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Men’s Violence Against Women In Rural Bangladesh

 

This feature is published from a joint work of Research and Training Institute, Arlington, USA, Department of Economics, Jahangirnagar University, Dhaka, Bangladesh and Development Research Center, Dhaka, Bangladesh

 

SITUATIONS IN WHICH MEN BEAT THEIR WIVES

 

The ethnographic team was asked to keep track of situations in which women were beaten by their husbands or others in the family. Most of the cases that came to the researchers’ attention involved men beating their wives. Although there were many variations, the vast majority of situations involved discrepancies between role expectations and actual behavior and/or economic issues such as the woman incurring an expense or asking for something for her, or the man attempting to extort something from his wife or her family.

 

Falling short of role expectations:

 

In the study villages a man might beat his wife if he comes home from work and finds that his meal is not ready, or she serves him reheated rice from the morning meal rather than freshly cooked rice in the evening, she forgets to do something, like washing a shirt, or she does not respond quickly enough when he asks her to do something, or he thinks she is neglectful in caring for the children. Talking back when reprimanded, leaving home without permission, and failing to obey the in-laws (according to the in-laws) are other common examples of women’s behavior that provokes their husbands to beat them. Some women said that they were beaten for giving birth to daughters. These examples suggest that violence against women is perceived as justified (or perceived so by men) when women fail to conform to traditional role expectations. Women are required to be hard working and deferent and they are supposed to bear sons.

 

A man also may beat his wife when he himself falls short in his traditional role of provider, particularly if his wife calls this to his attention. In the six villages women were beaten, for example, for urging their husbands to go out and seek daily wage work, or trying to stop them from gambling. One respondent said:

 

"My husband often beats me. He can’t seem to earn any money. We have many debts, and beats me the most when I ask why."

 

Another said:

 

"My husband wastes money playing cards. If he works and gets three days wages he squanders it away in two days playing cards. When I ask him to go to the market and buy food he beats me."

 

These are some of many examples of men beating their wives for pointing out their failure to fulfill the traditional male role of provider. In two other cases described by the field team:

 

B did not want to work and for several months claimed that he was ill. [The interviewer and B’s wife seemed to doubt this.] Because j. [his wife] kept insisting that the he go out and work, they quarreled a lot, j. kept asking her husband to go out and plow the fields, and he got very angry and hit her a few times. In fear, she fled to her brother’s house, but B. fetched her back and beat her some more.

 

Women get beaten for various reasons, like if they try to stop the husband from gambling with the money they get from selling paddy, or if they try to stop the husband from borrowing money for consumption needs and sitting at home.

 

One of the men explained:

 

Women in our village get beaten a lot because the men don’t want to work. When the women tell their husbands to go out and earn a living the men beat their wives. I don’t beat my wife because I go out and work every day and my wife has nothing to complain about.

 

Incurring expenses:

 

Since women are not perceived as economically productive, their husbands and in-laws often feel that it is wrong for them to incur expenses, even for medical care, as illustrated in the following:

 

"I’m not in a position to tell anyone if somebody in the household gets sick. All I can do is nurse the sick one. Especially if I get sick myself I never say anything to my husband."

 

"There were some expenses when I gave birth to the stillborn child. Everybody blamed me for this, as if I had intentionally killed the child just to cost them money."

 

There were many cases in which men beat their wives because they were too ill to do housework and/or asked for medical treatment. The ethnographers in one village observed:

 

There is a relationship between women’s health and violence ___

 

... if they want to stay in their husbands’ households they have to [work constantly]. Women who are in poor health or weak, and tend to fall sick a lot, are seen as a burden. They have to work even if they are weak or sick, but their husbands are not satisfied with their work and find fault with them. This happens especially right after the harvest. If he has to hire someone else for the post-harvest work the husband becomes furious. It is a crime for the woman to get sick at that time. The husband [may] by medicine for her to make her get well faster, but if she doesn’t get well it’s her own fault, and she has to pay by getting beaten up.

 

Failing to perform household work and home-based productive tasks has important consequences in a subsistence economy. Women’s work although devalues, is essential to the survival of their families. Illness that temporarily disables a woman may men a missed meal or loss of income, especially around harvest-time when home-based crop processing is done. As illustrated by the quotations above, women are held accountable for any expenditures or losses resulting from their illnesses.

 

 

 

Extortion:

 

As in much of the Indian subcontinent, in Bangladesh, dowry has come to be seen as obligatory compensation to the bridegroom’s family for taking the bride off her parents’ hands. Since the amount of the dowry generally increases with the bride’s age, there are many cases in which desperate parents promise more dowries than they can deliver, or promise to give it in the future.

 

The researchers in one of the study villages observed:

 

[The struggle] to get dowry is the major reason that women are beaten. At the time of the marriage the father can’t come up with the whole amount and asks for more time. Usually the rest of the dowry is paid only after the girl’s husband starts beating her. Sometimes they send her back to her parents’ house to get the rest of the dowry.

 

A mother told one of the researchers:

 

"My daughter’s husband always beats her because when we arranged her marriage we said that we get him a job, and we still haven’t been able to do that."

 

In rural Bangladesh (as in India) dowry has evolved into a system of institutionalized extortion, often fueled by violence against young wives. Violence and threats of further violence (in extreme cases even to the point of murder) are used to extort money or property from the young women’s relatives, sometimes in excess of what was promised at the time the marriage was negotiated.

 

In addition to extortion of resources via the institution of dowry, men in the study villages often seemed to feel that whatever their wives brought with them at marriage, inherited, earned, acquired, or even borrowed was rightfully theirs.

 

One woman complained:

 

"My husband likes to go to the movies, smoke and drink tea. When he runs out of money he takes my pumpkins and chickens [and sells them]. If I try to stop him he beats me."

 

One member of the ethnographic team observed:

 

Men and women disagree on how the wife’s money should be spent. Men beat their wives to make them give up their money. For example, M. had saved up 1000 Taka (about $25). She wanted to invest it in dadan (lend it to a cultivator who pay it back after the harvest in the form of paddy) but her husband wanted to use it for rice trading. Her husband beat her to make her go along with this, and then he spent the whole amount for consumption instead of investing it in rice.

 

Some of the women who join credit programs face similar problems. In one village, which happened to be a problem village for the credit program, the ethnographers explained:

 

Every one of the husbands thinks the wife’s loan money is rightfully his and this attitude [sometimes] gives rise to disputes. There are no disputes if the men invest the loan money and [give enough to the wife to] pay installments regularly. But those who misuse the loans for gambling or pleasure, and do not have regular earnings themselves, cannot pay the installments. The [credit program staff] pressure the woman, she demands the money from her husband, they start arguing, and it reaches a point where he beats her up. The women never tell the [credit program staff] about these incidents.

 

One of the ethnographers reflected:

 

 Women, who obey their husbands all the time, never object to their husbands’ conduct, behave according to their husbands’ wishes and, above all, can fulfill their husbands’ dowry demands are beaten less. But often when a woman is busy and tired she’s off guard. She protests when her husband complains about something.... forgetting that the consequences may not be pleasant. In the repeated arguments and beatings she loses her fear reflex. Nor is being beaten a shameful thing for her. It is just part of her life.

 

more in next issue......   


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