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Rutgers Professor Tackles the Stereotypes of Women Suicide Bombers
By
Sherrie Negrea
Date
April 10, 2012
Julie Rajan’s new book challenges the media’s dismissal of female bombers as political actors
Reem al-Riyashi, with her son, gave a videotestimonial just before her suicide mission, which she completed alone.
Courtesy of Julie Rajan
The 22-year-old Palestinian woman had two children: one 18 months, and one 3 1/2. In January 2004, she walked up to a checkpoint in Jerusalem and exploded herself, killing four Israelis and injuring 10 other people.
In a video testimonial recorded before her mission, Reem al-Riyashi explained why she became a suicide bomber: "I hope that the shredded limbs of my body would be shrapnel, tearing Zionists to pieces," she stated. "How often I dreamed, how often I desired to carry out a Shahada-seeking [suicide] operation inside Israel, and by perseverance, and with Allah's grace, my wish was fulfilled as I wanted."
Riyashi, an operative for the Palestinian group Hamas, is one of dozens of female suicide bombers portrayed in a new book, Women Suicide Bombers: Narratives of Violenceby Julie Rajan, a visiting assistant professor in the Department of Women's and Gender Studies at Rutgers. Published in 2011 by Routledge, the book is the first to challenge the way female suicide bombers are represented in the media in ways that discredit them as political actors.
Rajan, who earned her master's and doctoral degrees in comparative literature at Rutgers, became fascinated with public perceptions of female suicide bombers after the first Palestinian women began to blow themselves up in 2002. Though numerous women had been deployed as suicide bombers in other countries, such as Lebanon and Sri Lanka, since the 1980s, Americans seemed surprised that Palestinian women had chosen to take on these missions.
More important, the media portrayed the women by stressing their physical appearances and by suggesting they had been victimized over the violence affected by their missions. At the same time, terrorist groups represented the same women suicide bombers as heroines for their actions.
Julie Rajan, assistant professor in the Department of Women's and Gender Studies at Rutgers.
After conducting research on female suicide bombers in various countries, from Russia to Iraq, and reviewing their statements in various media outlets, Rajan concluded that rather than being coerced into these missions, many of the female suicide bombers were clearly acting of their own will.