home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
- <text id=93TT1004>
- <title>
- Feb. 22, 1993: Unspeakable
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
- Feb. 22, 1993 Uncle Bill Wants You
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- BEHAVIOR, Page 48
- Unspeakable
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>Is rape an inevitable--and marginal--part of war? Bosnia
- opens a terrible new perspective. It shows rape as policy to
- scorch the enemy's emotional earth.
- </p>
- <p>By LANCE MORROW--With reporting by William Mader/London and
- Adrianne Jucius Navon/New York
- </p>
- <p> Rape and killing are chief among the vicious pleasures, a man's
- recreations on the dark side. Medieval kings reserved for themselves
- alone the right to do such things, in peacetime anyway. In war,
- the privileges were distributed to the lowliest foot soldier:
- every man a king.
- </p>
- <p> Killing, of course, is what soldiers are trained to do. The
- disciplined destruction of the enemy is their military duty.
- Soldiers may be court-martialed for not killing.
- </p>
- <p> Rape is a disreputable half-brother to that. No glory attends
- it. The story of rape in war is murky. Rape after battle has
- usually been regarded as an ugly side effect. The spoils of
- war, Homeric booty: kill the men and take the women as prizes.
- Does after-battle rape merely serve to illustrate the human
- tendency to take things too far once taboos have been breached,
- especially in the midst of much danger and adrenaline and anarchy?
- Everyone knows that atrocity has a life of its own, a quality
- of evil ecstasy.
- </p>
- <p> No one can hear accounts from the war in Bosnia-Herzegovina
- without sensing that the conflict there has taken the matter
- of rape in war down into deeper, more sinister dimensions. It
- is not known how many rapes have been committed since the fighting
- began in the breakup of Yugoslavia. A European Community team
- of investigators calculates that 20,000 Muslim women and girls
- have been raped by Serbs. Other estimates run much higher. The
- Bosnian government claims that as many as 50,000 Muslim women
- have been raped. Serbs are undoubtedly committing most of the
- rapes at the moment; they have also seized the most land. But
- as Amnesty International reported last month, others in the
- conflict, Muslims and Croats, have also been guilty of widespread
- rape. The hideous moral ecology of the region has left no one
- innocent.
- </p>
- <p> The fighting has opened a door upon horrors--the wanton siege
- of Sarajevo, the death camps and other atrocities of "ethnic
- cleansing"--suggesting that atavistic nationalisms, or tribalisms,
- may lie just beneath the civil veneers. The abuses of Bosnian
- women open a perspective upon wartime rape that is equally terrible.
- In Bosnia, rape, far from being a side effect of war, has become
- one of the indispensable instruments of war. The battleground
- is not only villages and countryside but also women's bodies.
- </p>
- <p> Amnesty International's report Bosnia-Herzegovina: Rape and
- Sexual Abuse by Armed Forces, states "The available evidence
- indicates that in some cases the rape of women has been carried
- out in an organized or systematic way, with the deliberate detention
- of women for the purpose of rape and sexual abuse." Rather than
- being the random indiscipline of soldiers, many of the rapes
- in Bosnia have almost certainly been committed as a matter of
- deliberate policy.
- </p>
- <p> And as a weapon of war, rape works--sometimes even better
- than killing does. Killing may make martyrs, and thus inspirit
- and strengthen the morale and solidarity of the victims. Rape,
- on the other hand, not only defiles and shatters the individual
- woman but, especially in traditional societies, also administers
- a grave, long-lasting wound to morale and identity. Rape penetrates
- the pride and cohesion of a people and corrodes its future.
- When a woman is raped in war, she and her family and ultimately
- her community internalize the assault upon their identity. Rape
- in war is only sometimes an act of simple lust or sadism.
- </p>
- <p> The Serbs not only vehemently deny encouraging mass rape but
- also deny that such rapes have even occurred. Croats and Muslims
- have also denied such practices. The Balkans reverberate to
- this counterpoint of denial, a victim symphony of outraged innocence.
- Radovan Karadzic, who is a poet and a psychiatrist as well as
- the ruthless commander-in-chief of the Bosnian Serbs, tries
- a reverse approach. He says soldiers on all sides are committing
- rape. He sounds the note of bogus fatalism that is also a kind
- of blessing of rape: "It is tragic. But these dreadful things
- happen in all wars."
- </p>
- <p> The first indications began to emerge last summer, when Muslim
- and Croat victims described mass rapes by Serbs to the International
- Red Cross and the U.N. High Commissioner for Refugees. The women--some escaped to Croatia, some still living in Bosnia, some
- in concentration camps--all told of being forcibly taken by
- Serb troops, often to temporary "camps" in inns, hotels, schools,
- town halls and even restaurants. There they would be raped by
- a procession of Serb soldiers, then either released or sent
- to one of the larger concentration camps in Bosnia. Other women
- have been repeatedly raped in their own homes by Serbs, and
- some were reportedly killed afterward. A number of pregnant
- victims ended up in Croatian hospitals as refugees, awaiting
- the birth of unwanted children. Some of the victims are said
- to be held by Serb soldiers until they give birth.
- </p>
- <p> In the past few months, there have been reports of Muslim and
- Croat soldiers committing mass rape, but the cases have been
- less well documented. Says a senior E.C. official: "The Red
- Cross, the U.N. and we know that some mass rapes have been committed
- by non-Serbs. The information has come from similar sources:
- the victims."
- </p>
- <p> In December the E.C., at its summit meeting in Edinburgh, expressed
- its outrage at "these acts of unspeakable brutality." So did
- the U.N. Security Council. The E.C. summit appointed a 12-member
- team, which found mass rape had been committed "in the context
- of expansionist strategy"--that is, ethnic cleansing. The
- investigators reported that "daughters are often raped in front
- of parents, mothers in front of children, and wives in front
- of husbands." David Andrews, a member of the commission, who
- was at the time Ireland's Foreign Minister, said it was clear
- that rape had "become an instrument, not a by-product, of war."
- </p>
- <p> How does rape work as a weapon of war?
- </p>
- <p> In the Balkans ethnic purity is a primitively overriding value.
- Bosnian Muslims believe that the mass rapes are intended to
- break down their national, religious and cultural identity.
- In part, they assume, the Serb objective is to use rape and
- enforced pregnancy as a form of revenge and humiliation. Says
- Mark Wheeler, a lecturer on modern Balkan affairs at the University
- of London's School of Slavonic and East European Studies: "The
- idea of nationality in the former Yugoslavia is based on descent,
- and the greatest debasement is to pollute a person's descent."
- </p>
- <p> Neatly done: mass rape achieves ethnic cleansing through ethnic
- pollution. Serbs do not care about the fate of the children
- of rape: they are not Serbs but of mixed blood, therefore debased.
- Mass rape contaminates the gene pool.
- </p>
- <p> The Balkans have become a sort of Bermuda Triangle into which
- human decencies vanish without a trace. In the post-cold war
- era, it is unsettling to think that conscienceless tribal ferocity
- may catch on around the world. Rape, of course, has been an
- apparently inevitable part of war since men first threw rocks
- at each other--or anyway since Rome was founded upon the rape
- of the Sabines. Joseph Stalin expressed a prevailing (male victor's)
- view of rape in war. When Yugoslav Milovan Djilas complained
- about the rapes that Russians had committed in Yugoslavia, Stalin
- replied, "Can't you understand it if a soldier who has crossed
- thousands of kilometers through blood and fire and death has
- fun with a woman or takes some trifle?" In 1945, Soviet soldiers
- raped 2 million German women as a massive payback for everything
- the Nazis had done to Russia. Alexander Solzhenitsyn, who was
- a Soviet army captain in East Prussia in 1945, recorded: "All
- of us knew very well that if the girls were German, they could
- be raped and then shot. That was almost a combat distinction."
- </p>
- <p> Revenge, soaked in hatred and hormones, may explain some of
- the Soviet troops' behavior. But it is not a good all-purpose
- explanation. Revenge--which in the Nazi-Soviet context perversely
- takes on the color of almost a kind of brutal justice--does
- not explain Nanjing in 1937. The Chinese had not committed atrocities
- against the Japanese people when the Japanese marched into Nanjing
- and raped--and often murdered--tens of thousands of Chinese
- women. Nor can revenge entirely explain the behavior of Pakistani
- troops who in 1971 raped more than 250,000 Bengali women and
- girls in Bangladesh.
- </p>
- <p> Achilles sulked in his tent because Agamemnon denied him his
- just plunder in war, the beauty Briseis. "Rape has always been
- endemic with armies," says John A. Lynn, military-history professor
- at the University of Illinois. "There have been armies in which
- rape was treated as a disciplinary problem, and armies in which
- it was institutionalized. In most European armies in the first
- half of the 17th century, rapes by unpaid soldiers occurred
- in large numbers in front of officers and were not stopped because
- they were part of the quid pro quo of what you got for being
- a soldier."
- </p>
- <p> Once there were even elaborate rules about permissible rape
- in war. Lynn mentions an early European convention: if a besieged
- town surrendered in timely fashion, its women would be spared
- rape. If the town resisted, wholesale rape was justified. Says
- Lynn: "That kind of legitimized rape had a political reason--to intimidate other towns to surrender without resistance."
- </p>
- <p> Armies in all civilized countries receive intensive indoctrination
- on decent behavior and on what offenses, including rape, will
- result in court-martial. It is the job of officers to control
- their men. Elite units are the least likely to commit rape and
- other atrocities, although SS men in World War II proved the
- exception. Says the military historian John Keegan: "Elite units
- have a rather high opinion of themselves and consider atrocity
- to be beneath them." A soldier who murders or rapes disgraces
- his comrades and damages esprit de corps.
- </p>
- <p> But Bosnia shows how that logic can be turned upside down. There,
- "elite" units of Serbian irregulars such as the White Eagles
- have evidently made rape a gesture of group solidarity. A man
- who refuses to join the others in rape is regarded as a traitor
- to the unit, and to his Serbian blood. Sometimes, that impulse
- to bond with the male group becomes a kind of perverse inflaming
- energy inciting to rape. Lust is only a subsidiary drive.
- </p>
- <p> And sometimes, young men in war may commit rape in order to
- please their elders, their officers, and win a sort of father-to-son
- approval. The rape is proof of commitment to the unit's fierceness.
- A young man willing to do hideous things has subordinated his
- individual conscience in order to fuse with the uncompromising
- purposes of the group. A man seals his allegiance in atrocity.
- </p>
- <p> It should be possible to draw a graph predicting the level of
- rape that would occur in a battle context according to the officers'
- degrees of tolerance or disapproval. The greatest number of
- rapes would happen if 1) the soldiers were under direct orders
- to commit rape. Slightly fewer would take place if 2) there
- were fully articulated official approval of rape, as with the
- Soviets entering Germany in 1945. The levels would descend with
- 3) tacit official approval of rape, 4) official neutrality on
- the subject, 5) tacit official disapproval, 6) spoken official
- disapproval, 7) direct orders not to rape or 8) a written code
- of conduct prohibiting rape and mandating punishment for such
- behavior.
- </p>
- <p> Even armies operating under conditions 7 and 8 may commit numerous
- rapes. Rapes increase geometrically if the soldiers feel that
- civilian women are implicated in the war against them. American
- soldiers in Viet Nam committed an unknowable number of rapes,
- including those attending the massacre at My Lai, in part when
- the units were incompetently or viciously led, but also in part
- because it was hard for the Americans to distinguish officially
- friendly Vietnamese civilians from the Viet Cong.
- </p>
- <p> Dr. Richard Mollica is the director of the refugee-trauma program
- of the Harvard School of Public Health and director of the Indochinese
- Psychiatry Clinic at St. Elizabeth's Hospital in Brighton, Massachusetts.
- He and his colleagues have worked with some 3,500 refugees,
- half of them Cambodians. The subjective meaning of rape in war,
- Mollica suggests, is created by the historical and cultural
- traditions that surround the deed. "Every society and subculture
- has a different way of dealing with rape," he says. In some
- societies the taint of rape is indelible and toxic. In Indochina,
- as in many areas with traditional societies, rape means the
- loss of a woman's sexual purity, the highest gift she can give
- her husband. The Cambodians have a folk saying: "A woman is
- cotton, a man is a diamond. If you throw cotton in the mud,
- it's always soiled. But if you throw a diamond in the mud, it
- can be cleaned."
- </p>
- <p> On the other hand, some women from Nicaragua and other parts
- of Latin America were proud of being raped in war because their
- political beliefs told them that they had given their bodies
- to the revolution. Rape as sacrifice: the crime creates a living
- martyr.
- </p>
- <p> In Bosnia the cotton-and-diamonds tradition, alas, applies,
- and the rapists know it. Part of the enduring disaster of rape
- is this: the husband often enough blames the woman who was raped
- as much as he blames the man who raped her. All the dynamics
- of rape are ingeniously destructive. It tears the social fabric
- apart. It profoundly degrades the women and disgraces--absolutely--the men who were unable to protect the women.
- </p>
- <p> Rape is inherently unforgivable: no woman has ever forgiven
- the man who raped her. No man has ever forgiven the man who
- raped his wife or daughter or mother. There is little hope of
- reconciliation. As T.S. Eliot wrote, "After such knowledge,
- what forgiveness?" Rape is also inherently unforgettable. No
- one who has been raped ever forgets, as long as she lives. No
- raped woman can look at men without fearing it will happen again.
- Rape lives on and on in the anger and grief and depression and
- adhesive shame that it creates in one evil burst of violence.
- </p>
- <p> Rape in the Bosnian war is clearly a policy of scorched emotional
- earth with intent to achieve ethnic cleansing. The only possible
- benefit one can see emerging from the rapes might be a grace
- of widened perception, a clearer moral focus on the idea that
- rape is really a form of warfare, like, say, germ warfare, and
- that sometime in the future, it will become unthinkable. At
- the end of Hemingway's The Sun Also Rises, Jake Barnes says
- to Lady Brett Ashley, "Isn't it pretty to think so?"
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-