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Afghan women

Just…Ugh.


Posted by fatemeh on 13 Apr 2011 / 0 Comments
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And speaking of trash bags, here’s a poster for Germany’s International Human Rights ad campaign: The translation reads: “Oppressed women are easily overlooked. Please support us in the fight for their rights.” Outrageous. Thanks to Kawthar for the tip!

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Wishing Upon an Afghan Star


Posted by diana on 26 Jan 2011 / 0 Comments
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The images that Afghanistan conjures are usually ones that mirror front-page stories of newspapers around the world: armed Taliban crouching at the entry of a mountain cave, women in burqas, and images of public stonings are just a few that are constantly associated with the country. HBO is schedule to air a two-part documentary that […]

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Masking the Problem: Afghanistan’s “Niqab” Program


Posted by sarahaji on 11 Jan 2011 / 0 Comments
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Just when I thought we were past discussing the experiences of Muslim women in dichotomies and distorted imagery, CNN pulls out this gem about Afghanistan’s most talked-about talk show: “Niqab.” “The Mask,” as American media have translated it, features “Afghan women [who] dare to speak out on [the] taboo subject of abuse by husbands.” This […]

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However Tall the Mountain: Stories from an Afghan Girls’ Soccer Team


Posted by Krista Riley on 14 Oct 2010 / 0 Comments
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Named from an Afghan saying that “However tall the mountain, there’s always a road,” However Tall the Mountain: A Dream, Eight Girls, & A Journey Home is the true story of a project conceived by the book’s author, Awista Ayub, to bring teenaged girls from Afghanistan to the United States for soccer training.  The story […]

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Riz Khan on Afghan Women


Posted by diana on 02 Sep 2010 / 0 Comments
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The recent cover of Time magazine featuring the photo of Aisha has sparked debate about the US presence in Afghanistan and what it means for women’s rights there. Here at MMW, the overwhelming sentiment seems to be that the image is yellow journalism at its finest, reinforcing the antiquated rhetoric of “saving women” and exploiting […]

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More on the Time Magazine Conversation


Posted by fatemeh on 05 Aug 2010 / 0 Comments
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Krista speaks with an AP reporters about Aisha’s Time magazine: Krista Riley, a sociology graduate student and contributor to a Muslim women’s website, Muslimah Media Watch, finds the photo “invasive and deeply troubling.” To Riley, the image plays into racial divides and cultural distances. Read more on the conversation here. Check it out!

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Homeland Insecurities: Nel Hedayat and Afghanistan


Posted by ayaan on 05 Apr 2010 / 0 Comments
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The BBC documentary Women, Weddings, War and Me follows 21-year-old British Afghan Nel Hedayat (pictured below) as she returns to Afghanistan 15 years after she and her family left. The accompanying article was my first exposure to Hedayat’s experience there, and it provides a different perspective than the documentary did. The article came across as […]

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The Afghan Women Tug of War


Posted by Guest Contributor on 07 Dec 2009 / 0 Comments
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This was written by Frau Sally Benz and originally published at Feministe. Earlier this week, GRITtv posted an interview with a woman from RAWA, the Revolutionary Association of the Women of Afghanistan. I wanted to post the video for you all to watch and just say a few things that came to mind as I […]

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One Afghan Woman’s Words: Malalai Joya’s Book Tour


Posted by Krista Riley on 18 Nov 2009 / 0 Comments
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Malalai Joya, an Afghan activist for women’s rights (and many other things), was in Toronto tonight on a cross-Canada tour to promote her new book, A Woman Among Warlords: The Extraordinary Story of an Afghan Who Dared to Raise Her Voice.  For those unfamiliar with her story, the book description is as follows: Malalai Joya […]

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Behind the Globe and Mail’s Coverage of Women in Kandahar: Part 2


Posted by Krista Riley on 08 Oct 2009 / 0 Comments
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This is my second post covering the Globe and Mail‘s series on women in Kandahar, Afghanistan.  My first post examined the title and introductions to the project; this post will look at the online footage of the ten interviews that were conducted for the series.  There is more to the project than what is covered […]

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