims and of gender relations in
the Muslim world and Muslim countries make it easy for sloppy and
reactionary journalism to gain momentum. They love to publish it, and we
love to read it. There’s something wrong with this equation, but we still
continue to gobble it up every time it’s thrown in our collectively gawking
face.”*

And lo, we gawk on.

Reply via email to