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Bride-Kidnapping in the Caucasus! Tradition or Barbaric Cultural Practice?

Coolyo

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Amina Edieva's abductor stalked her like a seasoned predator. He approached the slender, raven-haired 18-year-old student on a Grozny side street, hoisted her off the ground in a tight bear hug and dragged her into a waiting car.

She screamed, kicked and scratched at the man, but he brought three male friends, a driver and two backup abductors to ensure she couldn't escape. More young men in a second vehicle trailed, on the lookout for witnesses who might try to halt the brazen afternoon capture.

But Ms. Edieva knew that no Chechen would rescue her that September day nearly three years ago. Well versed in Chechnya's bride-abducting traditions, she understood she was caught up in a centuries-old ritual in which her captor, a suitor she had frequently rebuffed, was going to force her to marry him.

"I told him I hated him," she said, but he smiled.

"It doesn't matter if you love me or hate me," he told her calmly. "I want you, and you are going to be my wife."

Across Chechnya and neighbouring Ingushetia, violent bride abductions are staged nearly every week in the mountain-ringed, southern Russian republics known as the North Caucasus; during the spring wedding season, it can happen every day. Young women are snatched from bus stops, on their way home from school and sometimes out of their own yards. A shocking video with clips of men dragging screaming young women, their books, purses and cellphones sent flying, is a popular YouTube posting.

Authorities in the two restive republics routinely turn a blind eye to the violent practice, preferring to depict it as a romantic tradition, often staged by the starry-eyed young couples themselves.

Some claim the practice has a fairytale quality and many young women dream of being abducted by a handsome man.

"It's a sign that [a man] really loves her," said Mariyat Muskeeva, a cultural liaison officer with the Chechen local government. "If a woman can tell her children that their father kidnapped her, it's a great love story."

Most women interviewed across Chechnya and Ingushetia disagreed, saying they felt no affection from the men who stalked them and shoved them into waiting cars. Others said the custom has no place in modern society.

"The government wants to deny this is a problem," said Ms. Edieva, who eventually left her husband after a tense eight-month marriage. "They treat it as a normal thing."

There are no hard statistics on how many women are seized each year in Chechnya and Ingushetia, but human-rights organizations say it is in the thousands. Locals estimate that about half of all marriages begin with abductions.

During the Soviet era, Chechnya and Ingushetia were a single, autonomous republic, and the two cultures revolve first around the tightly knit, patriarchal families, followed by loyalty to the local clan.

Chechens, in particular, are proud of the region's non-Russian identity. In interviews, when asked why bride abduction persists in the 21st century, many replied: "It is our tradition."

Chechen magazine editor Lula Jumalaeva also noted that two wars have left a dire shortage of men. Unmarried women have no status in the society and many are desperate to marry, she said. With so few men, their odds are low of securing husbands of their choosing. If seized, they may feel pressure to marry the captor, especially if his family is suitable.

Family disputes, crimes and most social issues are settled by religious leaders and clan elders, not state authorities. Blood feuds and vigilante justice are common.

It is said that these strong family networks and disciplined religious brotherhoods helped Chechens survive three successive national tragedies, including the Stalin-ordered deportations of almost 400,000 Chechens to Kazakhstan in the 1940s, followed by two brutal wars with Russia in 1994 and 1999.

Women's roles in these tradition-bound societies are largely submissive and they perform the lion's share of household tasks. They are expected to act demurely in the presence of men and to eat at separate tables.

"In our society, we don't like girls who don't obey the rules and who have been touched," said Khamid Gabayev, 79, an elder in the alpine village of Vashendoroy in southern Chechnya. As he spoke, two women bustled around him, one pouring tea, the other cleaning his muddy shoes.

Ms. Muskeeva, the Chechen cultural liaison officer, said bride abductions are expressions of the passionate nature of North Caucasian men and women. "The kidnapping marriages are stronger than other marriages."

But Ms. Edieva barely knew her real-life captor and she was dating another man she longed to marry.

In the first minutes after she was grabbed, her mind flipped though the list of abduction rules most Chechen women know by heart: If she did not escape before morning, there would be no chance of avoiding the forced marriage.

If an unmarried Chechen woman spends a night in a man's house, she is considered to be his wife. If he touches her before marriage, she is thought to be tainted.

"I was about to faint," Ms. Edieva said in a recent interview at her parents' Grozny home. "He had already touched me. I was afraid that if my boyfriend found out, he would never see me again."

The speeding car drove past a military checkpoint manned by Chechens and Russians. The Chechen soldiers would not blink an eye, but she screamed out to the Russian soldiers. No one helped.

For nine hours, Ms. Edieva was held captive, pressured by a crowd of her abductor's relatives, who gathered at his home.

"There were nine men standing around me in a circle," she said. "I was screaming that I will die if I spend the night here. But they were laughing at me."

Just before 1 a.m., she found a cellphone and called home, but her mother was reluctant to rescue her. After she pleaded with an older brother, relatives took her home. Her mother and sister told her she was silly for resisting the match.

The next day, under pressure from her mother and grandfather, she gave in and agreed to marry her abductor, a man she identified only as Aslambeck.

Nine days later, Ms. Edieva, her makeup smudged by tears, was married in a traditional Chechen ceremony where she stood alone in a corner for hours at the groom's house, forbidden to speak or sit until the elders left.

Today, as a divorced young woman in a traditional Muslim culture, her marriage prospects have narrowed. She could marry a divorced man, or become a second wife, neither of which appeal to her.

Back home at her parents' house, Ms. Edieva has not re-enrolled in university and spends hours watching TV. She loves to try on bridal gowns and watch wedding videos.

Her future, she said, is ruined.

"Chechen traditions, they're all about what the parents want," she said bitterly.

Despite the official line that bride abduction is largely stage-managed by the young lovers themselves, scores of young Chechen and Ingush women told similar stories of abductions followed by hours of agonizing negotiations, often with complicit relatives.

Ms. Muskeeva said she doubted these stories, insisting that few Chechen women are forced to marry.

"If a girl doesn't want marriage, if the man's family doesn't want the marriage, if there is no mutual agreement, there is no marriage," she said.

During the interview, her boss, Isa Askhagov, entered the room and described how he captured his wife years ago. The two were dating and planned to marry, but she wanted to first finish medical school. He snatched her on her way home from classes. She was angry at first but he allowed her to finish her studies and today they have five children.

"It's like a play that's acted out," Mr. Askhagov said. "Chechen girls grow up in strict families. A girl wants a real man she can respect."

Of all the Chechen and Ingush traditions, the rules governing courtship and marriage are among the most strict.

Physical contact between an unmarried couple is forbidden. "Dates" normally consist of two people meeting in a public space for a conversation. A man must keep a distance of at least a metre from his female companion.

Chechen and Ingush women are rarely seen in public without head scarves and they never wear pants.

For many young Chechen men, the lack of physical intimacy is unbearable. Umar Makhauri abducted his 16-year-old bride, Malika Makhaeva, outside her grandparents' village house 34 years ago.

He said he had been overcome with desire. "I needed her and so I kidnapped her. I was young and my blood was boiling."

His family and friends supported the abduction and helped lure Ms. Makhaeva from her grandparents' house.

Now 57, he regrets what he did, admitting it caused his wife a lifetime of emotional pain.

Mr. Makhauri's midlife regrets have cost him little, though. He later took a second wife, a Grozny lawyer with whom he now lives part of the week.

His first wife and five of their six children, meanwhile, live outside Grozny in a large family compound. She said she has "never had a day of happiness" with her husband, adding she stayed in the marriage to keep custody of her children.

According to Chechen tradition, children of a divorced couple live with the father.

Ms. Makhaeva said the heartbreak of her marriage left more emotional scars than both wars combined. "My husband has a full life, with his family here and a second wife. I don't. I should have left him."

Fifteen-year-old Shumist Kadyrova ran nearly five kilometres in bare feet through alpine meadows in a failed dash for freedom from her 45-year-old captor. But his friends caught up with her when she stopped to rest by a tree. Within days, she was married.

Despite the terror of that afternoon, Ms. Kadyrova, now 88, speaks fondly of her late husband.

"He was a nice man, a good soul. He had a good heart." At the time of her abduction, Ms. Kadyrova said, she felt pity for him because he could not find a wife his own age.

Six months after the wedding, Russian soldiers rounded up villagers onto trains for deportation to Soviet Kazakhstan, where thousands of Chechens would die of disease and starvation, including Ms. Kadyrova's husband, parents and three siblings. She later married a man of her choosing, a fellow Chechen in exile. They returned to Chechnya 13 years later.

Though she has no ill feelings about her first husband, Ms. Kadyrova said she would like to see bride abductions halted. Her own granddaughter was seized in Ingushetia while in a refugee camp. The Kadyrova family rescued the 20-year-old before nightfall.

"I think it's very violent," Ms. Kadyrova said, recounting the afternoon of her own abduction 73 years ago. "Of course, I had no idea what was going on.

"And there was another boy I was in love with … ," she added, her voice trailing off.


 
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Other Article on the Issue:

Chechen Bride Snatching on the Rise

CHECHEN BRIDE SNATCHING ON THE RISE
By Asiyat Vazayeva in Grozny and Khava Uzhakhova in Nazran

July 7, 2003 – (IWPR'S CAUCASUS REPORT) Living in his crowded parental home in a Chechen village, 28-year-old Aslan D. has his eye on the woman he wants to marry and set up his own home with.

For two years now, having built and done up a house amid all the difficulties of the war, he has been wooing his chosen one - the only problem being that she doesn't agree.

"I have met a lot of girls, but after five or ten minutes' conversation I lose all interest in them," says Aslan outlining his quest. "My heart belongs only to Madina, but she doesn't want me."

Then his sad eyes sparkle with determination, "She will be my wife! I will steal her, as I've helped steal five brides for my friends - and good marriages came out of it. Madina will come to love me when she knows me better."

After nine years of conflict and violence in which Chechnya's male population has been decimated, such an eligible husband as Aslan should by rights be worth his weight in gold. But he is not prepared to shift his attentions to one of the many other unmarried women.

Aslan's unrequited dreams of a life with Madina are fanned by the growing popularity of bride-stealing. It is an old practice found amongst Chechens and their ethnic kin the Ingush, although it is technically punishable by law and many families take a dim view of it.

Madina, for one, no longer goes out alone since Aslan has told her family of his feelings,.

"Generally it happens like this," explained Chechen ethnographer Zalpa Bersanova. "Young people [relatives or friends of the would-be bridegroom] go up to the girl and announce, 'From now on, with Allah's blessing, you are one of us.' Then they force her into a car and take her away. The girl of course resists and protests."

The woman is then taken to the home of a friend or relatives of the groom, after which a delegation of older people visits her parents to try to formalise the deal.

Aina, 19, worked in a flower-shop in the Ingush town of Nazran. One evening four men she did not know came in and ordered a basket of flowers.

"As I was choosing the flowers, one of them seized me by the waist and dragged me out of the shop to a car," Aina remembers. "At first I didn't understand what was going on. My sisters tried to rescue me, but two of the guys held them back.

"I tried to resist but what could I do against two strong men? They threw me in the car and took me away and my terrified sisters were left on the doorstep with a pile of roses."

Carted off to a village, all that Aina knew about her would-be husband was that he was 21.

A whole night of persuasions and threats followed as she was ferried between his relatives and friends before police - summoned by her family - intervened.

"They took me to the old people, I said I didn't agree and they took me home. I arrived at six in the morning. When I was with my family again I couldn't hold back the tears and then I fell asleep, not believing I had been saved. That was the worst night of my life. I don't envy anyone who has to go through that."

Tamila, a 20-year-old student at Nazran University, was snatched on her way to a class. Her determined suitor turned out to be a 24-year old who had no job and had not been to university.

"I hoped that when I mentioned my boyfriend, he would calm down, but he got even angrier," Tamila said. "He began to threaten that he would deprive me of my honour and I would be forced to stay with him. I said I would rather die than live with a beast like him.

"A fight broke out in the courtyard and they were going to take me somewhere else. But luckily the father of the boy turned out to be a decent man and when he heard I didn't agree, he just put me in his car and took me home."

In other cases however the woman is forced to give in and a marriage takes place. It may even work out.

Bersanova is herself the product of such a wedding, her mother snatched at only 15 but going on to spend more than 50 years with her abductor and raise 10 children. In more recent case, the ethnographer said she knew of a woman called Fatima, an Ingush who lived in Grozny, "stolen" when very young by a man she hardly knew.

The girl's family was outraged with the man, and he spent three years in jail for the abduction. Upon his release, he went back and wooed Fatima so persistently that she ended up agreeing to marry him - and it has proved a successful match.

It is stories such as these that encourage hot-headed youths to dream of abducting brides.

Ethnographers like Said-Magomed Khasiev, who works for Chechnya's Republican Museum, condemn modern-day snatchings as "hooliganism" which have no place in Chechen tradition.

"Using violence against women, whatever nice justifications they use for it, is an outrageous violation of traditional marriage customs," argued Khasiev.

He says that Chechen custom values the free expression of will by young people, promoting sinmarsho or "freedom of the soul," with a relaxed approach to both marriage and divorce.

For a marriage to take place, a mullah comes to the house and after checking that the couple and their parents agree, performs a blessing. Divorce is even easier, with the husband simply declaring in the presence of two witnesses, "From this moment you are no longer my wife."

But whatever the historical accuracy, instances of bride-stealing now appear to be on the rise in both Chechnya and Ingushetia.

"The deterrent of criminal punishment which existed in Soviet times has gone," said Bersanova. "Now total legal chaos reigns in Chechnya, and against that background stealing a bride to start a family looks like a minor offence."

In a bid to throw light on the situation, Khasiev has recently started a programme of cultural education, including publishing a brochure on Chechen customs and etiquette.

But until more people like Aslan get around to reading it, abductions will continue.

Witnesses tell of a girl recently snatched in the village of Shali right in front of a Russian soldier. When the girl cried for help, the Russian only smiled and said, "But that's your tradition!"

Asiyat Vazayeva is a Chechen journalist and IWPR contributor based in Ingushetia. Khava Uzhakhova is a student at Ingush State University.
 
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Bride Kidnapping is NOT only common in the Caucasus! It is also growing in Kyrgyzstan!


 
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Whatever it is, it definitely has got to go :angry:

Surprisingly according to a new BBC documentary 'Stolen Brides' this horrible practice is on the increase in Chechnya :what:

I have uploaded a temporary 8 minute video on YouTube, showing glimpses of the documentary. As a new member I am unable to embed the video or provide its link. If you want to see it, search for 'nasiwise' on YouTube and then click on video titled 'Temporary upload'.
 
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It is old tribal custom in Caucasus and has nothing to with Islam. There was bridal price paid to the woman's family when a man wanted to marry a women. Even in Pakhtun society of Pakistan and Afghanistan there is a bridal price to marry a women. While in India, the Hindus have dowry gift paid to man to marry women. This all depends on availability of women to marry. In Punjab and Haryana region of India we will see more cases of bride price and/or women kidnappings due to large scale female infanticide.
 
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Its barbanic unless Borat is kidnapping Jenna. Then its a movie scene :P


Even in Pakhtun society of Pakistan and Afghanistan there is a bridal price to marry a women. While in India, the Hindus have dowry gift paid to man to marry women.

Mardangi i say?? :pakistan:
 
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Chechans are usually very good muslims ... a few bad apples spoiling the lot ... this practice equates to kidnapping and rape .
 
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These habits misunderstood,its called in arabic "Khatifah" I will tell you about my personal experience, I got married in this way:

1. I met a girl and we like each other and we decided to get married

2. I told my mother that I want to marry this girl, A shame to talk with the my Father in such matters

3. My mother had taken an appointment with her big sister because her mother is dead

4. I went with my mother to meet them, We all sat down together, While my mother talking with the sister of the bride, I've been talking with the bride

5. In the end the Sister of the bride asked us to wait to tell her father and know his opinion

6. The father of the bride approved and a date was set for Khatifah

7. On the day of Khatifah, I went with my sisters and my relatives in the cars to the house of the bride, My sisters came to the house where the bride was waiting with her sisters and brought her with them, When my relatives saw the bride they began firing in the air as a sign of happiness

8. When I arrived the bride to the house of my family, it Is forbidden for me to be in the same place with the bride until the marriage contract (i Should be kept away in one of the houses of my relatives) then We sent a number of respected well-known old men to the father of the bride to tell hem ( thats only a Ceremony for An expression of respect for the father of the bride)

9. I Stay in the house of my relatives until the marriage contract

In the end The whole issue is a marriage ceremony, and If the girls father refuse the groom the Khatifah did not continue
 
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These habits misunderstood,its called in arabic "Khatifah" I will tell you about my personal experience, I got married in this way:

1. I met a girl and we like each other and we decided to get married

2. I told my mother that I want to marry this girl, A shame to talk with the my Father in such matters

3. My mother had taken an appointment with her big sister because her mother is dead

4. I went with my mother to meet them, We all sat down together, While my mother talking with the sister of the bride, I've been talking with the bride

5. In the end the Sister of the bride asked us to wait to tell her father and know his opinion

6. The father of the bride approved and a date was set for Khatifah

7. On the day of Khatifah, I went with my sisters and my relatives in the cars to the house of the bride, My sisters came to the house where the bride was waiting with her sisters and brought her with them, When my relatives saw the bride they began firing in the air as a sign of happiness

8. When I arrived the bride to the house of my family, it Is forbidden for me to be in the same place with the bride until the marriage contract (i Should be kept away in one of the houses of my relatives) then We sent a number of respected well-known old men to the father of the bride to tell hem ( thats only a Ceremony for An expression of respect for the father of the bride)

9. I Stay in the house of my relatives until the marriage contract

In the end The whole issue is a marriage ceremony, and If the girls father refuse the groom the Khatifah did not continue


very nice,but sir where is the action :cheesy: i mean kidnapping stuff,i mean that's how people ordinarily marry:D
 
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very nice,but sir where is the action :cheesy: i mean kidnapping stuff,i mean that's how people ordinarily marry:D

well . . . in old days i must have strong horse instead of the car . . as i said its today only ceremonys for us . . every thing is arranged . . there is no kidnapping exactly
 
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very nice,but sir where is the action :cheesy: i mean kidnapping stuff,i mean that's how people ordinarily marry:D

Imagine if your sister was kidnapped by a stranger and then within days pressurised into marrying him! :angry:

You wouldn't call it an 'action', would you???? :nono:
 
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