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The Middle East Explodes with Obesity

by Daniel Pipes
Wed, 29 Dec 2004

updated Sun, 23 Sep 2007

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Specialists on the Middle East have their own brand of gossip, and one staple of the genre is how Arab men appreciate rotund women, a fact pregnant with implications for Arab-Western social relations. Now, various organizations have issued facts and figures confirming this propensity, as reported by Gautam Naik in today's Wall Street Journal Europe.

The article begins with a mildly horrific tale of gavage (French for force-feeding, the technique used to fatten geese for foie gras) applied to an 8-year-old girl in the western Sahara, Jidat Mint Ethmane.

Ms. Ethmane says she was required to consume four liters of milk in the morning, plus couscous. She ate milk and porridge for lunch. She was awoken at midnight and given several more pints of milk, followed by a prebreakfast feeding at 6 a.m. If she threw up, she says, her mother forced her to eat the vomit. Stretch marks appeared on her body, and the skin on her upper arms and thighs tore under the pressure. If she balked at the feedings, her mother squeezed her toes between two wooden sticks until the pain was unbearable. "I would devour as much as possible," says Ms. Ethmane. "I resembled a mattress." …

Force-feeding is usually done by girls' mothers or grandmothers; men play little direct role. The girls' stomachs are sometimes vigorously massaged in order to loosen the skin and make it easier to consume even greater quantities of food. … Local officials say some women are so fat they can barely move. In [a Mauritanian] survey, 15% of the women said their skin split as a result of overeating. One-fifth of women said one of their toes or fingers were broken to make them eat.

Naik provides a groaning board of statistics indicating "an explosion of obesity," especially in the oil-rich states where food is aplenty. The International Obesity Task Force, a London think-tank, finds 83 percent of women obese or overweight in Bahrain, 74 percent in the United Arab Emirates, and 75 percent in Lebanon. (Trailing not far behind, some 62 percent of American women fit these categories). The Journal of Nutrition in a 2001 study found half the women in Tunisia and Morocco overweight or obese. Further, the rate of childhood obesity has risen rapidly. A 2001 survey estimated that 22 percent of Mauritanian women have been force-fed as girls.

Governments are getting into the act because, the Obesity Task Force figures, being overweight brings on various illnesses (including diabetes, heart disease and gastric ailments); in all, these account for one-third of total health costs in the Middle East.

One interesting ally in their campaign for slenderness is the Western notion of female beauty. A 19-year-old explains that "exposure to Western TV shows and magazines convinced her it is healthier to maintain a middling weight," Naik reports. It will be fascinating to watch if Arab cultural attitudes change with the perception of health, as for example they did in the West concerning sun tans. (December 29, 2004)

July 4, 2007 update: Sharon LaFraniere reports some suprising and good news from Nouakchott in "In Mauritania, Seeking to End an Overfed Ideal." In brief, the government is doing what it can to change the traditional preference for obese women.

In recent years, television commercials and official pronouncements have promoted a new message: being fat leads to diabetes, heart problems, high blood pressure and other woes. … Until lately, a Mauritanian woman in jogging shoes was roughly as common as a camel in stiletto heels. … A 2001 government survey of 68,000 women found that one in five between ages 15 and 49 had been deliberately overfed. And nearly 70 percent ­ and even more among teenagers ­ said they did not regret it. …

Other cultures prize corpulent women. But Mauritania may be unique in the lengths it has gone to achieve its vision of female beauty. For decades, the Mauritanian version of a Western teenager's crash diet was a crash feeding program, devised to create girls obese enough to display family wealth and epitomize the Mauritanian ideal. Centuries-old poems glorified women immobilized by fat, moving so slowly they seemed to stand still, unable to hoist themselves onto camels without the aid of men's willing hands.

Girls as young as 5 and as old as 19 had to drink up to five gallons of fat-rich camel's or cow's milk daily, aiming for silvery stretch marks on their upper arms. If a girl refused or vomited, the village weight-gain specialist might squeeze her foot between sticks, pull her ear, pinch her inner thigh, bend her finger backward or force her to drink her own vomit. In extreme cases, girls died. …

In 2003, the women's ministry mounted a slim-down campaign, wielding messages that were anything but subtle. One television and radio skit depicted a husband carting his fat wife around in a wheelbarrow. Another featured houseguests raiding the refrigerator because their host was too obese to get up to feed them. Doctors were recruited to explain health risks. But messages spread slowly in the desert. Nearly three-fourths of Mauritanian women do not watch television, and an even greater share do not listen to the radio.

Related Topics: Middle East patterns, Sex and gender relations

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Title By Date
Amazed! [132 words]Dr. Mohammed TamerMay 31, 2007 11:58
i dont think so [24 words]fadelMar 6, 2007 12:55

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