Crisis in Tahrir

Egypt’s “nude photo revolutionary” just that, revolutionary

| 17 November 2011 | Comments (23)

Aliya Mahdy

CAIRO: Despise Aliya Mahdy or not, she has done what few revolutionaries in Egypt have been able to do: take revolutionary action. Her public display of her naked body in a blog post has seen attacks from the conservative Islamists and the liberals alike. Nudity, especially female nudity, leaves people queasy. Had she been a man, would the reaction have been so virulent against her? Doubtful. The man would likely have been praised for his use of his body as expression. Mahdy, unfortunately, is a woman living in Egypt.

Women are objects in many conservatives’ views. Things that can be owned and used for a man’s pleasure when he desires and when he wants. This is why we have seen the growth of polygamy, the shoving aside of a woman’s ability to choose her life’s goals, and the unending “debate” over the causes of sexual harassment and sexual assault.

Whether we agree that one’s body should be a form of protest – which so many of Egypt’s liberals disagree with – is irrelevant. The reality is that Mahdy has been able, with her body, debunk all myths of Egyptian liberalism. Her naked image, which has seen over one million hits, has shown that Egypt is not ready for free expression.

Liberal activists online lamented that the 20-year-old university student has “ruined” her life, is “young and doesn’t know what she has done.” But in an inherently conservative society, Mahdy has created something only the truly revolutionary in today’s world can do: showing the hypocrisy of the so-called freedom fighters for expression.

In the ultra-male dominated society of Egypt, women are too often told what they should put on their bodies. Wear the veil, wear loose clothes, don’t wear this, don’t wear that, and so on. Mahdy has shown that nobody has a right to tell her, or other women for that matter, what is appropriate for a woman. Her body is her own and she can do what she likes with it, and that includes putting nothing over top it and publishing it online. It’s her right.

What Mahdy has shown is that one doesn’t have to follow the traditional cultural norms. In Egypt or elsewhere. The antagonism meted out against the young woman for showing her body publicly is part of the conservative nature that is Egypt, where a woman’s body is the de facto property of society. Her honor the honor of her family, community and country. But Mahdy, knowing it or not, told Egypt and the world that she has had enough. Time for change. Time for a woman to have the right to their property, their body.

Following our publishing of the story earlier this week, I received many angry emails from supposed “free speech advocates” who denounced Bikyamasr.com for writing about the story in a “positive” manner. One email, from a supposed “Egyptian liberal activist” summed up the struggle facing women in this country: “I support women’s rights and freedom of speech, but what this girl has done goes beyond anything that could be possibly defended. It is not honorable for a woman to publicly display her body. That is pornography and our Egyptian sensibilities do not support this.”

There are plenty of progressive views around, but in reality life is difficult for liberal-minded women in Egypt. Women are too often the scapegoats for the ills of society. Take Amr Derrag, the head of the Freedom and Justice Party in Giza – the offshoot political party of the Muslim Brotherhood – who told me recently that the societal problems facing Egypt in the past three decades are “directly related to women not staying home and building the family.”

Not only is this assumption wrong, and scary – the FJP wants to push women back into the home – it shows that the problems facing Egypt socially are being pinpointed and put on women.

There are many examples of women being “protected” from men in the Middle East.

One would think that the rise of ultra-conservatism, namely the Salafi project emanating from Saudi Arabia, would be more tolerant of Islam’s historical support for women’s rights and their mobility in public – think of the era of the prophet and the openness of that society. The prophet was adamant that all people were welcome in Medina and that women were to be treated with the utmost respect. At the time, unlike today, there was no sexual apartheid in the mosque, with men and women praying together in a show of unity. Now, what we are witnessing is the rise of a movement that is as vehemently anti-women as it is anti-progress.

“Whenever the conservatives enter a society they don’t talk politics or economics, they talk of the honour of women”, said Hibaaq Osman, the founder and chair of the women’s organisation El Karama, in a previous interview. She argues, rightly, that what is important to these conservatives – and she is quick to point out this is not a problem limited to Islam – is that women are the key to society. She added that in all societies, women are the building blocks of forward thinking. She believes that once women have shaken off the need for a male guardian and have entered the workforce, then freedoms and laws against sexual violence can be implemented for the betterment and progress of society.

But, she added: “If the woman is being portrayed as the devil in Friday sermons in the mosque, then in public people are looking for confirmation of what they are hearing.”

Men are unable to take responsibility for their own actions. Osman says that evidence shows conservative religious folk the world over, including the Middle East, are the most sex-crazed.

So when Mahdy removed her clothes, she undressed the liberals and their calls for freedom. Obviously, in their mind, she made a mistake. She was wrong. Nudity has no place in Egypt. But for the millions of women, who on a daily basis face sexual harassment, assault and categorical oppression from all sides, she did what no activist has been able to do. She won. She told the world that her body is owned by nobody other than herself. Disagree with the tactic, fine, but one must, if they truly espouse the idea of freedom of expression, support her in her cause.

At the end of the day, one may attempt to cover a woman’s body with clothes, force them into the home, but in today’s Internet world, women like Mahdy can achieve more naked than they ever can clothed and in the streets.

BM

ShortURL: http://goo.gl/7DWqT

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Section: Egypt, Op-ed, Women

Egypt in Crisis
Religion in Focus
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  • Eve_massard

    What’s your concept about freedom? Is doing anything you like even when it’s demeaning to yourself and others freedom?! Freedom is to defend your right in living a decent life,it has nothing to do with “nudity as a sign of freedom”.i really want to know what is good about exposing your body like that???????
    Donot talk about Islam like you know it.Islam is an honourable religion despite all this fake and empty attacks.If you want to talk about something,learn CORRECTLY and PROPERLY all about it.
    Is nudity freedom?i don’t think so.Islam prevents nudity because exposing our body to the public is not decent and so demeaning to human beings men and women as well.
    Islam never considers a woman as an object,no sir,woman is a jewel that should be respected.

  • Arakelow

    Excellent commmentary! I add that her act was a valuable catalyst for the world’s social, political & economic development. I think her revolutionary act will continue to positively influence the intellectual debate and inspire other’s to follow in her courageous footsteps. Social & intellectual enlightenment helps break the social dams holding back humanity’s progress, the resulting flood of activities stimulates healthy economic growth.

  • http://pulse.yahoo.com/_DTJQ4QX2ZMRIYKX2UFYMBPEQFQ Martin

    According to religious Muslims a woman’s body was designed and made by Allah. Surely to consider a nude woman’s body as disgusting is an insult to Allah. Such people should remember their Judgement Day!!

    Think. Mahdy does.

  • Coffindancer38

    I had a discussion about this with egyotian friends one of whom said they wish they could meet her so they could kick her!!!??? What??? This same gentleman went on to proclaim that egyptian WOMEN (!) would kill this girl if they could get at her!!! What the hell? If women are so kept down and demeaned and treated like dirt in that country, then the rest of the world should not have neen so supportive of them getting their independence from mubarek!!!! If there is soooo much rabid intolerance like this then i think perhaps these people should look at themselves to find why such practices got started! I think its pretty obvious women are treated like this because MEN cant keep their urges to themselves! Obviously such compartmenalizing and veiling of women is a societal distrust of other males to keep their penises to themselves!!!

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  • soud

    She and her supporters are not not freedom of expression fans but they are perverts of society  If she knows most feminist movements in the world oppose sexual depiction women in sex pornography

  • Khadija

    This woman is an attention-seeking twit, nothing brave or revolutionary about her. The only people who are excited about this or who support this are nitwits who are brainwashed by Western ideas of “freedom”, as well as perverts who want to see the pics. We all know that she would have been just as vilified if it had been a man pulling this disgusting stunt. How exactly does she speak for “women’s rights” or “freedom” by putting on an indecent display like an animal? How are the liberals hypocrites because they don’t want this sort of obscenity in their society? If anything this idiot is a hypocrite by bashing conservatives while at the same time falling victim to Western objectification of the female body in the guise of “freedom”. This has NOTHING to do with her being a woman and everything to do with a   violation of basic human decency.

    • http://pulse.yahoo.com/_D5PNRPIAL4VHQ4KKMW63L5RUYY O-Man

      I believe you are missing the point of why she did posed nude. If you look at the islamic world, the are viewed as sexual property, and not a person; this is a undeniable fact. The point of her posing nude was to say that she free. She is free to do what ever she pleases with her body because it is her body, no one owns her body but her. This has everything to do with being a woman because of how women are treated, if you are this blind to that fact, than honestly, I’m not sure what other evidence you need.

      Secondly, what is so indecent about the human body? The human body is one of the most beautiful creations. You’re looking at the human body as a sex object. Why? Is that all you see? If that is all you see, than truly, you are not looking at the human body correctly because it is NOT a sex object.

      Lastly, I am from the West, namely America, and you know what? I find great value of what this young woman is trying to do. She is bringing to light a big problem that is rampant and many people are angry that their culture is being put on the front and center and being embarrassed. They should be embarrassed, I know I would be and I would try to fix it. You can’t progress as a society until you address the problems that are in your country.

      • Khadija

        “If you look at the islamic world, the are viewed as sexual property, and not a person; this is a undeniable fact.” Actually I DO deny it, you can’t make blanket statements about the entire Islamic world any more than I can about all Western nations. I don’t believe for a minute  that her point was to do anything other than seek attention. It’s clear that this girl has Daddy issues, from her comments about being “controlled” by Daddy’s money to her penchant for jumping into sexual relationships with men much older. I also notice that for all her talk about being a “liberated, free woman”, she had no problem with quitting school rather than be cut off financially by Daddy.
        I don’t see the human body as indecent in and of itself. I see it as something beautiful and personal to be shared with one’s spouse, not to be put on public display. Humans are not animals and there is nothing “progressive” or “artistic” about showing private bits, this is barbaric and ignorant. It has nothing to do with being a woman because if a man had put himself out like that people would be just as disgusted and angry. Yes, it’s her body but when she put it out there for all to see then she opened up to criticism and judgment. People are angry because this idiot is deliberately misrepresenting an entire culture in order to gain fame for herself. If she wants to be able to parade around and be “free” to show “her body” then move somewhere else. Egyptians don’t have to accept this sort of “freedom” in their culture. What makes your ideas of individualism and “liberty” automatically better for society? Why are they wrong for wanting to preserve THEIR culture? I see the Western support of this confused individual nothing more than cultural imperialism.

  • Clint Alexander07

    You finally got it right Joseph. I am proud of you!

  • Master-blaster

    A brave woman who fought for freedom for women in their country! Bravo for having the courage not to be suppressed by hypocritical Islamic “morality”! Greetings from Germany!

  • Guest

    Who said that a man would be praised if he does something like that? So untrue! It’s unethical for both genders alike!

  • Hope

    Welcome back to stoneage!

  • 1234

    Aliya Mahdy, Wonderfully done, you are definitely a brave woman. God bless you Aliya Mahdy. God will laugh at all these religious conservatives who can not bear that someone like you say “it is my choice to do what I want”. You are not killing anyone, you are not not hurting anyone, just making the old “religious gang” scared because you are not following their rules. Aliya Mahdy, I wish you all the luck in the future, you will be the winner, and you win by real “knock-out-punches” which hopefully lands right in the private parts of the religious gang. Again, Aliya Mahdy – you are a brave woman.
     
    Pierre

    • Amira

      Hello Pierre, 
      God bless you also. Could you please show your body to all the world in your blog to call you a brave man?   i am very exited **gg** 

      • http://www.blog.sandipdev.me Sandip Dev

        I support Aliya but I wouldn’t like to put my own naked photos on my blog (of course I am not very photogenic either) because I am uncomfortable/shy about the idea. But me being shy about something does not and shouldn’t prevent another person from doing it. I am also shy about dancing in public because I a not a good dancer. That does not mean all dancing be banned. That’s what is being argued here. There people are free to do what they like, of course within certain limits. But the limits being imposed on Aliya in particular or women in general are not fair.

  • Shabbirchhipa

    she is mad.

  • https://profiles.google.com/ircpresident/about Mohamed ElGohary

    Oh please man, can you write her name instead of referring to her as Mahdy? Mr. so called women rights? Argh westerners….

    • Yusuf

      Her name *IS* Mahdy!

    • Anonymous

      what are you talking about?

  • G.

    Simply red ya J.

  • http://ianrobertdouglas.com Ian Douglas

    Aliya is the only one who has demanded by action that the leftists and all Egyptians focus on what they should have been thinking about and discussing all together since 11 February: freedom, what is freedom, and what kind of freedom do we want. The Tahrir revolutionaries lived something extraordinary, but it was lost the day – 8 March – that women rallied in Tahrir in support of womens’ rights and the role of women in the revolution and were attacked by thugs. Thereafter the left descended into absurdity: either in competition with itself as to who is more revolutionary than the other, or losing time attacking Islamists in the name of the scarecrow of the Islamic state. Given that the betrayal of the revolution started with violence against women, it is appropriate that it is a woman who reminds the Egyptian revolution of its ultimate goal. And with a lot of dignity