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The
Plight of the Muslim Women of Afghanistan under the Taliban
Islam means the submission of
humankind to the will of God, not the submission of women to the will of men.

The four thumbnail photos above
are taken from a video filmed using a hidden camera in Kabul on August 26, 2001
by RAWA, an all-female Afghan underground movement. It shows two Taliban from
the department of Amro bil mahroof (Promotion of Virtue and Prevention of
Vice, Taliban religious police) beating a woman because she dared to remove her
burqa in public.
"Treat
your women well and be kind to them for they are your partners and committed
helpers."
From the last sermon of Prophet Mohammed
"None but a noble man treats women
in an honorable manner. And none but an ignoble treats women
disgracefully".
Prophet Mohammed (At-Tirmithy).
According to Abdullah ibn Mas'ud, the Prophet is reported to have said:
If a daughter is born to a person and he brings her up, gives her a good
education and trains her in the arts of life, I shall myself stand between him
and hell-fire.
(Kanz al-Ummal).
quoted in Women in Islam by M. Mazheruddin Siddiqi
How praiseworthy are the women of Ansar that their modesty
does not prevent them from attempts at learning and the acquisition of
knowledge.
(Sahih Muslim, Kitab al Tahrat).
A person who has a female slave in charge and takes steps to
give her a sound education and trains her in arts and culture, and then frees
her and marries her, he will be doubly rewarded.
(Sahih Bukhari, Kitab al-Nikah).
Some Muslim callers preach a false and ugly version of Islam and then
complain because people do not accept it. I think that those ignorant
preachers should be imprisoned or lashed because they divert people from the way
of Allah and the truth that Muhammad, the final Messenger, declared.
Sheikh
Muhammad Al-Ghazaly.
Muslims who advance conservative views on female affairs...are
normally very literal in their understanding of texts; but they tendentiously
opt for an understanding that suits their prejudice.
Dr Hassan Al-Turabi

Women have clearly defined rights in Islam.
These have been set out in
the Quran and Sunnah and also
have been made explicit by scholars such as Dr Hassan Al-Turabi of Sudan in his
seminal 1973 pamphlet, On the
Position of Women in Islam and in Islamic Society and by the famous English convert to Islam and Quran translator, Mohammad Marmaduke
Pickthall. Yet much as Pickthall lamented and condemned the non-Islamic
treatment and "pitiful condition of Muslim womanhood" in India
as long ago as 1925 in his lecture The Relation of the Sexes,
today in 2001 we find the Muslim women of Afghanistan being treated much worse
by the Taleban regime, who serve up a grotesque caricature of Islam and bring
the good name of our beloved religion into such disrepute.

Islam
means the submission of humankind to the will of God, not the submission of
women to the will of men. Please find below links to web pages and sites detailing the
plight of the Muslim women of Afghanistan.
Azizah
The magazine for the contemporary Muslim woman, the
magazine American Muslimahs have been waiting for.
Azizah magazine addresses issues pertinent to Muslim women, profiles
sisters whose lives and achievements inspire us, and highlight ideas and events
that empower and entertain us. Azizah reflects what Muslim women are doing,
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contributions to the local and world communities, our lives.


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"The Taliban must be overthrown
and this is an opportunity to overthrow them."
Benazir
Bhutto, former Prime Minister of Pakistan.
Conference
on the restoration of women's and children's rights in Afghanistan
"By ousting the Taliban, women's rights will be restored and they will
have the right to work and vote." - Afghan President, Burhanuddin Rabbani.
Afghan
women find new freedom
The Northern Alliance has announced that women in Afghanistan can now go
back to work, and girls can go to school - activities that were banned by the
Taleban.
BBC News, Tuesday, 13 November, 2001.
Release of
Kandahar film in London
Iranian director Mohsen Makhmalbaf's Kandahar, winner of the Prize of the
Ecumenical Jury at Cannes this year, was put on release at the ICA cinema in
London Friday. The illuminating and timely release, given four-star ratings by
the BBC and Guardian film guides, charts a woman's perilous journey from Iran to
Afghanistan to find her sister.
Film-maker
lifts veil on Afghan tragedy
A film based on a young woman’s desperate attempt to rescue a friend
trapped by the Taleban is to receive a special screening at the White House. It
may not sound like typical viewing for President Bush, but even he has fallen
under the spell of Kandahar, a film that lifts the veil on
Afghanistan and exposes its human tragedy.
The Times (London), November 10, 2001.

RAWA - The Taliban's
bravest opponents
The Revolutionary Association of Women of Afghanistan is an all-female
underground resistance of Afghan women who risk torture and execution to alert
the world to the Taliban regime's atrocities. Here Janelle Brown tells of
RAWA's activities and interviews one of their volunteers.
Risking All to Expose
the Taliban
Julia Scheeres reports on the heroines of the Revolutionary
Association of Women of Afghanistan
Wired News, August 10, 2001
We
Muslims must decry the Taliban
'If Muslims really believe that Islam can be a force for good, why do they
choose to ignore those who corrupt this potential?' Yasmin Alibhai-Brown, The
Independent (London), 10 September 2001
Taliban
have "hurt Islam and distorted the reputation of Muslims
throughout the world".
Full text of the Saudi Arabian Government's statement on the
breaking off of diplomatic relations with the Taleban
IslamForToday.com Tuesday, 25 September, 2001
The
Taleban: Believers or Enemies?
English Muslim lawyer Aisha Harris contrasts the Taleban's treatment of
women with the Islamic ideal.
Afghanistan's
Taliban: Not a valid interpretation of Islam
"The extreme position taken by the Taliban hardly deserves to be
considered an 'interpretation' of Islam... It is really an aberration in
violation of the most basic tenets of the faith." Dr. Laila Al-Marayati
calls for a fuller understanding among Muslims of Islam as "a religion that
embraces the value of women without subjecting them to sequestration."
Perspective
on Women's Plight in Afghanistan
We hoped it was just another example of the fabricated lies against Islam
and Muslims. Reports sprinted through the airwaves that the Afghan Taliban
ordered women out of school and out of their jobs. More distressing was the news
that this was announced as a fulfillment of the teaching of Islam...
By Hassan Hathout, M.D., Ph.D.
Focusing
on the Tragedy of Afghan Women
"The women of Afghanistan are suffering under one of the most viciously
anti-female regimes ever to grip a country. Women who have been forced
into virtual house arrest while much of the world has looked the other way."
By Judy Mann, Washington Post, October 30, 1998
Women
and the Taliban
"As victims of the Taliban, they wanted the world to help them, but as
good Muslims they did not want to be used by Western media to defame Islam."
By Azizah Y. al-Hibri, The Philadelphia Inquirer, March 11, 2001
The
Taleban's other outrage
The Taleban have wrecked irreplaceable antiquities. This destruction
has drawn worldwide attention--and worldwide outrage. And, yes, it is a tragedy
that such priceless art would be destroyed. But there is a far greater
outrage, one that, inexplicably, has received less attention than the
Taliban's treatment of statues. That is the Taliban's treatment of women.
Chicago Tribune editorial, March 8, 2001
Fear is
their Religion
Peggy Elliot speaks out against the Taliban treatment of women in Afghanistan.
Cry of
an Afghan Woman
An Afghan Muslimah tells of the un-Islamic tyranny she and her family have
suffered at the hands of the Taliban and pleads to the Ummah for liberation and
justice.
The
Rights of Women in Islam
Muslim
Women Between Backward Traditions and Modern Innovations
by Sheikh Muhammad Al-Ghazaly
Risking
death to expose the Taliban
Matt Bean of Court TV reports on RAWA an underground Afghan Women's group
whose members run clandestine schools for girls and capture Taliban brutality on
hidden cameras.
Restrictions
Placed on Women by the Taliban
compiled by the Revolutionary
Association of the Women of Afghanistan (RAWA), a political/social
organization of Afghan women struggling for peace, freedom, democracy
and women's rights.
Afghanistan
- Beneath the Veil
Companion web site to TV documentary by Britain's Channel 4
Saira Shah's journey into the heart of Afghanistan reveals a country
of desperate poverty, much of it brought about by the deliberate
policies of its fundamentalist Islamic government, the Taliban. Women
are deprived not only of education, medicine and freedom, but often of
the very means of survival. Saira, the daughter of Afghan
scholar Idries Shah, took a dangerous journey into the heart of her
father's country. Starting in the vast refugee camps of Pakistan, she
made her way into Afghanistan itself, where she found unimaginable
brutality but also extraordinary bravery.
Life
in Afghanistan under the Taliban
Transcript of a CNN online chat with journalist Saira Shah, August 27, 2001
Saira Shah is a freelance journalist. She was born in Britain, of an Afghan
family. She first visited Afghanistan at age 21 and worked there three years as
a freelance journalist, covering the guerilla war against the Soviet occupiers.
Later, working for Britain's Channel Four News, she covered some of the world's
worst trouble spots.
The
Taliban's War on Women: A Health and Human Rights Crisis in Afghanistan
This report documents the results of a three-month study of women's health
and human rights concerns and conditions in Afghanistan by Physicians for Human
Rights (PHR). The extent to which the Taliban regime has threatened the freedoms
and needs of Afghan women is unparalleled in recent history. Taliban policies of
systematic discrimination against women seriously undermine the health and
well-being of Afghan women. Such discrimination and the suffering it causes
constitute an affront to the dignity and worth of Afghan women, and humanity as
a whole.
Behind
the burka
We should make the Northern Alliance sign a contract on human rights -
especially women's rights
Polly Toynbee The Guardian (London) September 28, 2001
Women On The Road For
Afghanistan
From the 26th to 28th, June 2000, a gathering of about 200 Afghan
women took place in Dushanbe, Tajikistan,
to write the declaration of basic rights of the Afghan woman.Perspective
on Women's Plight in Afghanistan
From the Muslim Women's League Homepage
Revolutionary
Association of the Women of Afghanistan RAWA is a political/social
organization of Afghan women struggling for peace, freedom, democracy
and women's rights in fundamentalism-blighted Afghanistan.
Women
and Girls in Afghanistan
Fact sheet released by the Senior Coordinator for International Women's
Issues, US State Department, March 10, 1998.
'Liberty'
for Afghan women
"We have schools, higher education, we can work".
Kate Clark reports from opposition-controlled north-eastern Afghanistan
BBC News, May 17, 2001
"I pray night and day
that America will destroy the Taleban"
Fatima
Syed, widow of Taliban massacre victim.
Women
in Afghanistan - A human rights catastrophe
1995/6 report from Amnesty International.
  
Remember the Women
of Afghanistan webring
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(Shia charity)
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