History of Feminism
Related: About this forumLebanon’s sexist citizenship law hurts mothers and babies
We give life, but we cant give citizenship? one mother asked at the latest protest held by the campaign for womens right to citizenship, My Nationality Is a Right for Me and My Family.
This is a reality for every Lebanese woman. A childhood friend of mine, for example, is in a committed relationship with an Englishman she met in Lebanon. They both live there and hope to for many years. She is Lebanese, but her children will not be.
Nor will my future children, unless I marry a Lebanese man. My brothers children? They will be Lebanese regardless of their mothers birthplace.
http://america.aljazeera.com/opinions/2015/5/lebanons-sexist-citizenship-law-hurts-mothers-and-babies.html
brer cat
(26,618 posts)"The worst consequence of the current nationality law is that some children can end up stateless. If their mothers hold only Lebanese citizenship and their fathers do not have citizenship (which is the case for many Palestinian refugees) or have lost their documents because of war or have no means to register their children in their home country, then the children will be stateless. As such, they will have no official identity documents, no access to government services, no right of movement and no ability to legally work or live in the country. Being stateless means living without existing. Official estimates of the number of stateless women, men and children in Lebanon vary, but the current consensus seems to be about 200,000."
Thanks for posting, boston bean. K&R
boston bean
(36,534 posts)brer cat
(26,618 posts)as being those dispossessed by war, not by politicians. And of course, only those born where the citizen-mother, not the father, marries a foreigner. There seems to be no end to the ways women are subject to discrimination.