Book learning for girls

Girl and books

Last week a 14-year-old Pakistani girl named Malala Yousafzai was shot in the head by the Taliban.  Her crimes, labeled “activism” by the monsters who tried to kill her and her female classmates, appears to be attending school and encouraging other girls to become educated.

This week, in my home state of Wisconsin, a man shot an entire beauty salon full of people in order to kill his estranged wife.  There was a similar salon shooting tragedy in Orlando, Florida, earlier this month, and another mass-fatality, domestic violence-related shooting last year in Seal Beach, California.

These incidents are related.  No, the Taliban didn’t shoot these American ex-wives and all their co-workers.  But the same mentality that declares schooling girls to be not only useless but a dangerous blasphemy is related to a culture where women are unsafe in their marriages and if they choose to end their marriage.  The same desire to control the minds and bodies of women and girls, coupled with the easy availability of guns all over the world, allows retaliation with high body counts when females step out of line.  It’s a slippery slope, I know, to talk about the safety and rights of women and girls, when I was the one who opted out of all but one college class in anything remotely “feminist” (a single women’s history class, which is the only reason I know the names of all the seminal texts — The Yellow Wallpaper, The Second Sex, etc — that I have yet to read).

But I did have three important learning experiences that shaped my view that education for girls and equality for women (which includes control of their own bodies and health, including access to birth control) are vital and interrelated, and can’t be taken for granted.  The first was the circumstances of my upbringing: my mother was in an abusive marriage to my father until I was six years old, and until my father’s death in 2000, even after he left the United States and moved back to Taiwan, she remained terrified of him.  I remember plenty of physical violence, but what also stands out in my memory is the steady stream of emotional and verbal abuse he hurled at her.  You can blame it on culture or family — my father was from a male-dominated, old-fashioned culture, in a patriarchal family, where other men also beat their wives.  You can blame it on the fact that my mother dropped out of college after only a year or so, at age 20, to get married, and then had a baby (me) in short order, and another one (my brother) when her marriage was falling apart, at age 25.  All of that contributed to the misery and intractable feel of our family situation and the poverty we experienced once my mother was out, sort of, from under the yoke of her abusive marriage.  Like the women who were murdered in all of the recent mass killings, my mother had a restraining order against my father.  But like the deceased women, my mother’s restraining order was a simple piece of paper against an abusive man’s rage — at worst, only as good as the paper they’re printed on.

The second experience came when I was in eighth grade.  My social studies teacher was an enthusiastic, articulate young man named Mr. Fisher.  We studied government and current events and the rest of the prescribed curriculum in 1984 in Eau Claire, Wisconsin.  One day during his lecture, Mr. Fisher told us that he didn’t understand why more girls didn’t go on to higher education.  As he recalled from his own childhood, the girls were the ones who were often “better at” school than the boys, and they had great contributions to make if only they would stick with their educations.  Of all the prosaic, throwaway bits of my adolescent school experience, this was a memorable moment — someone outside my family saying that girls should stay in school and go as far as their intellect and resources will allow.

The third experience was when I was in graduate school studying public health at UCLA.  My public health classes were all about math, biological pathways, risk factors, and assessing variables that I never before understood could be quantified.  In one class, a community health class outside my primary discipline of epidemiology, I was shocked to learn that infant mortality is related to lack of education in mothers.  In fact, the babies’ risk of dying decreased with each additional year their mothers had attended school.  It was a thunder clap, but also a moment of, ‘this is so obvious, it’s hard to break it down for anyone whose mindset prevents them from viewing women as an important half of the species rather than simply walking baby incubators.’

Knowing this makes it seem like basic species survival to send girls to school, and allow them to learn for a good, long time!  I’m not sure what to do about the problem of creating boys and men who view women as truly equal human beings.  I count myself lucky and smart to have married one; now I’m working on version 2.0 in raising my son.

3 Comments

  1. Gail Flackett
    October 24, 2012

    I was moved by this article. I, of course, have been very troubled by the Malala attack; but I did not know about those shooting of women here so recently; but over the years I have worked with women who have been in abusive controlling relationships, or were sexually abused as children…so much pain…for a lifetime. I, myself was fortunate to have a very kind father. I am blessed that like your husband and now Calvin, I have a son who, when a teen in junior high, wrote a song admonishing boys to be more respectful to girls, based on what he witnessed among his peers. He is a Dad now of a boy and girl, and it is great to see the relationships that his male peers have with their spouses and their children. Keep up your great work Susan. Gail

    Reply
    • Susan
      October 24, 2012

      Thanks very much, Gail. After yet another American politician yesterday came out defending rape at “God’s will,” it’s hard not to despair completely about the lack of progress we’ve made. But my mother-in-law raised an incredible man, and you raised a good son. One of the most rewarding parts of the difficult job of parenting is seeing our kids grow up with respect and empathy for others.

      Reply
  2. Susan
    October 27, 2012

    This article from today’s Los Angeles times shows that the effort to stop education goes beyond girls: http://www.latimes.com/news/nationworld/world/la-fg-pakistan-education-taliban-20121027,0,5116278,full.story

    Reply

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