Sunday, December 21, 2008

Egypt’s first Christian woman mayor takes role in her stride


KOMBOHA, Egypt - Eva Habil has just become Egypt’s first female mayor but already she seems relaxed in her pioneering role as she strolls around her community clad in jeans and a pink sweater. “She will be a good leader, just like her ancestors,” says Jamil Guirguis, an elderly man wearing the traditional white galabiyah robe, who made a point of climbing off his donkey to greet the new mayor. “And besides, a woman is in power in Germany,” he adds.

Habil, a 53 year-old Christian lawyer, beat five male candidates, including her younger brother, to become mayor of the predominantly Coptic Christian town of Komboha in southern Egypt.

The appointment of a woman to the top civic role in the community of stockbreeders was confirmed by the interior ministry in November. “I don’t believe it. I am the first woman mayor of Egypt,” she says as a band of children swarm around her, smiling in admiration. “My father was mayor (of Komboha). I was born here. I was not parachuted out of nowhere,” said Habil. She admits, however, that the older generation supported her more than the young of the town of 10,000 people.

Egypt was the first Arab country to give women the franchise in 1956. But today there are only nine female MPs in Egypt’s 454-seat parliament. Four were elected while the five others were appointed under presidential decree. Habil’s nomination as mayor echoes a long tradition in rural Egypt that administrative positions are handed down from father to son, even if this time the daughter got the top job.

My mother wanted a boy

“My mother was unhappy when I was born because she had wanted a boy,” the new mayor recalled. As a woman, Habil knew she would have to face up to huge challenges as she battled her way into the male-oriented politics of Egypt. “When I was a student at Ain Shams University in Cairo in the 1970s, mini-skirts were in fashion and the emancipation of women was on the horizon,” she said. But the majority of society became more conservative later.

While a growing number of Muslim women from all walks of life opted for wearing scarfs to express their faith, Christians wore crosses. “Copts began wearing chains with huge crosses in reaction,” said Habil who insists that citizenship should prevail over religious differences. “We must, first and foremost, proclaim ourselves Egyptians.”

Egypt’s Copts — the largest Christian community in the Middle East — account for an estimated six percent of the country’s 80 million mainly Muslim inhabitants.

Fearing that Egypt’s small secular opposition parties were being flouted by the influential Muslim Brotherhood opposition group, Habil joined the ruling National Democratic Party of President Hosni Mubarak. “I am the first woman mayor, but believe me there will be others,” she said, pointing to a group of young girls around her.

Source: US COPTS Association

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