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Karabakh War Changed Women's Roles For Ever

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  • Karabakh War Changed Women's Roles For Ever

    KARABAKH WAR CHANGED WOMEN'S ROLES FOR EVER
    By Karine Ohanyan, Anahit Danielyan

    Institute for War and Peace Reporting IWPR
    December 22, 2010
    UK

    Women say they are much more prominent in civil and business life
    due largely to the full part they played in the fighting.

    The balance of the sexes in Nagorny Karabakh appears to have been
    permanently changed by the war between Azeris and Armenians, with
    women retaining the greater equality they gained on the frontline.

    Just three ministers and five members of parliament are women, but
    in the non-governmental and business sectors women often outnumber men.

    That is a major reverse for a society that was strictly traditional
    towards the end of the Soviet period, with women crediting much of
    the change to the full part they took in the fighting.

    "Despite the fact that the main burden in actual fighting was
    born by men, the role of women in the war was no less important,"
    said Zhanna Krikorova, chairwoman of the International Cooperation
    Centre of Nagorny Karabakh, which coordinates connections between
    non-governmental organisations in Karabakh with international
    non-governmental bodies.

    "Although this goes against the Caucasus mentality, many Karabakh
    women, despite their traditional place, went to fight alongside men.

    Others took upon themselves all the difficulties of wartime survival."

    Nagorny Karabakh, although unrecognised internationally, declared
    independence from Azerbaijan unilaterally and has governed itself
    unimpeded ever since the ceasefire of 1994.

    According to research conducted by the entity's regional business
    centre, women adapted much more quickly to the difficulties of post-war
    life, when the economy was destroyed and trade was restricted by all
    connections between Nagorny Karabakh and Baku being severed.

    "Since Armenian women are responsible for their families, many
    representatives of the weaker sex used their initiative and became
    more active. This social activity has been preserved, meaning we have
    a different kind of life in Karabakh," Krikorova said.

    Nagorny Karabakh was an autonomous region within Soviet Azerbaijan
    with a majority Armenian population. In 1988, the Armenians appealed
    to Moscow for their region to be joined to nearby Armenia, sparking
    ethnic clashes in Baku and elsewhere, in the first major disorders
    to herald the end of the Soviet Union.

    Ordinary women in Nagorny Karabakh threw themselves into the defence of
    the territory, and some even went to the frontline to serve alongside
    men, though often as nurses, such as Margarita Taranyan.

    "I still do not understand how we managed to save ourselves. I cannot
    believe that after all those horrible and cold days I managed to
    preserve good health," said Taranyan, who served as a nurse from
    1992-4.

    Now she is a major in the police, with a position in the defence
    staff. It would once have been rare to see a woman in epaulettes in
    Nagorny Karabakh, but since the war, it is fairly common, though they
    do not serve on the frontlines.

    "Such lads were killed, one better than the next. And the girls too,"
    she trailed off, before talking about her friend Margarita whose body
    they waited until night to recover.

    According to men who fought in the war, women have not retreated to
    their traditional subservient position after the ceasefire. Gagik
    Avanesyan, an activist from the Movement for Nagorny Karabakh's
    Independence, said women often gave blood for the wounded, cooked food,
    or served as medical orderlies.

    "Now of course it is not the war veterans who are so active, but
    younger women. And I have a sense that young men became more inert,
    and that women more frequently take the responsibility on themselves,"
    he said.

    But the war did not spare women the traumas associated with violence
    and fear. Many war veterans have struggled with getting the psychiatric
    care (http://iwpr.net/report-news/mental-scars-karabakh-war-veterans)
    they need to overcome the horrors of the fighting, and women who
    served as nurses often do not even have the minimal help that has
    been available.

    "You'd think that I should have been scared then. We're the weaker
    sex after all. But I felt no fear at all. There were so many killed
    and injured, and I understood I could be next, but I had some feeling
    inside that I would live," said Anahit Petrosyan, a mother of two from
    Martakert who continued working as a military nurse in civilian life.

    "The fear came later. After the war, when I told someone about the
    horror I had been through, and it was then I felt this indescribable
    terror."

    All the same, however, Nagorny Karabakh's women say they are tougher
    now than they were, and that the society will not turn back.

    "War has so hardened us women," said Julietta Arustamyan, the widow
    of a fallen officer and now head of the Harmony non-governmental
    organisation, which organises cultural events for women. "We lived
    through so much that if someone told us to sit on a tractor and fly
    to Mars, we could do it," she said.

    Karine Ohanyan is a freelance reporter. Anahit Danielyan is a
    correspondent for the Armedia news agency.




    From: A. Papazian
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