Please forward widely.
Thank you.
Muhaideen

-----Original Message-----
From: kiosk0207 [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Tuesday, August 10, 2004 9:07 AM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: [abunimah] Abunimah: A hoax and honor lost



A hoax and honor lost for Norma Khouri

By Ali Abunimah

The Daily Star
10 August 2004

http://dailystar.com.lb/article.asp?edition_id=10&categ_id=5&article_id=7113

A sensational book that purported to tell the "true" story of the
murder of a young Jordanian woman by her father because she dared
to date a Christian man has been exposed as a fraud. The scandal
was a setback for advocates of women's rights in Jordan and
provided a disturbing case study of how lies and distortions can
masquerade as "fact" in Western discussions of the Arab world and
Islam.

When Norma Khouri's book "Forbidden Love" ("Honor Lost" in the
US) came out last year, it was a hit, selling more than 250,000
copies globally. In Australia, where the author has been granted
asylum, it was voted one of the country's 100 favorite books of
all time. Khouri's book told the story of how she and her friend
"Dalia," a Muslim woman, opened a unisex hair salon in Amman in
the early 1990s. Dalia fell in love with a Christian man,
"Michael," who frequented the salon, and despite the innocence of
the affair, she was brutally stabbed to death by her father in
1996. Khouri claimed she fled Jordan after this atrocity, fearing
for her own life, eventually making her way to Australia.

However, investigations by a Jordanian journalist, women's rights
activists and Australia's Sydney Morning Herald have revealed the
book to be a hoax. There is no evidence the events described took
place. If Khouri's ragged tale could fool major publishers like
Random House (in Australia) and Simon and Schuster (in the US),
her story fell apart immediately when Rana Husseini, an
investigative journalist at the Jordan Times, got hold of it.
Since 1994, Husseini has written countless articles on honor
crimes in Jordan and can be credited with a major role in
galvanizing public opinion against the practice.

This has been a hard road, as Husseini explained by telephone
from Amman: "I have always been accused of tarnishing Jordan's
image, of washing dirty laundry in public. But I have always been
very careful to explain that honor killing is not part of the
Muslim religion, and that although serious, there are only 15-25
cases per year, not thousands, like Khouri claimed falsely in her
book." Husseini pointed out that the practice also occurs among
Christian families.

Husseini first heard about Khouri's book through a flow of
e-mails from Australia, since Khouri had published Husseini's
e-mail address without her permission. Some were from
Arab-Australians who felt slandered, but many more were from
readers who believed that Arabs and Muslims were monsters. "I
felt I had to do something," says Husseini. She contacted the
Jordanian National Committee for Women (JNCW), and with the
organization's president, Amal al-Sabbagh, she did a thorough
page-by-page analysis of the book and documented dozens of
serious errors and anachronisms, covering geography, history,
Islam, Arabic language and law.

On page two of her book, for example, Khouri wrote that the
Jordan River is "no longer strong enough to flow down to Amman."
Yet, the Jordan River has never flowed anywhere near Amman, not
least because it would have meant flowing uphill for an altitude
of 1 kilometer.

There were also errors about Jordan's legal system: Khouri
claimed that Dalia's killer was released on bail, even though
Jordan never releases suspects on bail in capital offences.
Khouri also described the lives of a majority of Jordanian women
as being akin to that of prisoners, slavishly serving men in
silence and eating their leftovers, She also described a society
of fear that was unrecognizable to anyone familiar with Jordan.
Husseini's investigation determined that no salon as described by
Khouri had ever existed (unisex salons are in any case illegal),
nor had anyone in Khouri's alleged Amman neighborhood ever heard
of her family, or of the brutal murder. Husseini was astonished
that Khouri's book contained not a single reference for any of
the thousands of "facts" it reported.

JNCW's Sabbagh sent a letter detailing these findings to Random
House in Australia, but so far the publisher has stood by Khouri.
However, the American publisher has withdrawn the book from sale
pending an investigation. While the facts of the Khouri hoax are
astonishing, it is, sadly, not surprising that so many were ready
to believe her. Husseini observes: "The timing of the book was
very suspicious, between Sept. 11, 2001, and the war on Iraq. The
alleged crime happened in 1996, so why did the book come out
after so long?"

In the post-Sept. 11 era, Khouri's book met a certain demand in
the US and other Western societies, where the shortcomings and
"backwardness" of Arab and Muslim societies have become a focus
of intense interest to which precious little genuine expertise is
brought to bear. Indeed the desire to "rescue" Muslim women has
become a prominent theme in liberal justifications for US
intervention in the region. This was most common at the beginning
of the Afghanistan war.

There is also a Western tendency to assume that violence is a
pathology when it occurs among Arabs and Muslims, and to apply
spurious religious or cultural explanations to explain it. Murder
rates in general, and specifically for the murder of women by
male family members and intimates, are far higher in the United
States than in Jordan, though few analyses attribute this to
American culture generally, or to Americans' devout Christianity.

Husseini points to the well-worn stereotypes that infect Western
media discourse about the issues to which she has devoted her
career. She notes the exotic artwork on the cover of Khouri's
book, which shows a women clad in black head-covering with only
her long-lashed eyes peering out - dress that certainly exists,
but is not typical in Jordan, where women outnumber and
outperform men in secondary and higher education, and are
increasingly present in all sectors of the economy.

"We have this problem (of honor crimes) in Jordan and elsewhere,"
says Husseini; "(T)here are people here working on it, the
government is working on it and the royal family. The country
acknowledged the problem before anyone outside was talking about
honor crimes."

There is resistance to change from conservatives. For example
from the opposition Islamic Action Front or some tribal leaders,
who often justify their positions by claiming that the campaign
against honor crimes is a hostile foreign plot. However, Husseini
points out, noted Muslim figures, among them Jordan's Chief
Islamic Justice Sheikh Izzedin al-Tamimi, have come out firmly
against the practice, and in recent years there have been 10
major legislative reforms advancing women's rights in several
areas.

The stereotype of helpless women in need of escape, which
Khouri's book has fed, renders these debates and struggles
invisible, and disempowers the very women who are campaigning
successfully for change from within.

Ali Abunimah, a Chicago-based Palestinian-Jordanian analyst and
media critic, is co-founder of Electronic Intifada. He wrote this
commentary for THE DAILY STAR



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