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Street roots Feb. 18, 2011 9 M Arab women lead the charge on foot and online BY EMAD MEKAY STREE T N E W S SE R V IC E smaa Mahfouz, a 26-year-old Egyptian woman who two weeks ago had only one name, now boasts at least three. These include “A woman worth 100 men,” “The girl who crushed Mubarak” and “The leader of the Egyptian revolution” Mahfouz, who began online political activism in 2008, is now credited for launching a video call that sparked the revolution against the autocratic military rule of President Hosni Mubarak. Mahfouz is a member of a new lot of Arab women activists who are shedding their typical conservative^ image to lead or inspire a wave of prordemocracy protests that are reshaping the political future of several countries in the Arab world. Mahfouz created a YouTube.com video in mid-January in which she urged “all young men and women” to leave their computer screens and converge on the streets of Egypt to protest the brutal and corrupt rule of the 82-year old Mubarak. “I am a woman and I am going out on Jan. 25 and am not afraid of the police,” she said a few days before the unrest broke; out: “For the men who brag of their toughness, why exactly are you not joining us to go out and demonstrate?” Her message reverberated she says, “beyond the wildest of dreams”. The 4 minute 30 second video was shared Women in the forefront o f protests in Tahrir Square in Cairo, Egypt. widely by Internet activists and was posted on many blogs and websites. Young people officers in Alexandria last year, joined the "My fam ily was so worried forwarded it on mobile phones — used by protesters in Tahrir and repeatedly urged about me and they told me some 65 million Egyptians. Soon after, the them not to go home before Mubarak left women are not harsh enough government blocked all mobile phone office. networks. Women were visibly in the forefront in for that hind of “I had hoped Jan. 25 would gather 10,000 demonstrations at Tahrir Square and other confrontation. They now tell places — in a society where women people at best, but I later realized after the me they are so proud of m e." traditionally have taken a back seat. Many police force withdrew and collapsed, that I — MAHFOUZ volunteered to do body searches of other our day of protests turned into a popular E G Y P T IA N P R O T E S T E R women taking part in the protests - it had revolution,” she said on a Facebook.com become clear that the regime could sneak in page created for her by her supporters. weapons to be used against the protesters. “My family was so wowied about me and Across the Arab world, women have they told me women are not harsh enough women taking the lead during protests in stepped into the forefront of dangerous anti for that kind of confrontation,” Mahfouz Egypt and elsewhere in Arab countries. regime protests. said. “They now tell me they are so proud of In Cairo, women with sticks and iron bars In Tunisia, human rights leader and me. I knew that if I get scared and in hand were patrolling some of the streets blogger Lina Ben Mehenni was among the everybody gets scared, then this country with their male relatives during the days of first to get word out about the Tunisian looting and vandalism that swept the city will be lost for good.” protests early in December through her Mahfouz’s words resonated not only in after the collapse of the Egyptian police tweets and blogs, despite police threats. Egypt, but across the region. force. The mother of Mohammed Bouazizi, the “Asmaa’s words were sincere and came Mothers of several people who died in young street hawker who set himself ablaze out of the heart,” wrote Reem Khalifa, a the initial days of the protests refused to starting the Tunisian revolution in mid- columnist for the Bahrain newspaper receive condolences or hold funeral December, was also doing her share, calling Alwasat “Her words turned into a tsunami ceremonies until the revolution achieved its for change. Her sincere tears and wishes for wrecking havoc with despotism, tyranny and main goal of ousting the regime of Mubarak. justice galvanized hundreds of thousands of The mother of Khaled Said, an Internet injustice.” impatient Tunisians to eventually remove Asmaa Mahfouz is among millions of activist who was beaten to death by police B insanity, or insane because of their vagrancy. The mode of life of the true tramp or vagrant, with its excitements, excesses, beginning have possessed is soon and irregularities, is such that it might diminished or destroyed.” reasonably be expected to cause insanity in She tells of one man whose self-esteem a certain percentage of this type of cases. was d am ag e d through having to use public She noted that “23 of the 52 insane were aid for his livelihood. “He had always been men of refinement, from good homes; eight fully self-supporting previous to the accident were college men and 10 were high school in which he lost one leg just below the hip. graduates.” Many of those deemed After the accident he became a street “mentally unfit” had been sent to Chicago beggar, but never overcame an intolerable after countless other cities had said that sense of shame and degradation. The man they were either unwanted or there weren’t who sits on a public street with his hat enough resources to provide aid, so they before him and begs would seem, to most were given a train ticket to Chicago. people, to be more shameless and hardened In her chapter on the homeless elderly, in his profession than the man who asks for she lamented her client’s situations. “No a night’s lodging at the door; but this class of applicants from among the homeless particular street beggar said that he himself seemed to be more uniformly hopeless and had chosen the former method because it unhappy than the men who had passed 60, saved him from the shame of asking for and who realized that the doors of industrial help. “When I sit there, anyone can see that opportunity were being closed against them I am helpless, I do not have to speak.” and that it was only a question of a short During her chapter on mental health, she time before they must become wholly postulated the effect of long-term , dependent upon charity.” homelessness and dependence on one s She also noted that “it is almost equally mental state. difficult for men in their 50s to find well-paid “One of the first questions of interest / employment, while in certain lines of work about insane homeless men is whether they men who drop dut.in their 40s or even in are homeless and vagrant because of their 1 ,000 MEN, fro m page 8 their latter 30s are not eligible for re-employment.” She noted that this population were not idle, but “respectable Irish, German, or American workmen, or in some cases, business or professional men, many of whom have spent all their fives in Chicago and have contributed their fair quota to its prosperity and:wealth.” What she observed was a common urban problem before the advent of safety net programs like Social Security and Medicare. Concerning this population she also noted that elderly women largely avoided this fate as they were offered board and care in a family’s home in return for cooking, sewing, and nannying children. The male population did not have this skill set, and were hot offered this opportunity. In her chapter concerning chronic beggars she differentiates four categories: the anti-social men who consider society their prey, those who have drifted into the habit, those with personal and social handicaps, and the “accidental” beggar. She concludes that “the task of re-building or of building up for the first time, self-respect and habits of industry in men who have become chronic beggars, is at best, a difficult one.” the country’s long time dictator Zine el Abidine Ben Ali. The video of her tears went viral in the Arab world. In Yemen, another country that has seen major anti-government protests, young woman activist Tawakul Abdel-Salam Karman was leading the charge. I t w a s 30-year-dld K a rm a n ’s a r r e s t by President Ali Abdullah Saleh’s regime that set off days of major street demonstrations that threatened his hold on power. Karman, who is now free, remains one of the country’s most outspoken critics of the regime. “The Arab world is in revolt against dictatorships,” sai Magda Adly, of the.El Nadim Center for the Rehabilitation of Victims of Violence in Cairo. “That’s why we see women, Islamist or not Islamist, veiled or not veiled, coming together and leading what’s happening on thè ground. This is real equality and we’ll never go back to square one.” Originally published by In ter Press Service. © www.streetnewsservice.org Her chapter on runaway boys is particularly fascinating. In an antiquated • way she confirms that many of the boys | suffer from “spring fever” or “wanderlust”- diagnoses that have no basis in modern medicine. It is still stunning that 117 boys were designated, homeless, many of whom came from good homes but wanted to see the world and ran away. While some of the conditions that existed in 1911 have radically improved-namely care of the elderly and less frequent industrial accidents-reading the individual stories in One Thousand Homeless Men serves as a haunting reminder oihow quickly one’s fife can take a turn for the worst when accidents and bad circumstances are compounded by . poor access to medical care, education, or decent housing. Solenberger’s appeal for public understanding and access to opportunity as essential for giving those who are down-and-out a chancé for rehabilitation is a message just as important for Chicago today as it was a century ago. Originally published by Streetwise Newspaper, Chicago, Ill.© w w w . streetnewsservice. org