States
and the international community have generally failed to seriously address rape
in conflict situations, including those occurring within genocide, where women
are raped by the thousands. Feminist analysis of rape and genocide has not only
made an important contribution to studies on wartime rape and genocide, but
also to the development of international laws which made possible the prosecutions
of state and nonstate actors. Nevertheless, subsequent studies continue to
raise critical questions concerning the role of gender in genocide. Among
the issues debated is whether sexual violence inflicted on a group in wartime genocide constitutes
genocide or is it instead, a war crime indirectly related to genocide. This
post discusses how feminist analysis has responded to this issue. It will begin by
a brief description of relevant international laws.
Legal Responses
to Rape in Genocide
Analyses
on genocide began after the atrocities of World War II and were mostly based on
what have occurred during the Holocaust. The term genocide was first coined by
Raphael Lemkin, a legal scholar, following the Holocaust. As a result of
Lemkin’s advocacy, the Convention on the Prevention and Punishment of the Crime
of Genocide was drafted in 1948 (Ashraph, 2017). Article II of the Convention
defined genocide as an intention to destroy, in whole or in part, a national
ethnic, racial or religious group, through acts including killing members of
the group; causing serious bodily or mental harm to members of the group. The
convention did not explicitly state rape as genocide and there were no prosecutions
of rape in the Nuremburg trials (Russell-Brown, 2003: 359–361). In contrast, the
War Crimes Tribunal in Tokyo was the first milestone in terms of the indictment
of wartime rape although unrelated to genocide. The Tokyo Charter, which was also
established following World War II, included the act of rape as a violation of
customs and convention of war and some Japanese military and civilian officers
were found guilty of rape (Askin 2003: 300; Russell-Brown, 2003: 360).
Furthermore,
none of the Geneva Conventions specifically list rape as a crime against
humanity or grave breach, although wartime rape has been interpreted as such by
the international community. To enforce the recognition of rape as crime
against humanity, the international tribunals of Yugoslavia (1993) and Rwanda
(1995) used as precedent the Control Council Law Number 10 charter for wartime
crimes adopted in German courts after the Second World War, which included rape
in the list of crimes against humanity. However, rape as a means of ethnic
cleansing through the impregnation of Muslim and Croatian women and girls in
Bosnia-Herzegovina was considered as a crime against humanity but failed to be defined
as genocide in the tribunals of Yugoslavia (Joeden-Forgery, 2012: 101–102). It
is the Rwandan Tribunal which has now set the precedent for rape as genocide by
proving that rape was a tool used and part of a strategy to destroy the Tutsi
community (Russell-Brown, 2003: 352; Joeden-Forgery, 2012: 89).
Early Feminist
Inquiries on Genocide
Gender
stereotypical roles lay the foundation for the sexual violence that become an
effective tool of genocide. As in most societies women are considered men’s
property, raping women from the enemy’s side is analogous to taking their
valuables. Invading women’s body is equal to invading their enemy’s territory.
In patriarchal culture women are typically under the protection of men and
women’s chastity is related to the family’s honor. In this culture, women’s
rape and sexual enslavement result in men’s powerlessness, while women become the
shame of the community. This view developed the basis for feminist analysis in
the role of gender and sexual violence in genocide. In the context of genocide,
feminist scholars argue that women commonly become the target of rape and other
acts of sexual violence because it can be used as a means to terrorize the enemy,
disempower men of the enemy, as well as break families and weaken social
cohesion in the enemy’s group, ultimately destroying the community.
When
studies of genocide which occurred during the Holocaust began, scholars in
general took a universal approach. Jewish people as a race were seen as being
the target of mass killing. When feminist inquiries raised the fact about the
rape and the biological-based human rights violations that Jewish women
experienced, such as reproductive experiments and forced sterilization, it was
not generally welcomed by the academia. There were concerns that by raising such
issues, it would mean putting gender over race, and by doing so, it will
somehow reduce the significance of the atrocity–the annihilation of the Jewish
people (Rafter and Bell, n.d.:3–4).
However,
early feminist inquiries into the genocide of the Holocaust and other
atrocities of World War II developed into a body of theory that not only revisited
the notion of women as a weapon of war in mass killings, but one that
proclaimed genocide is gendered.
Feminist
Analysis of Genocide
It
was not until Susan Brownmiller’s ground breaking book Against Our Will: Men, Women and Rape (1975)–which opened the
discussion on rape during war time and genocide–that the issue of rape came to
the forefront. During the following decade, feminist analysis of genocide
focused heavily on women victims. As a response, in her 1985 book Gendercide: The Implications of Sex
Selection, Mary Anne Warren used the term gendercide to coin the gender
neutrality in the gender analysis of genocide, where both men and women can be specific
victims of genocide. Although Warren may point out the lack of attention to
male experience in genocide, still she confirms the general feminist viewpoint
that genocide is gendered and that women and men experience genocide
differently.
"women commonly become the target of rape and other acts of sexual violence because it can be used as a means to terrorize the enemy, disempower men of the enemy, as well as break families and weaken social cohesion in the enemy’s group, ultimately destroying the community."
In
the 1990’s, following the atrocities in the Bosnia-Herzegovina and Rwanda armed
conflicts, a new discourse on genocidal rape emerged, contributing to important
changes in International Law. Catharine MacKinnon, who was notably influential
in developing the case of genocidal rape during that decade, sees rape against
women in genocide as an attack carried out as part of strategies to destroy a
group. It is used as a tool to shame the enemy, to disintegrate the victim’s
community, to make women leave their land and never return (Mackinnon, 1993).
Thus,
rape committed as part of genocide is a policy campaign carried out to achieve
the ultimate goal of annihilation. This is seen in the ethnic cleansing of Bosnian
Muslims through forced impregnation and the release of male HIVAIDS patients in
order for them to rape Tutsi women of Rwanda (Russell-Brown, 2003: 354–355).
However,
the notion of rape as an act of genocide did not sit well with all feminist
scholars. Some, such as Rhonda Copelon, feared that by acknowledging genocidal
rape, rape as a gender-based violence in armed conflict will be obscured,
undermining the fact that women are raped because they are women. The gender
aspect of rape will then be reduced to issues concerning ethnicity. On the
other hand, scholars such as MacKinnon and Sherrie L. Russell-Brown acknowledge
the intersectionality of gender and ethnicity; that in armed conflict, women
are raped because they are part of a group which another group seeks to destroy
(Russell-Brown, 2003: 365).
Recognizing this intersection does not have to reduce the fact that women are attacked or are more vulnerable to sexual violence because they are women. On the contrary; first, the intersection puts women into the sociological context of their community, and second, it strengthens the argument that ethnicity, class, caste, etc., are gendered. As seen in the Rwandan genocide, social and class hierarchy played a major part in the conflict. Furthermore, it was by adopting intersectionality into the framework of genocide that the fact rape was employed as an integral part of genocide made its course into international law.
Recognizing this intersection does not have to reduce the fact that women are attacked or are more vulnerable to sexual violence because they are women. On the contrary; first, the intersection puts women into the sociological context of their community, and second, it strengthens the argument that ethnicity, class, caste, etc., are gendered. As seen in the Rwandan genocide, social and class hierarchy played a major part in the conflict. Furthermore, it was by adopting intersectionality into the framework of genocide that the fact rape was employed as an integral part of genocide made its course into international law.
More Responses
to Feminist Analysis of Genocide
Analyses
on gender and genocide was criticized for its specific focus on women victims
and survivors. Some scholars such as Adam Jones (2008), wanted to put the
gender neutral meaning of gender back into the term “gender”, which means acknowledging
the fact that men are also victims of gender-specific acts of genocide. For
example, male gender selection is common in genocide. In cases such as the
Holocaust, the genocide of Tutsis in Rwanda, the massacre of Bosnian Muslims in
Srebrenica, and the Yazidi genocide, men and boys within the combatant age
group were picked out and killed, making this a male-specific experience. In
fact, young educated rich Tutsi men were hunted down by the Hutus in the
Rwandan genocide. The Tribunal of Yugoslavia also received reports of rape and
other sexual violence experienced by men in Bosnian and Serbian detention
(Ashraph, 2017).
Feminist
analysis of genocide was also criticized for its lack of acknowledgement of women
as perpetrators or supporters of mass violence (Joeden-Forgery, 2012: 90) This
is found in the case of Nazi concentration camps, where female SS officers were
involved in the mass killings of Jews. A more recent case is the Rwandan
genocide where for the first time, a woman, Pauline Nyiramasuhuko, former
Minister for Family and Women’s Development, was indicted before an international
tribunal for genocide based on accounts of her ordering the rape of Tutsi women
by Hutu men.
The
women-specific focus in earlier literature of feminist analysis of genocide was a response to the invisibility of women’s experience in wartime in most part of
history. The reason for this invisibility, particularly in genocide studies, is
that most scholars are blind to the fact that ethnicity and nationalism are
gendered. Thus, it was not only until more recently that women’s testimonies
became a major part of investigations on genocide. Furthermore, the classic
attitude that rape or other sexual violence during war or armed conflict is a
byproduct of war contributes to the lack of understanding of the relation
between sexual violence and policies carried out in regard to genocide.
Rape in
Strategies of Genocide
Genocidal
rape involves the understanding of how gender operates in the context of policies
and strategies administered to carry out the agenda of genocide. As part of the
strategies, sexual violence is commonly used as a tool to achieve the goal of
the destruction of a people. The traditional gender roles of a community, the construction
of masculinity, and how the destruction of women’s dignity through the invasion
of their body is interpreted as the fall of a nation are among the important factors
that make up the strategies employed in genocide. Thus, key to feminist analysis
of genocide is the view that genocide is gendered and that the sexual violence
which occurs as a result needs to be recognize as an integral part of planned
strategies carried out as an act of genocide by state or nonstate actors.
Seen
in this light, rape as genocide differs from rape as a byproduct of war or a
sex crime indirectly related to the conflict. It is not about the
“uncontrollable sexual desire” of men, it is about systematic rape. Rape and
other sexual violence committed in cases of genocide have been observed as part
of a grand design for destroying a group.
Furthermore,
it should be recognized that genocide does not at all times involve the mass
killings of both gender. In some cases, women are kept alive to carry on the
agenda of the genocide, such as the Muslim and Croatian women and girls who
were victims of forced impregnation, the Yazidi women who are sexually
enslaved, and the Tutsi women rape survivors living with HIV/AIDS. Many of
these women are rejected by their family and community, they are unwanted
because of the shame they represent. These women and the next generation born
out of the atrocities continue to remind community members of how they were
humiliated and torn down. Sexual violence employed in genocide sometimes aims
for the slow death of women, but at same time rapidly operates to systematically
cause destruction of a life, a people, an identity, a nation.
Sources
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Sareta (2017) ‘Acts of Annihilation’ thecairoreview.com. https://www.thecairoreview.com/essays/gender-and-genocide/
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Kelly (2003) ‘Prosecuting Wartime Rape and Other Gender-Related Crimes under
International Law: Extraordinary Advances, Enduring Obstacles.’ Berkeley
Journal of International Law, 21(2).
https://scholarship.law.berkeley.edu/bjil/vol21/iss2/4 [December 31, 2018].
Joeden-Forgery,
Elsa von (2012) ‘Gender and the Future
of Genocide Studies and Prevention.’ Genocide
Studies and Prevention 7(1). https://scholarcommons.usf.edu/gsp/vol7/iss1/10
[December 8, 2018].
Jones,
Adam (2008) Gender and Genocide. In The Historiography of Genocide.
London: Palgrave Macmillan UK, pp. 228–252. https://www.researchgate.net/publication/304638314_Gender_and_Genocide
[October 20, 2018].
MacKinnon,
Catharine A. (1993) ‘Crimes of War, Crimes of Peace.’ UCLA Women’s Law
Journal, UCLA School of Law, UCLA, p.29.
https://www.scribd.com/document/202988845/Mackinnon-Crimes-of-War-Crimes-of-Peace
[December 31, 2018].
Rafter, Nicole and
Kristin A. Bell (n.d.) ‘Gender and Genocide.’ Northeastern University, Boston.
[October 20, 2018].
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Sherrie L. (2003) ‘Rape as an Act of Genocide.’ Berkeley Journal of
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Picture source in order of appearance: intercontinentalcry.org; ushmm.org
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