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Pakistani women in abusive marriages in Canada

ShaikhKamal

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https://www.utoronto.ca/news/sabeen...-she-s-being-mentored-someone-who-understands

University of Toronto News
Sabeen survived two abusive marriages. As a U of T student, she’s being mentored by someone who understands

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Mentor Samra Zafar and Sabeen (photo by Steph Martyniuk)

Sabeen* had survived two abusive marriages. She had entered the first – an arranged marriage – in Lahore, Pakistan, at the age of 21. After almost 10 difficult years, she boarded a plane with her children to start again in Canada. At 35, she then tried marriage a second time. This husband quickly turned emotionally abusive. To Sabeen, living with him felt like “living with the devil,” and she began fearing for the safety of her children. In a matter of months, she found the strength, yet again, to leave.

Sabeen had wanted to attend the University of Toronto Mississauga for a long time, hoping to attain a degree in criminology and sociolegal studies to pursue a career in family law. But there were so many roadblocks to attending university, including paperwork: She didn’t have her transcripts from the university she had attended in Pakistan. She was dealing with the emotional and financial toll of a divorce in progress, and of being a single working mom. But she thought a lot about applying, anyhow.

One day, her mom sent her a link to a Toronto Life article, with a one-line message: “If she can do it, you can do it.” It was a memoir by U of T alum Samra Zafar, who had been forced into an arranged marriage at the age of 17. Like Sabeen, she had survived emotional and physical abuse. She, too, had two children very young. She, too, had found the strength to leave her marriage. Unlike Sabeen, Samra was much further ahead in her academic journey – and her journey of healing. She had not only earned a bachelor of science in financial economics from U of T Mississauga in 2013, but had followed it up with a master’s in economics in 2014. She was now pursuing a successful career in commercial banking.

After she read the article, an astounded Sabeen looked up Samra on Facebook and messaged her. She wrote, “I feel like this is a sign from God that I have to pursue this and submit an application to UTM.” Samra messaged her right back, and advised her to email her story to the office of the registrar. So Sabeen wrote to them, laying out her entire life story. “I felt, ‘I need someone to open one window for me so I can just jump through and save my life.’”

On a summer day in 2017, she was visiting her parents who were then living in Abu Dhabi. She sat down and checked her email. There was a letter of acceptance from U of T Mississauga. “‘I did it,’” she thought. “I got in.” That night, she messaged Samra. “I thought I heard Samra scream through Messenger. She was so happy for me.”

Since then, Samra has been her mentor, an unofficial position that sees them meet up or talk once a month. The first time they met, at a Starbucks, they talked away the hours over coffee that went cold. “I thought, ‘She is so powerful and confident’ – and her smile,” says Sabeen. “When people go through pain, it’s hard to smile. So for her to be able to smile like that, where her eyes and her entire face sparkle, you can tell she’s come a long way and she’s proud of herself.” Adds Sabeen: “My smile’s kind of getting there now. Going to UTM is my healing process. Doing something for myself is a whole new beginning.”

Their conversations range from academics, to juggling single parenthood with classes, to career goals, to dealing with fears about future relationships. “It’s very holistic,” says Samra. “It’s not just about school; it’s about life.” And because mentoring shape-shifts with each step that the mentee takes, the conversations change, too: When Sabeen started school, she had questions about the credit system. Now, she mulls over whether she should pursue grad school right away or enter the job market.

They also talk about lighthearted things – from the keto diet to dating: “She has a great sense of humour,” says Samra. “There was a time when I went through a breakup and I said, ‘Oh my God, I have the worst luck with men.’” They both just looked at each other. “Babe, I’m with you,” said Sabeen. “We’re both magnets.” In that moment, they burst out laughing.

“Mentoring is very different from teaching or coaching or even helping, because it’s not about what you can do for them. It’s about how you can empower them to do it for themselves,” says Samra, who has mentored more than 30 women – at U of T and otherwise – and also founded Brave Beginnings, a non-profit to support abuse survivors. “My own mentors have never told me what to do. They’ve been my sounding board. They’ve given me ideas. They’ve played devil’s advocate. They’ve given me a reality check sometimes. They’ve connected me with people. At the end of the day, I’m empowered to make informed decisions for myself, which is so liberating. I can actually craft and create the life that I want for myself, and I don’t want to do it alone and I’m not meant to do it alone. That’s the power of mentoring.”

When Samra left her husband in her second year at U of T Mississauga in 2011 and moved into campus housing, she was struggling under the weight of court cases surrounding the divorce and domestic abuse; her own challenges of healing and coping; working multiple jobs; raising her girls; and going to school. It was her university mentors and friends who lifted her up: Students would look after her children when she was at the lawyer’s office. Professors would spend hours motivating her and encouraging her to go on.

One mentor who had a profound effect on her was John Rothschild, a U of T alumnus who was then CEO of Prime Restaurants. He is still an integral part of her life, providing emotional support and encouragement, and helping her navigate fears and hard decisions. “People would hold my hand in the worst circumstances. It just warmed my heart so much, and that is what made all the difference,” she says. “I realized that resilience is not just an individual concept. It’s a collective concept. When people are connected to each other, and when people are comfortable in offering and asking for help, that’s what builds resilience.”

Like Samra, Sabeen certainly knows what it’s like to navigate her way through extreme stressors while attending university and raising children. She tries to schedule her classes so she can be there when her 10-year-old son and 13-year-old daughter get home from school; then she makes dinner and helps them with homework. When night hits, it is time for her to do her own assignments. Making friends with other students has been difficult given the difference in age and life experience – and Samra helps her with that. “Only she can understand the pain that I feel, the misery of being undermined so much,” says Sabeen. “She went to hell, she came back. And she’s OK. Unless you’ve been to hell and back, you don’t know what it feels like and you don’t know if it’s going to be OK.”

Samra was accepted into U of T in 2004, but her husband wouldn’t pay the tuition fee and she couldn’t get OSAP because of his salary and assets. She started to babysit and tutor, and saved enough money on the sly for tuition. On a proud day in June 2013, at the age of 31, she walked across the dais in Convocation Hall, graduating as U of T Mississauga’s top economics student. Samra is now an alumni governor at U of T and her bestselling memoir, A Good Wife, was recently published by HarperCollins.

A few weeks ago, Samra had a vivid dream that she was back living with her ex-husband and his parents. She was in the basement, and tried to open the door to get out. She was trapped. She woke in a sweat and looked around. She was home in her condo, safe. Her kids came by. “Are you OK, Mommy?” They all hugged.

After Samra has had a nightmare or flashback, or has experienced anxiety, she imagines embracing her young self. “That 17-year-old girl who was forced into marriage or the 23-year-old who was told she couldn’t go to school, I just imagine hugging her and telling her it’s OK. You’re a part of me and I love you, and just saying the things she should have heard at the time.”

Now, as a mentor, Samra is able to support other women who may need an embrace – whether it’s a physical one, or more of a helping hand. She tells them: “The only thing that can heal you is you. Know that the strength lies inside of you, not around you. The people around you will help you realize that strength, and that’s what mentoring is about, but ultimately it’s in there. Once you know that you have that power, then you’re unstoppable.”

*Sabeen’s last name has been withheld at her request.

This article first appeared in the University of Toronto Magazine. Read more of the Spring 2019 issue.
 
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https://globalnews.ca/news/4980747/samra-zafars-teenage-bride-human-rights-activist/

February 20, 2019 7:28 pm
Updated: March 4, 2019 1:20 pm

Samra Zafar’s journey from teenage bride to human rights activist

By Claire Allen Contributor CKNW

WATCH ABOVE: Having the chance to rewrite your life story

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Samra Zafar faced years of abuse after arriving in Canada as a teenage bride in an arranged marriage, but nothing could stop her from pursuing her dreams of education and freedom.

While speaking on the CKNW Simi Sara Show Wednesday, Zafar detailed how her life dramatically changed at the age of 17, when her family arranged her marriage to a man who was 11 years older than her. Subsequently, Zafar moved to Canada with her new husband, leaving behind her family in Pakistan.

“I had a lot of dreams of getting an education and going to… universities that were abroad. I was very passionate about my career and fulfilling my dreams. But I was often told that my dreams were too big for me because I was a girl,” she said. “The only way that I would be able to go abroad was to get married to this man because, as a girl, I can’t be sent away. Who would guard me? Who would be my chaperone? So I was pressured into it.”

LISTEN: Samra Zafar speaks with CKNW’s Simi Sara about escaping her abusive marriage:

In her new book, A Good Wife: Escaping the Life I Never Chose, Zafar recounts how her new husband and his family promised that the marriage and move to Canada would allow her to fulfill her dream of getting an education, but once she arrived in her new country, she realized it had all been a lie.

“Once I got here I was told that I should be grateful that I got to the real purpose of being a woman sooner rather than later, and didn’t have to go through all of that ‘education crap’. I was told that I should be a good wife, a good daughter-in-law, and a good mother, and that was the real purpose as a girl…”

In the years that followed, Zafar gave birth to two daughters and tried to live up to her husband’s definition of a good wife, but said that she often fell short in his eyes. In her book, Zafar details how she endured emotional and physical abuse from her husband, which left her feeling isolated and afraid.

“… I was humiliated and assaulted and insulted everyday. I started believing that… it was all my fault and that I was not good enough.”

READ MORE: Ontario woman empowering, mentoring domestic abuse survivors

Desperate to get out of her marriage, she hatched an escape plan for herself and her two daughters.

“I was very blessed that I was a student [at the University of Toronto]. When I left I did not have anywhere to go. My husband had sold the house from under me and I was on the verge of being homeless… and U of T gave me a place at student housing. That’s where I lived for the next two years. I was working four or five jobs on campus, raising my daughters, and going to school full-time.,” Zafar said.


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Through her academic and career achievements, Zafar has gone on to become a human rights activist, mentor and public speaker. She founded Brave Beginnings, a non-profit organization where she works to help abuse survivors in their journey to find freedom and peace. She hopes that her book will help individuals in similar situations find strength within themselves.

“My message with this book is ‘it’s not going to be easy. It is hard, it was hard for me too, and you can still do it’… It’s never ever too late… you are not victims, you are warriors… find that power inside of yourself, and use that.”
 
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If you raise your children in western countries and they spend most of their time in these countries then their mindset is different so you cannot import Dulha/Dulhan for them from Pakistan thinking that marriage will work and there will be no hardship in it. Weak man abuse their partners. women can torture man as well if not physically then emotionally and mentally
 
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A strong man is not one who beats up women or abuses them...a strong man is he who has patience....you gotto let some things go at times.

Patience and flexibility is key in all relationships. I think the problem with many sub-continental men is that they had a control freak / abusive father and that becomes the model
 
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She was married twice and both times she was in the abusive marriage ..oh right..She is woman, she is innocent...blah blah crap...

I'm ok with the 1st abusive marriage....it happens...but a 2nd one too lol??

Well this time, it's definitely your fault lady. Now we just have to wait for the 3rd one too, you know, for publicity? :D

I think there a reason why most Diaspora Pakistani men tend to marry other Muslim groups cause the family politics crap and the sjws in Pakistan

@Itachi @Pan-Islamic-Pakistan

Me too, when I'm of the age. I have seen many failed marriages here in the US because the wife thinks she needs to be treated like a queen while contributing almost nothing to the marriage/relationship and making the husband work like a mule.

No thanks....there's better women out there, more beautiful, faithful and equally hard working as the man. :)
 
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