Nepal and Bhutan
Journal of International Women's Studies Volume 13 Issue 4 Gender and Political Transformation in Societies at War
Article 7
Sep-2012
Unexpected Consequences of Everyday Life During the Maoist Insurgency in Nepal Judith Pettigrew
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Recommended Citation Pettigrew, Judith (2012). Unexpected Consequences of Everyday Life During the Maoist Insurgency in Nepal. Journal of International Women's Studies, 13(4), 100-112. Available at: http://vc.bridgew.edu/jiws/vol13/iss4/7
100 Journal of International Women‘s Studies Vol 13 #4 September 2012
Unexpected Consequences of Everyday Life During the Maoist Insurgency in Nepal 1
By Judith Pettigrew 2
Abstract
This article examines gendered aspects of women‘s lives in a hill village in
central Nepal during the decade-long civil war (1996-2006). The predominantly middle
aged and elderly women discussed in the paper were not directly influenced by Maoist
equality agendas, nor have they been – as yet - significantly empowered by the recent
post-conflict gender reservations. Rather, the paper argues that it was via the unintended
consequences of the conflict - their unexpected leadership of a village development
project – that these women forged an alternative path towards gender transformation.
Key Words: Nepal, 'People's War', unintended consequences, gender transformation
Introduction
The ‗People‘s War‘ (1996-2006) in Nepal presented the opportunity to create new
(generally unanticipated) experiences for Nepali women of all backgrounds. This article
examines gendered aspects of rural Tamu (aka Gurung) 3 janajati (ethnic or ‗indigenous
nationalities‘) women‘s lives in a hill village in central Nepal where, despite the
involvement of some locals in the Maoist movement, the vast majority of people were
non-aligned civilians. 4
The predominantly middle income and middle aged/elderly
women in this paper were not directly influenced by the Maoist women they encountered,
or by Maoist rhetoric, nor have they been significantly empowered – as yet - by the post
2006 gender reservations. Rather, I argue that they forged an alternative path towards
gender transformation through their unexpected leadership of a development project.
These transformations resulted in part from learning to negotiate a precarious margin of
safety between the government forces and Maoists insurgents during the conflict and by
discovering that when thrown back on their own resources they could run (and expand) a
1 For comments on earlier versions I am grateful to Sara Shneiderman and the editors of this special edition.
2 Judith Pettigrew, an anthropologist and senior lecturer at the University of Limerick, Ireland has
published widely on Nepal‘s Maoist movement. Her research on the everyday impacts of violence on rural
people examines the interrelationships between space, gender, violence, emotional life and psychosocial
wellbeing. She is the co-editor of Windows into a Revolution: Ethnographies of Maoism in India and
Nepal. Her monograph Ethnography and Everyday Life in Nepal's Civil War is forthcoming with
University of Pennsylvania Press.
3 Tamu‘ is the singular of ‗Tamu-mai‘, the term that the people who are better known as ‗Gurungs‘ apply to
themselves when they speak their own language Tamu Kyui (a Tibeto-Burman language indigenous to the
Tamu-mai). As this paper is based on research carried out in a predominantly Tamu village and conducted
primarily through Tamu Kyui I use the term ‗Tamu‘ throughout. 4 This article is based on more than twenty fieldtrips, ranging from two days to two weeks, conducted
during the period 2002–2012, and building on my earlier work, which commenced in 1990.
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101 Journal of International Women‘s Studies Vol 13 #4 September 2012
development project. Thus their greater confidence in participating in public life is
largely due to the unintended consequences of the conflict rather than Maoist gender
equality rhetoric or post conflict state-sponsored equality policies.
Much attention has been paid to the claimed 30-50% female participation in the
Maoist ‗People‘s War‘ in Nepal. Although the exact percentage of women in the People‘s
Liberation Army is contested (the Maoists state that up to about 30% to 50% of their
force were women (Yami, 2007, p.6) while the United Nations Mission in Nepal
(UNMIN) stated that women made up 19% of registered combatants (Whitfield 2010, 12)
it is clear that the Maoists attracted considerable numbers of women to their cause.
During the decade-long conflict, photographs of young insurgent women holding guns
were prominently displayed in international Maoist publications and on the Communist
Party of Nepal (Maoist), now the Unified Communist Party of Nepal - Maoist (UCPN-M)
website. The aim of these images was apparently to provide evidence of the Maoist
movement‘s empowerment of women. These representations could be contrasted to those
which emerged out of the Kathmandu-based conflict resolution programmes which
repeatedly portrayed village women at the mercy of both the Maoists and the state
(Pettigrew and Shneiderman, 2004, p. 20). Contradictory narratives of agency and
victimization are not new, and have often featured in feminist debate. The reality was
somewhere between these extremes as most Nepali women were neither combatants nor
dependent victims. . As Lauren Leve (2012: 180-181) states ―... we need to clearly
understand that rural Nepali women are neither mute victims of socially oppressive
traditions, nor naturally blessed with a revolutionary instinct.‖ Referring to women‘s
agency she notes that women become themselves ―... through gendered physical and
emotional engagements that often involved sacrifice and pain ... it‘s in the particular ways
that each woman manages the dukkha [suffering] she is dealt that individuals exercise
agency‖ (ibid, Desjarlais 2003). A key consideration of my article is the manner in which
women in my research site exercised agency via their management of the contingencies,
challenges and dukkha of the People‘s War.
Only one point of the original 40 Maoist demands submitted to the government
prior to the launch of the People‘s War explicitly refers to women while a second one
relates directly to women‘s rights. Point 19 states that: ―Patriarchal exploitation and
discrimination against women should be stopped. Daughters should be allowed access to
paternal property‖ (cited in D. Thapa, 2003, p. 393). Nepali law historically prevented
women from inheriting paternal property unless they were aged over 35 and unmarried.
This legislation was amended in 2001 and came into effect in 2002 following a long
campaign by Kathmandu‘s mainstream feminist organizations (M. Thapa 2003, p.53-54).
In theory it grants equal property rights to women. Point 18 of the Maoist demands
indirectly relates to women‘s rights,declaring ―Nepal should be declared a secular state‖
(cited D.Thapa, 2003,393). Senior female Maoist party leader Hisila Yami makes it clear
that ―Women‘s social oppression is firmly rooted in state sponsored Hindu religion which
upholds feudal Brahminical rule based on caste system, which disparages women in
relation to men‖ (Yami, 2007, p. 15). The reference to ―patriarchal exploitation and
discrimination‖ and to the need for a secular state sums up the fact that in what was, until
May 2006, 5 the world‘s only official Hindu state, dominant (and frequently state-
supported) ideologies towards women were premised on conservative Hindu
5 Following a People‘s Movement in April 2006 the country became a secular state.
102 Journal of International Women‘s Studies Vol 13 #4 September 2012
understandings of femininity (Bennett, 1983). However, multi-ethnic Nepal has over 60
non-Hindu groups who make up a substantial proportion of the population and who often
pattern gender relations in very different ways to Hindu groups.
Pettigrew and Shneiderman (2004, p. 23) point out one of the primary problems in
Maoist attitudes towards women is that the underlying vision of ―Nepali women,‖ upon
which Maoist claims of transformation were based, appears to be very similar to existing
dominant discourses. Seira Tamang (2002) argues that the stereotypical image of a
―universal Hindu Nepali woman,‖ who is oppressed and in need of empowerment, is the
fictional product of a development discourse created by and for high-caste Hindus in
Kathmandu. As she explains,
―The patriarchically oppressed, uniformly disadvantaged and Hindu,
‗Nepali woman‘ as a category did not pre-exist the development project. She
had to be constructed by ignoring the heterogeneous forms of community,
social relations, and gendered realities of the various peoples inhabiting
Nepal‖ (Tamang, 2002, p.163).
The Maoist movement is one of many social change projects that have occurred in
Nepal. As Pettigrew & Shneiderman (2004, p. 8) point out, despite the Maoist critique of
the Nepali state and foreign-funded development programs, they originate from and are
embedded in the same context, and in many ways they uncritically appropriated the
terminology and symbolic vocabulary of these institutions. For example, the Maoist
rhetoric of ‗women‘s empowerment‘ appears to indicate an implicit acceptance of the
idea of a universally disempowered Nepali woman. In contrast to this stereotypical image
women from Nepal‘s non-Hindu and largely Tibeto-Burman language-speaking janajati
groups have multiple opportunities for agency. While the representation of janajati
communities as egalitarian is equally inaccurate —as there are many restrictions on the
‗freedom‘ of janajati women —in many cases, they do have access to different forms of
cultural, economic and symbolic power than caste-Hindu women (it is important to
acknowledge that there is also diversity among Hindu groups). Furthermore, the gendered
division of labour in these communities has traditionally been more flexible, with women
engaging in heavy labour such as portering for cash wages and men often participating in
household tasks such as cooking and cleaning. The multi-ethnic diversity of Nepal raises
questions about the Maoist claim to have transformed social relations.
aoist statements on gender relations have focused on overturning gendered
hierarchies as part of their program for radical social transformation. However, as
Pettigrew and Shneiderman (2004, p. 29) observe, the picture of Maoist attitudes towards
gender relations that emerges is contradictory. Despite an ideological commitment to
gender equality, criticisms about the gap between rhetoric and practice have been made
many times both by outside commentators and also within the movement. Senior party
leader Hisila Yami draws attention to the high number of women in the movement (and
in senior positions) but is also critical of the party‘s gender record (Yami, 2007, p. 40). In
2002-2003 the CPN-(M) conducted a survey of women who had been recruited during
the war. The findings revealed that 74.56 per cent of those interviewed believed that
gender discrimination was ‗normally present‘ in the movement and 3.66 per cent believed
it to be ‗excessively present‘. Significantly, 61.32 per cent of surveyed female members
103 Journal of International Women‘s Studies Vol 13 #4 September 2012
who were members of the People‘s Liberation Army (PLA) believed that there was
gender-based promotion discrimination in the Maoist army (Yami, 2007, p. 79).
Despite the ongoing criticism, the Maoists have focused attention on women‘s
empowerment in a manner that was missing from previous political discourse. Based on
the work of feminist journalist Anju Chettri, (who in 2003 mapped out the way in which
the Maoist demands for women‘s rights focused state attention, and even initiatives, on
the rights of women) Seira Tamang (2009, p. 76) notes that in the 2001 peace talks, the
CPN-(M) proposed that women be given rights in each sector and that the trafficking of
women should be stopped. During the 2003 peace talks, the government negotiators
stated that all oppression of women and trafficking must cease. Women were to given
equal rights including inheritance. In the next round of talks, the states team‘s demands
included, ―…25 per cent reservations in all institutions representing people; constitutional
safeguards for the reservations for women in education, health, administration and
employment; and at least 25 per cent representation in both houses‖ (cited in Tamang
2009, p.76). Gagan Thapa, a youth leader of the Nepali Congress Party, commented on
how the Maoists had forced the political parties to respond to women's issues and noted
that ―The Maoists are making us travel in 10 years a path we would have travelled in 50‖
(Goering, 2008).
In the aftermath of the April 2006 people‘s movement, which included large
numbers of women, significant pressure was placed on the government to introduce
reform. Commitments and laws followed including a declaration that Nepal is to be a
secular federal democratic republic. Other laws included a new citizenship bill providing
equal citizenship rights to mothers as well as fathers, a provision of 33% reservations for
women in all state bodies and the passing of a bill on gender equality which allowed
revisions in nineteen existing laws. Nepal adopted a mixed system to elect its Constituent
Assembly members (tasked with drawing up a new constitution). Under the Proportional
Representation voting system a 50 per cent women‘s quota was instigated (but not in the
First-Past-the-Post system). Subsequently, 33 per cent of Nepal‘s Constituent Assembly
were women (192 out of a total of 601).
However, in spite of these achievements it is necessary to be cautious about
assuming that there have been significant gains. As Tamang (2009, p. 77) points out,
when a six member interim constitution-making team was constituted (just a week after
the announcement of reservations for women in all state bodies) it did not initially
include women (or Dalits – the former ‗untouchables‘ – or janajatis). Following protest,
the numbers on the committee were increased and the composition became more
inclusive, however, the additional members were chosen (by the parties) on the basis of
party affiliations. Despite 33 per cent of the Constituent Assembly being female there
was a clear lack of commitment on the part of the political parties during the 2008
elections as none put forward 33 per cent female candidates in the First-Past-the-Post
system. According to Tamang (2009), women who ran in the Constituent Assembly
elections stated that women were given candidacies to fulfil quotas and they were not
given the same degree of support as their male colleagues. Shanti Uprety (2012, 6) notes
that women‘s effective participation in political parties in Nepal continues to be
hampered by ―... pervasive male domination and masculine culture inside political
parties‖.
104 Journal of International Women‘s Studies Vol 13 #4 September 2012
These national-level transformations have to a greater or lesser extent impacted
local contexts. For example, in my research site in a hill village in rural central Nepal I
have observed the post 2006 adherence to filling quotas for women on local committees.
Women‘s participation in local politics is new, but not entirely, as there have always been
small numbers of women active in public life in Tamu villages. Rather, it can be seen to
be an extension of pre-existing practice and not a completely new departure. For
example, when I began my research in the early 1990s, one of the most prominent
members of the VDC, Prem Kumari, was an unmarried middle aged woman. Women like
Prem Kumari, however, often belonged to elite families with a long history of leadership,
whereas today the engagement of women on village committees has widened to also
include those from a range of socio-economic backgrounds. However, when questioned
about the extent and depth of change women state that although they are present the
number of women in key decision making positions is limited. Most of the senior
positions on the village committees are still held by men. Despite their inclusion women
feel that the patriarchal structures continue to limit their influence. The People‘s War
presented the opportunity to create new (generally unanticipated) experiences for Nepali
women of all backgrounds. The transformation in gendered roles and relations is due to
the space opened by the conflict, and, as I show below, the fundamental shifts in
women‘s participation in public life in the village of Kwei Nasa 6 may have occurred less
because of planned political policies and more because of the unintended consequences
of the conflict that emerged regarding women‘s existing practices.
The ‘People’s War’
In February 1996 the Communist Party of Nepal (Maoist) (hereafter CPN (M))
submitted a 40-point list of demands to the Nepal government. When these demands were
not addressed, the CPN (M) escalated its underground war. From their original
strongholds in the mid-Western part of the country, the Maoists started to establish ―base
areas‖ elsewhere. Early on, repressive police responses antagonized local people and
garnered support for the insurgents (D. Thapa, 2001). The Maoists also took advantage of
widespread frustration with an unreliable and corrupt state, which despite promises of
enfranchisement and economic development after the establishment of democracy in
1990 had provided little concrete improvement. The conflict escalated in November
2001, when the insurgents withdrew from a ceasefire and initiated a series of attacks
across the country including ones targeted for the first time at Royal Nepal Army
barracks. In response, King Gyanendra imposed a State of Emergency which effectively
suspended most civil rights and for the first time deployed the army to fight the Maoists.
In January 2003 a second ceasefire was called and a schedule for peace talks was
established. Ultimately the talks broke down in late summer 2003 and 1000 people were
killed in the following four months. In 2003 and 2004, Nepal had the highest number of
6 All personal names, place names, and the name for the village development project are pseudonyms. As
my research focuses primarily on the majority Tamu (aka Gurung) ethnic population in the village and is
conducted mainly through Tamu Kyui I have chosen to give the village a Tamu Kyui pseudonym rather
than a Nepali one. Although official names are in Nepali all Tamu villages have a Tamu Kyui name which
is always used when speaking Tamu language. Certain ethnographic details have been disguised in this
piece in an attempt to protect the identity of my informants. I am responsible for translations from Tamu
Kyui to English.
105 Journal of International Women‘s Studies Vol 13 #4 September 2012
disappearances in the world (United Nations, 2004). Human rights organisations
extensively documented the human rights violations committed by both the Maoists and
state forces (Amnesty, 2002; Amnesty,2003; Human Rights Watch, 2004; Advocacy
Forum, 2010), during the insurgency.
King Gyanendra took power directly in February 2005 and declared a State of
Emergency. He suspended key constitutional rights, placed leading politicians under
house arrest and ordered the army to enforce media censorship. Communications links
between Nepal and the outside world were briefly cut. In November 2005 the Maoists and
seven mainstream political parties agreed on a program intended to restore democracy. The
jan andolan (People‘s Movement) of April 2006, which saw the political parties and the
Maoists collaborating, led to the king relinquishing power. A ceasefire was negotiated,
followed in November 2006 by a peace accord signed by the government and the Maoists
declaring a formal end to the ten-year insurgency which had cost the lives of more than
14,000 people. In January 2007 the Maoists entered parliament under the terms of a
temporary constitution. The Peace Agreement included plans for election to a Constituent
Assembly (which was tasked with writing a new constitution) and the monitoring of the
weapons and soldiers of the People's Liberation Army by the UN. Subsequently, just
under 20,000 PLA soldiers were restricted to United Nations controlled cantonments
across the country. Insisting on the abolition of the monarchy, the Maoists withdrew from
the government in September 2007 and did not re-enter until December 2007 when
parliament agreed to this condition. Elections for the Constituent Assembly (which were
twice rescheduled) were held in April 2008. The Maoists won a spectacular election victory,
gaining the highest number of seats in the new Constituent Assembly, although with 220 out
of 601 seats, they did not secure a majority. Despite a series of extensions the Constituent
Assembly did not complete its task of writing the constitution by the deadline of May 2012
and so collapsed. Elections have been proposed for the end of 2012.
Kwei Nasa
Kwei Nasa is a village of several hundred households located along the upper
slopes and top of a ridge in the Himalayan foothills in central Nepal. It has a health post,
rice mill, post office and teashops that serve as general-purpose stores. It was the last
village in the area to become electrified in 2010. Although most villagers are Tamu,
Kwei Nasa is a mixed community that includes Dalits, (Blacksmith and Tailor castes) 7
and in nearby hamlets Bahuns (hill Brahmins), and Chettris (both caste Hindu groups).
The primary occupation is farming and the staple crop is rice, but maize and millet are
also grown. Stretching below the village on either side of the ridge are the steeply
terraced fields, some close to the village but others up to an hours walk away.
Agricultural work involves steep climbs and descents and long walks with heavy loads.
Both men and women undertake this extremely strenuous work. Women are also
responsible for running households and play the major role in food preparation and
childcare. Most consumer goods that people use come from the town. Vegetables sellers
visit each week and other merchants come less regularly to sell dry goods, glass bangles,
and sundry items. In the winter months traders from the north sell herbs and turquoise
and coral beads. For everything else people make shopping trips to the urban center
which is less than a day‘s walk away.
7 Formerly considered to be ‗untouchable‘.
106 Journal of International Women‘s Studies Vol 13 #4 September 2012
Out-migration of young people, especially men, from this area has a long history.
Many villagers have relatives working overseas and remittances make a significant
contribution to the local economy. Kwei Nasa, like other Tamu villages, has a lengthy
tradition of male recruitment in foreign armies and every family has army links. Although
the numbers serving in the Gurkha regiment of the British Army are now relatively small,
higher numbers serve in the Indian Army and a small number serve in the Royal Nepal
Army. Significant numbers of men (and increasingly women) also work overseas in the
Gulf, and Southeast Asia. Due to the lengthy history of male out-migration Tamu women
have long headed households, run farms and brought up children alone. The conflict-
related changes which have been noted elsewhere as radical departures in women‘s
practices (such as heading households and running farms) were therefore of much less
impact in Tamu villages.
The People’s War in Kwei Nasa
Armed Maoists first appeared in Kwei Nasain the late 1990s. Initially their visits
were infrequent and included cultural performances, speeches, and requests for financial
donations and guns. Their presence increased when a training camp opened in the forest
above a neighbouring village. A villager recalled that it was common for the insurgents to
come into Kwei Nasa en route to the camp and to see porters ferrying foodstuffs and
equipment. On one occasion, a Maoist leader showed a Village Development Committee
(VDC - the lowest level of local government) member the guns they had captured from
the police and boasted that they would capture many more.
On a spring morning in 2000 standing in my village ‗sister‘s‘ courtyard looking
over the familiar village landscape I heard what I thought was the sound of a gunshot.
When I told Dhan Kumari, she asked me a series of detailed questions, ―Where did the
shot come from?‖ ―How many shots did you hear?‖ ―Are you sure it was a gun?‖ 8 I was
not, but it was some time before she was satisfied that I had made a mistake. Previously,
a comment like this would have triggered minimal curiosity and would have been
dismissed as, ―Just someone hunting in the forest‖. Surprisingly, however, Dhan Kumari
appeared to be frightened. ―What are you frightened of?‖ I asked. She was quiet for a
while and then replied, ―I am frightened of the Maoists.‖ 9 An unmarried middle-aged
woman, Dhan Kumari lived alone although a young female relative, Dil Maya, and her
son, Raju, spend much of the time in her large family home. When I asked her if locals
were involved she acknowledged that there were Maoist activists in the area, particularly
in some of the surrounding hamlets where there are families with long histories of left-
wing political activism. Dhan Kumari was frightened because she was well off and
owned a large amount of land, which was sharecropped, a practice that she had recently
heard the Maoists disapproved of. As a well-resourced villager she was vulnerable to
being asked by the Maoists for large monetary ‗donations‘ and as a householder she was
vulnerable to ongoing requests for food and accommodation.
The middle-aged and elderly mainly female middle-income villagers I talked to in
2000 viewed the Maoists as a threat. For those who were better resourced the threat was
greater. People with large houses, guns, money, and gold were more at risk than poorer
less well-resourced ones. ‗Maoists‘ were a shifting expanding category, which included
8 (personal communication March 2000)
9 (personal communication March 2000)
107 Journal of International Women‘s Studies Vol 13 #4 September 2012
the insurgents and a puzzling mixture of others who posed as Maoists but were in fact
thieves. I frequently heard people say, ―While Maoists want money and guns they speak
politely and explain their ideas and their activities whereas the others just want money.‖
‗Fear of Maoists‘ also included what could be done in the name of the Maoist movement
and people worried that those with whom they had contentious relationships might exact
revenge through violence. When I asked people why they were frightened of the Maoists,
they told me that it was because ―people have died.‖ What was also shocking and
unexpected to them was that locals, including young women, were involved with the
Maoists. When Maoists entered a friend‘s village, the enduring images that she and her
relatives emphasized were those concerning the membership of the group and their
behaviour. They were people they knew, young women with guns who threatened them
with death should they reveal their identities to the security forces. My friend explained
that while losing a gun and some money was very distressing and the threat of death even
more so, the social and kinship implications of this encounter were deeply shocking. In
this brief exchange, accepted notions of social relationships, based on a relatively orderly
progression of age overlaid with ideas of gender-appropriate behaviour, were completely
undermined.
By the end of 2001 the insurgency had escalated and the Maoists, now an
outlawed underground movement, changed their relationship with the village. As their
camps became targets for army raids and bombings they moved out of the forests and
into the villages requesting food and shelter almost every day. This changed pattern
impinged on householder women‘s daily activities and placed their homes at risk. No
longer able to operate openly the insurgents movements became clandestine and their
arrival and departure - although primarily timed for late in the afternoon or early in the
morning - less predictable. Villagers‘ fears were realised as the deployment of the army
meant that their homes were a target when the Maoists were present and after they left.
The security forces visited relatively rarely but they were deeply feared as they were
perceived to be ―trigger happy,‖ aloof and authoritarian and unlike the Maoists it was not
possible to negotiate with them. The best strategy for dealing with the security forces was
to have as little to do with them as possible. With the escalation of the conflict Maoist
influence increased and through the threat of physical violence or actual violence they
forced the Village Development Committee (VDC) to discontinue their work. The only
Nepal government representatives remaining in the village were the health workers and
the teachers and both groups came under scrutiny and pressure. With the dismantling, or
partial dismantling, of the institutions of the state, the Maoist parallel administration
became more influential. Used to administrations that exerted limited or minimal
influence, the villagers found themselves under a shadowy regime characterised by
random and unclear policies enforced by violence or the threat of violence. To complicate
matters this Maoist administration had only partial control as the village remained
officially under the remit of the Nepal government the representatives of which, the
security forces, could appear at any moment to search for Maoists and scrutinise villagers
for signs of collaboration.
108 Journal of International Women‘s Studies Vol 13 #4 September 2012
During the People‘s War the activities of development projects were closely
scrutinized (and in some cases prohibited) by the Maoists who accused them of
collaborating with elites and ignoring the most marginalized and impoverished sections
of society. 10
A high profile Nepali NGO had opened a project office in Kwei Nasa in
1999 and initiated various development and resource conservation initiatives in the
village including the opening of a day care center. The center had places for 25 children
up to the age of five (children go to primary school in Nepal when they are five) and was
immediately very popular as it provided pre-schooling and offered a safe place for
parents (especially women) to leave their young children while engaged in field and
forest work. The project paid the teachers and funded the center. A committee of village
women was formed to run the center on a day-to-day basis. All the committee members
were members of one of the four village Mother‘s Groups (the leading women‘s
organisation in the village which among other things aims to support and empower local
women). Mother‘s Groups raise funds (mainly by hosting dances for visitors) to repair
and develop village infrastructure (such as the repair of paths) and undertake other small
projects. Some members also participate in rotating credit schemes which provide loans
to women.
By the summer of 2002 the project was targeted by the Maoists because it was
under the auspices of a wildlife trust which had royal patronage. It was becoming
increasingly hard for the workers to continue their activities and shortly afterwards the
threatened staff had to leave their posts. In late 2002 the People‘s Liberation Army
ransacked the project headquarters in another village and one evening in December they
wrecked the office in Kwei Nasa. They threw all the furniture outside, ripped up the
plastic sheets covering the seedlings and destroyed the horticultural nursery. Dhan
Kumari explained what happened,
―Some of us women were very upset, as the project helped us do
many things - like starting the day care center. Purna Maya and Sanu Maya
wept as they were so upset. I was angry and when I asked the Maoists [who
were staying in her house] ... why they had done such a bad thing they said,
―We didn‘t do it Mother, we weren‘t involved, others did it‖. After that we
heard that they were planning to destroy the day care center as it had a project
board nailed to the outside. I went out on the street along with some of the
other women from the committee. We pleaded with them not wreck it. We
explained that we just received some support from the project but it was our
day care and we had built it and we run it. They removed the board [with the
development project‘s name on it] but left the center alone. 11
‖
10
International development agencies were viewed by the Maoists as representatives of imperialism and a
vehicle via which foreign governments could position themselves within the political and development
arena of Nepal. 11
(personal communication March 2003).
109 Journal of International Women‘s Studies Vol 13 #4 September 2012
By coming out onto the streets after dark (a rare occurrence during the conflict)
the women saved the day care center. In contrast to their common portrayal of themselves
as agency-less in the face of the combatants the women drew on a range of strategies
including confrontation and negotiation to achieve their goal of ensuring that the center
was not destroyed. Their response to this threat was based on anger and a sense of
injustice which they expressed through collective action. When questioned further they
reiterated the importance of the day care center to their everyday lives, their reliance on it
to manage child care and their sense of achievement in operating it (albeit at that time
with quite a lot of support from the development project). Experience had also shown that
it was possible – if you were cautious - to negotiate with the Maoists. Some women
explained that the insurgents were rural people like them, who knew the ways and
problems of the village. Long-term proximity and observation enabled women to identify
the most appropriate negotiation strategies to use which they deployed as strategically as
possible. Aware of the importance of the day care center to the women and perhaps
unwilling to anger those on whom they were dependent for food and shelter, the Maoists
backed down.
The women then took over the management of the center. Initially they received
occasional secret visits from the project workers and then when it became too dangerous
for them to visit they ran the center on their own with sporadic phone consultation from
the project. In 2000 they had asked me to provide some support and on each visit I
brought a small amount of money which I had raised outside the country. Subsequently,
the Maoist commander banned meetings held by the committees which had been formed
by the discredited development project. This included conservation committees and
various other development committees such as the day care center committee. The
committees were disbanded, he stated, and the members were forced to resign. This made
the management of the day care center and other development activities, such as
conservation of the forest, more complicated. The commander stated that things could be
run ―in the traditional manner‖, leaving it up to locals to interpret this. No one was sure
what exactly this meant; but it seemed that while ad hoc ‗committee‘ meetings could be
held, the bureaucracy relating to the formal committees, such as minute taking, official
scheduling of meetings in designated buildings etc. was to cease. On one occasion I
attended a meeting to decide the fate of a man who had burnt down his brother‘s house
which was held under a tree in order to appear ―traditional‖. Shortly after the
commanders order, the day care center committee secretly held their formal monthly
meeting inside a locked house, but became so frightened that they decided to comply
with the ruling. The committee members wrote the required resignation letters to the
development project; but the project did not accept them. This ambiguity enabled
villagers to meet the Maoists demands yet retain their links with the project. It also
provided a measure of protection, as it deflected the blame for lack of compliance away
from the villagers and onto the absent development project. Equally ambiguous was the
financial management of the day care center. Officially, it was a village project, yet it
remained funded primarily by the development project and everyone, including the
commander, knew this. As long as this was not openly acknowledged, the deception was
ignored.
In 2005, I was contacted by an international trust which funds small-scale
development projects. They had become aware of the day care center and stated that they
110 Journal of International Women‘s Studies Vol 13 #4 September 2012
would welcome an application to provide some support. The committee decided to apply
for funds to open a child health clinic in the grounds of the day care center and employ a
second teacher and a helper at the day care center. The first request was especially
important as some of the government health post workers had fallen foul of the Maoists
and consequently the Health Post was severally short staffed (and remained so until well
after the conflict ended). During one of my visits an outbreak of conjunctivitis among
village children was only treated after a lengthy delay because medicine had to be sent up
from the town. Funding was approved and the committee members then applied to the
‗government‘ (the Maoists) for permission to build it. My suggestion to also seek
permission from the Nepal government was met with amusement from some women who
pointed that ―that government have not been seen for years‖. 12
Eventually Dhan Kumari
and Purna Maya negotiated with the Maoist commander and received permission to build
the clinic. Rather than requesting a formal meeting which he might or might not attend
they decided to approach him informally and so they put their request to him when he
was sitting casually at teashop. This approach worked and he gave approval. There were
conditions, however: no American money was to be used (the US provided military
assistance - i.e. assault rifles - to the government forces) nor was funding to come from
an official aid agency or national institution, and the project was to be sustainable and
transparent. The fact that the day care center provided access (including scholarships) to
the most marginalised and impoverished in the community was a significant factor in
allowing it to continue running (when many projects had been closed down) and to
expand. Sourcing local labour and in conjunction with the chair of the conservation
committee the women arranged for the building to be built. By the end of the year the
clinic was almost complete and plans were underway to employ a health worker.
In April 2006 following a successful People‘s Movement, King Gyanendra
relinquished power. A ceasefire came into force in June 2006 and in November of that
year the government and the Maoists signed a peace accord. By 2007 the day care center
project had grown into a health and educational project which incorporates a community
library as well as the child clinic and the day care center. It employs nine people
including the first Dalit (formerly ‗untouchable‘) woman in employment in a public
institution in the village. In early 2009 it was formally registered as the Dhi Project, an
official NGO registered by the Nepal government. Its steering committee includes people
from a variety of backgrounds and political parties including the Maoists. Purna Maya is
the president and with one exception all its most senior post holders are women. The Dhi
Project is run by the women who at the beginning of the insurgency felt unsure of their
abilities to manage such an undertaking or to take lead positions in public life. They
saved it from Maoist threat and having done so they successfully ran and expanded it and
in doing so they surprised themselves. As Purna Maya, explained: ―We can do things that
before we thought only men could do. We can organise, run committees and lead just as
well as the men‖ 13
. These achievements have led them to expand the main Mother‘s
Group meeting house in the village. They applied for a series of grants and also
undertook substantial fundraising in order to build what is now the most impressive
public building in Kwei Nasa.
12
(personal communication 2005). 13
(personal communication January 2009).
111 Journal of International Women‘s Studies Vol 13 #4 September 2012
Conclusion
Women in Kwei Nasa participate in greater numbers today on village
development and political committees facilitated in part by government instigated quotas.
This is not entirely new as there have always been small numbers of women active in
public life in Tamu villages. When asked about the greater involvement of women in
public life, Dhi Project president Purna Maya acknowledges the role of political change
in enhancing women‘s involvement but points out the continued barriers to participation
due to unchanged patriarchal attitudes. Women may be present – and that‘s a good thing,
she says, as it brings possibilities for more influence and the development of greater
opportunities for women - but on many committees women are marginal to the decision
making process. The composition may have changed but the male dominated channels of
power and influence are largely unchanged. Continuing, she points out the widespread
endurance of attitudes that diminish women‘s opportunities. For example,
―Many girls would like to get a college education but their parents don‘t
send them as they expect them to get married and instead they send their
sons. Some things have changed, but lots of things have not and they
won‘t until people‘s ideas about women change 14
‖
Like women engaged in national political parties women in Kwei Nasa welcome
greater opportunities for inclusion but they are also cautious about being too optimistic.
Quotas to enhance women‘s participation in public life have only been used in Kwei
Nasa in the last few years and it will take time to assess their impact. To date, however,
the most influential factors in their increased confidence in public life have been gained
unexpectedly by their experiences and success of managing - contrary to general trends -
the day-to-day challenges and contingencies of a development project during the People‘s
War. Provided with the opportunity to open a child clinic they readily took up the
challenge and strategizing carefully gained the approval of the Maoist commander for
their new venture. Clearly these women are not the passive victims that the dominant
development discourse presents them to be, neither, however, are they the newly
empowered agents according to Maoist gender rhetoric. It was not the ideals of formal
equality agendas –- that enabled these women to more fully act in the public realm -
although they may facilitate their expanded participation in the future - but rather what
they learnt via the unexpected challenges and contingencies of the People‘s War.
Through a series of unintended eventualities these Kwei Nasa women have experienced
potentially transformative possibilities.
14
(personal communication June 2012)
112 Journal of International Women‘s Studies Vol 13 #4 September 2012
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- Journal of International Women's Studies
- Sep-2012
- Unexpected Consequences of Everyday Life During the Maoist Insurgency in Nepal
- Judith Pettigrew
- Recommended Citation
- Unexpected Consequences of Everyday Life During the Maoist Insurgency in Nepal