Nessy Guerra’s conviction in Hurghada reignites the controversy: this is why the case of the Italian mother causes the clash over the hypocrisy of rights to explode.
There is a young Italian woman, Nessy Guerrawho is experiencing a nightmare that would make anyone’s wrists tremble. Convicted in Egypt to six months in prison for a crime that we eliminated in civilized Europe almost a century ago – adultery – and hunted by a system that considers her the property of her husband. The sentence follows the woman’s refusal to sign the conditions that the man set to withdraw the complaint: according to what was reported by the Corriere della Serarequired that the wife agree to be “modest” and “faithful”, not to leave the marital home without authorization, and to abide by his decisions.
The contract also stated that War should not show “ornaments and nudity” in public, on social media and even in private, in addition to the obligation not to have secrets with her husband and to give him “the passwords of social accounts and electronic devices”. Stuff that makes your hair stand on end, and yet, in Italy, the same left that takes to the streets every two by three to give us lessons on patriarchy and civil rights, seems to have been struck by a sudden and suspicious laryngitis.
Convicted of adultery in Egypt: the case of Nessy Guerra and the silence of Italian feminism
Where is the “not one less”? Where are the fans of “the body is mine and I manage it”? Where are the intellectuals who see sexism even in a newspaper headline or in one handshake too many? Silence. A deafening silence that reeks of ideological hypocrisy a mile away.
The reason for this inaction is as simple as it is petty. For our feminists to be indignant about Nessy it’s uncomfortable. It is uncomfortable because the executioner is not the usual white male, Catholic and perhaps a centre-right voter. No, here the executioner is a system that has its roots in Islamic culture that the left has decided to protect regardless, in the name of blind multiculturalism and political correctness that ends up sacrificing women on the altar of hospitality without any ifs or buts.
If Nessy had she been the victim of an alleged “male chauvinism” in a Carabinieri barracks or in a Milanese bank office, we would already have monopolized talk shows, social profiles flooded with little black hearts and squares full of Schlein and his companions. Instead, since the drama takes place under the laws of sharia or archaic codes that cannot be criticized so as not to be considered Islamophobic, then Nessy can easily remain forgotten.
Coin feminism and the dogma of multicultural society
This is the litmus test of token feminism: women’s rights are only valid if they serve to attack the internal political adversary. If, however, reality clashes with the dogma of multicultural society, then it is better to look the other way. They prefer to leave an Italian mother in the hands of “justice”. Hurghada rather than admitting that, perhaps, true patriarchy lives precisely in those cultures that they consider untouchable.
Dear Nessydon’t expect solidarity from the cashmere sisters of our house. They are too busy fighting the “overextended masculine” to notice that you, in Egyptyou are losing your freedom and your daughter. Their silence is your condemnation, but it is also their definitive moral defeat. And then, when all this is over, make your own the wise proverb “wife and oxen from your own countries”, which not by chance finds its foundation in the book of Genesis where Abraham, now old, makes his servant swear not to take a wife for his son Isaac among the Canaanite women but to look for her among his relatives in his homeland.



