'My husband beats me when he is at the peak of his love for me': The place
where domestic violence is a sign of love

'A woman takes pride in being beaten by her husband'

*        <http://www.independent.co.uk/author/nebghouha-mint-zeidane>
Nebghouha Mint Zeidane 

Domestic violence against women was criminalised in 2001, and under
Mauritanian law, wife-beating is a crime punishable with up to five years in
prison istock / markgoddard 

Salimata was always told she should be proud to come from a family of wife
beaters.

“You’re the daughter of a woman whose husband broke her hands. Your
grandmother's legs were fractured by her husband. You must be loved,”
Salimata said, citing her mother’s words.

The 19-year-old woman from Mauritania’s Soninké  ethnic group, married to a
man who also beats her, said she taught herself to believe what her mother
told her.

“I felt like an animal that had to be disciplined,” she said. “As time
passed, I came to believe that my husband beats me only when he is at the
peak of his love for me.”

Mauritania, a poor, mainly Muslim nation, has deep social and racial
divides, each group with its unique marriage norms.

While divorce is widely accepted among the majority Moors, it is almost
impossible among the Mauritanians of African descent such as the Soninké and
Fulani.

And while domestic violence is frowned upon among the Moors, of Arab and
Berber descent, it’s seen as an act of love and an accepted practice for
Soninkés, said social researcher Sidi Boyada, an advisor at the ministry of
social affairs.

TRADITION

Aichetou Samba is a 60-year-old Fulani grandmother who lives in a modest
house in a Nouakchott neighbourhood.

“In the past, our girls used to get married at eight years of age, and they
usually married their cousins,” she said, coddling one of her grandchildren.

Mauritanian law stipulates “sanity” and “marriageable age” as preconditions
for getting married, leaving the door open for early marriage by giving
parents the right to decide.

Wearing a colourful scarf that shows her Fulani heritage, Samba smiled and
said: “A Fulani woman always takes pride in being beaten by her husband,”
and often shares her experiences with other women to show off his love for
her.

“This is one of our traditions,” she said. “We see wife-beating as a common
and normal practice, which sometimes includes pouring cold water on the
wife’s body.”

“MY LEGS WERE BROKEN”

Sociology professor Ousmane Wagué at the University of Nouakchott, also a
Fulani, said Mauritanian women of African descent accept being beaten to
avoid divorce, convincing themselves their husbands’ violence is a sign of
love. “As the popular song goes: My legs were broken and I stayed home,” he
told the Thomson Reuters Foundation.

Mariem Jallo, a 25-year-old Fulani woman, is an exception. She has been
divorced for five years.

“My husband used to constantly beat me. He passionately loved me but this
didn’t stop him from hitting me for very trivial reasons,” she said.

Jallo, who is fond of soap operas, said her husband came home one day while
she was watching television and hit her. Minutes later, he tried to make it
up to her, saying he couldn’t bear to see her preoccupied with something
other than him.

Her husband tried to block the divorce and her family blamed her for the
failed marriage, she said.

Alyoun Idi, a 27-year-old Fulani man, said he had beaten his wife many times
because she disobeys him, adding that this never affected their
relationship.

“I love my wife so much and I can’t live without her, but we inherited this
from our ancestors, which is part of our traditions,” Alyoun said. “It’s
also a great resolution for many family disputes.”

CRIMINALISED

Domestic violence against women was criminalised in 2001, and under
Mauritanian law, wife-beating is a crime punishable with up to five years in
prison.

Ahmed Bezeid ould Almamy, a lawyer who works with women’s rights groups,
said he receives an average of five complaints every month of women
reporting abuse by their husbands.

But prosecutions are rare as women often drop charges for fear of sending
their husbands to jail or getting divorced, he said.

However, lengthening queues outside the offices of women’s rights
organisations suggest a waning tolerance for violence against women,
campaigners say.

The Household Women’s Association recorded more than 2,000 complaints in the
first half of 2016, compared to 1,700 complaints in 2014, according to
Aminetou mint Al Mokhtar, head of the association.

Ministry of Justice official Haimouda Ramdhane said the Mauritanian legal
system provides women victims with free services, including lawyers, medical
and psychological support.

“New legislation is underway blocking the way for the withdrawal of
complaints against violent husbands to protect the public interest and
punish anyone who is also involved in covering up for crimes against women,”
Ramdhane told the Thomson Reuters Foundation, without giving a timeframe.

Despite efforts to pursue and prosecute violent husbands, some Mauritanian
women continue to endure battering.

“When apathy afflicts our relationship, he won’t care anymore for what I do
even if I burnt down the house,” said Salimata. “It’s at that moment that I
will miss being beaten.”

Thomson Reuters Foundation

 

 

EM

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