Source: Women's E-News
After years of repression, Aicha Dhaouadi is serving parliament for the Islamist party. "Try to know us more," she says to those who suspect a veneer of moderation. Last of three profiles of women playing active roles in post-revolutionary Tunisia.
Aicha Dhaouadi, now a deputy in the post-revolutionary parliament of Tunisia, readily recalls her nightmarish years under the fallen regime of President Zine el Abidine Ben Ali.
She and her husband were both considered political opponents and lived under constant surveillance.
In 1991, her husband Mohammed Hedi Kefi won asylum in France as a political refugee, but she wasn't so lucky. "I was taken hostage for seven years before being able to join my spouse in France," she said in an interview earlier this year.
Dhaoudi said that during the years she and her husband were apart Tunisian police kept her under constant surveillance and harassed her daily about the whereabouts of her husband, a member of Ennahda, the banned Islamist party.
During this time she said she was forced to remove her veil after being threatened with job loss and jail if she didn't.
She was imprisoned for eight months. Her crime, she said, was belonging to an unauthorized organization and fundraising without permission.
Dhaouadi said the organization for which she raised money helped other families who were victims of repression. Several other women whose husbands were in exile were left to raise their children alone. "I was only helping these women and families that were the target of Ben Ali," Dhaouadi said.
In 1995 her case drew the attention of Amnesty International, the London-based human rights group. On Jan. 19, 1996, she was released from prison.
During her detention, Dhaouadi said she was tortured and humiliated. "I have always had this dream to live in a democratic nation. I have always hoped to live freely in Tunisia, to be able to gather and express my opinions even if they are against the regime; but instead of this, I was arrested, tortured and humiliated."
She said she recovered her "dignity and freedom" the day Ben Ali was forced to flee the country.
Today she is deputy elected by Ennahda for the governorate of Bizerte, in the north of Tunisia. "I am glad and happy to know that we turned the page on Ben Ali's dictatorship," Dhaoudi said.
Dhaoudi could not be reached for comment on a recent poll finding widespread discontent so far with the Ennahda-led government. One hundred days after the October elections, more than 85 percent of Tunisians thought the government had failed to lessen unemployment; 75 percent thought it had failed to curb bribery and corruption. The survey was conducted by SIGMA Conseil, a North-African marketing research firm based in Tunisia, in conjunction with Tunisian daily Al Maghreb.
Dhaoudi's involvement with Ennahda started several years ago when the party was still illegal.
'Answering to the Revolution'
Today, Dhaouadi is confident about what the party can bring to the post-Ben Ali Tunisia. "With Ennahda, we want a constitution that answers to the revolution and the expectation of Tunisian people. We want a constitution that preserves the dignity and the freedom of our country," she said.
During the country's month of popular revolt most of its leaders were in exile and only returned after the president fled for Saudi Arabia. However unlike, the Islamist Muslim Brotherhood in Egypt, which disapproved of the Jan. 25 demonstrations that started the revolution there, Ennahda long advocated the overthrow of Ben Ali.
Dhaouadi rejects the criticism of those who dislike the integration of religion with politics. "Those who question the place of Islam in Tunisia ignore the history of our country. I reject those words 'Islamist' or 'extremist.' I am not one of them. I am simply a Muslim woman once again. And like I have always said: Islam is a moderate and balanced religion."
Dhaouadi said Ennahda did not intend to roll back on women's rights. "On the contrary, we want to move forward and give a more active role to women in the civil and political spheres."
Dhaouadi said she would like to see more flexible workplace schedules to help mothers to raise their children, higher salaries for women who work more hours than men and higher positions for women in politics. For the time being, however, Tunisia's Parliament--which is 23 percent female--is focused on drafting its new constitution.
Opponents in Tunisia accuse her party of "double discourse," meaning the party only has a veneer of being moderate and its real agenda is imposing a fundamentalist view of Islam on Tunisia.
"People judged us without even knowing us! Try to know more about us and then make your mind," she declared.