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fiercerthanyou: Meena Keshwar Kamal, ‘The Bravest of the Brave’ Meena was an Afghan revolutionary po

fiercerthanyou:

Meena Keshwar Kamal, ‘The Bravest of the Brave’

Meena was an Afghan revolutionary political activist, feminist and founder of Revolutionary Association of the Women of Afghanistan (RAWA). She was only 20 when, in 1977, she launched RAWA, Afghanistan’s first organized movement for women’s rights. Four years later, Meena launched a bilingual feminist magazine called Payam-e-Zan (Women’s Message).

In the beginnings with RAWA, Meena started a campaign against the Russian forces and their puppet regime in 1979 and organized numerous processions and meetings in schools, colleges and Kabul University to mobilize public opinion. Payam-e-Zan has constantly exposed the criminal nature of fundamentalist groups. Meena also established Watan Schools for refugee children, a hospital and handicraft centers for refugee women in Pakistan to support Afghan women financially.

Sadly, when she was only 31, Meena was assassinated by agents of KHAD (Afghanistan branch of KGB) in Pakistan in 1987. She was married to Afghanistan Liberation Organization leader Faiz Ahmad, who himself was assassinated a year earlier, by the agents of Gulbuddin Hekmatyar in 1986. They have three children, whose whereabouts are unknown.

Meena represented the struggle Middle East needs the most – the liberation from within. Not some Western forces coming to “liberate” or to “establish a democracy”, but a true change that can never be achieved by imposing it from the outside. She spoke about the history of Afghan women’s struggle for social recognition and equal rights in connection to the history of the country’s physical and cultural devastation (by different invasions and wars). She connected the two, which is what Western mainstream media so often fails to do.

Her organization, RAWA, continued with work after Meena was assassinated, and is still very active today.

Women from RAWA are doing great things and helping many people. In that sense, all those images we see of helpless and abused Afghan women in the Western media, obuscure the great role Afghan women play as agents of change in Afghanistan, and have been playing for the last couple of decades. It’s not just RAWA and Meena. 

One of the things that first comes to my mind is the story of the village widowed women built on a hill overlooking Kabul. Or the storyof women’s bakery in a small village in rural Afghanistan. Or the story of Shamsia Hassani, Afghanistan’s first female street artist. Or the story of Setara, singer who appeared on the Afghan Star, sang with great emotion, and included dance in her final performance, an action that put her life in danger. Or the story of Sadaf Rahimi, first female boxer in Afghan national team, who was invited to London Olympics in 2012 (at the age of 17).

There’s many stories like this, and there will be many more, because the women of Afghanistan are not just oppressed, abused and broken, but powerful, brave and active. Like Meena was. 

“Hope is the thing with feathers,” Emily Dickinson wrote a long time ago, and it still keeps so many warm, and will never stops…

Meena Keshwar Kamal speaking in 1982, photo via RAWA

Text Courtesy: Middle East Revised


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“Anche oggi il mio pensiero va a te …

A te che non posso più rivedere …

A te che sei sempre nel mio cuore …

A te che hai lasciato in me ciò che niente e nessuno potrà mai cancellare …

Perché certi legami vanno oltre e durano per sempre… ”


“Remember that the truth is never convenient for those hiding from it. -HITACHI BAYLOU”

(Google: Hitachi Baylou)

15/03/21

“Two roads diverged in a wood, and I— I took the one less traveled by, And that has made all the difference.”

-Robert Frost

“In the war of love, the battle between emotion and logic is the most brutal.”

-Mackenzie Campbell, Nineteen

“To have so much and complain about having so little reveals your selfish nature and childish privilege. For all your gifts you see wrapped in plainness, which to others are lavishly wrapped in gold.”

-Mackenzie Campbell, Nineteen

“Life is but a continual succession of opportunities for surviving.”

-Gabriel Garcia Márquez

mydailybookquotes:

“Like the rainbow after the rain joy, will reveal itself after sorrow.”

-Rupi Kaur, Milk and Honey

mydailybookquotes:

“Live! Live the wonderful life that is in you! Let nothing be lost upon you. Be always searching for new sensations. Be afraid of nothing.”

-Oscar Wilde, The Picture of Dorian Gray

Happy 167th Birthday to Oscar Wilde!

“Distance isn’t the problem. We humans are the problem, that don’t know how to love without touching, without seeing or without hearing. Love is felt with the heart, not the body.”

Gabriel Garcia Márquez

mydailybookquotes:

“If you speak and write in English, or Spanish, or Chinese, or any other language, then only a certain percentage of human beings will get your meaning. But when you draw a picture, everybody can understand it. If I draw a cartoon of a flower, then every man, woman, and child can look at it and say, ‘that’s a flower.’ So I draw because I want to talk to the world. And I want the world to pay attention to me.”

-Sherman Alexie, The Absolutely True Diary of a Part-Time Indian

“Stay alive for the people you will become. You are more than a bad day or year. You are a future of multifarious possibility.”

-Matt Haig

“There should be no room in your life for regret. If I’m the moment of doing you felt clarity, you felt certainty, then why feel regret later?”

-Yaa Gyasi, Homegoing

mydailybookquotes:

“Early in life, I had learned that if you want something, you had better make some noise.”

-Alex Haley, The Autobiography of Malcolm X

“Weakness is treating someone as though they belong to you. Strength is knowing that everyone belongs to themselves.”

-Yaa Gyasi, Homegoing

mydailybookquotes:

“You had to be that person to become this one.”

-Rupi Kaur, Milk and Honey

“Wherever you are, at any moment, try and find something beautiful. A face, a line out of a poem, the clouds out of a window, some graffiti, a wind farm. Beauty cleans the mind.”

-Matt Haig, Reasons to Stay Alive

“We ought to read only the kind of books that wound and stab us. If the book we are reading doesn’t wake us up with a blow on the head, what are we reading it for?”

-Franz Kafka, Letter to Oskar Pollak

mydailybookquotes:

“Each day means a new twenty-four hours. Each day means everything’s possible again. You live in the moment, you die in the moment, you take it all one day at a time.”

-Marie Lu

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