Leaving requires a lot of courage to take those first steps. That's why people see us as brave. The actual act of leaving feels pretty anticlimactic. I did something very similar to you NothernArab, just left a note and never returned.
People also see stories like ours as inspirational. It gives them hope that things can change. Doesn't matter if we had to 'sneak' away, we still got out. The least confrontational it is, the better. Who wants a massive fight/argument? It would just scare and discourage people.
Hey PeruvianSkies. Yeh I didn't want a big confrontation. I had already been confronted once by my younger brother who suspected maybe I was talking to guys. (no proof......) and my mum stood there and let him do it. He was actually blocking me from leaving a room. Him 19 years old, me 28..... its so stupid. In the end I thought if I'm going, I'm doing it quietly, and they can just just discover me gone. It was on the advice of a friend who worked in a womens refuge who said leave a note. She said that way you can't be reported to police as missing, because you left a note saying you left and you're safe. That's all they need to know.
I think you mean to say that perpetrators of honour violence are committing violent or abusive acts on the orders of a demon/god? If that is what you meant, it is not true. Honour has not very much to do with Islam, but lots to do with culture. The Quran does advocate physical punishment but honour is not that. Honour is very hard to explain. Oh.. Quod did it so well, I wish I could remember how he explained it.
It is like saving face. Your daughter looked out the window at a young man or got a wrong number on her cell phone so you have to kill her or no one will respect you, basically. It's not even about if she DID anything, plenty of young people die who are innocent of anything, and in some places it is men, too. It's about your reputation, in your own mind and in the community.
If I misread you, I apologize. But it is not about any demon at all (except for those who are insane and hearing voices), just trying to look honourable/macho/manly/respectable.
I think you explained it well. It's about being respected as a man and as a family in the community. They want others to speak well of them. Oh that family is good, they are religious, their daughter is devout etc. What the sons do, nobody seems to care, speaking as someone who has 3 brothers. I felt like they got away with murder compared to me.
I wasn't brave, either. I tried to be, but.. it was too much. Seriously we were brave to stay. It wasn't good for us but we stuck in there until we couldn't.
Pretty much. I was hoping things would change, its why I stuck it out. But it became clear to me that was never going to happen.