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29 November 2001

Sara Amiryar: The Women of Afghanistan Can Make a Difference

(Women Must Participate in Decisions About Post-Taliban Afghanistan)
(1050)
By Susan Domowitz
Washington File Staff Writer
Washington -- Afghan women must be part of the peace process and the
reconstruction of Afghanistan at all levels, said Sara Amiryar, an
Afghan-American activist and Georgetown University administrator. Born
and educated in Afghanistan and now a U.S. citizen, Amiryar has
conducted an energetic grassroots campaign among political leaders in
Washington, D.C., to ensure that Afghan women are not left out of the
peace process. Women, she said, must have a place at the table when
decisions are made about the rebuilding of their ravaged country, and
their presence must be more than merely symbolic.
"Afghan women should not be underestimated," Amiryar said. "Despite
the fact that Afghan women were the primary victims of two decades of
conflict and atrocities, they were the ones who kept Afghan culture
alive," she said. "Their knowledge, their strength, they are really
resilient."
Speaking to the Washington File on November 28, Amiryar says it is
important to remember that prior to the Soviet invasion and the
decades of conflict that followed, Afghan women had the opportunity to
be educated and to hold influential positions at all levels of
national and local government. Women participated in earlier Loya
Jirgas (traditional decision-making assemblies) and in drafting the
Constitution of Afghanistan in the mid-1960s, Amiryar pointed out.
There were women cabinet members, judges, legislators, teachers,
doctors, journalists, lawyers, and technicians, she added.
"The Constitution of Afghanistan gave equal rights to men and women,"
Amiryar noted, but women were almost left out of the meetings
currently taking place in Bonn. "In the beginning they did not even
want to include women at all," she said. "I said women should be
included from the beginning, from this initial meeting. If not, they
will forget about including women in anything."
Afghan women, said Amiryar, "should be included in the political
process, in security, in humanitarian aid, and in the future
reconstruction of Afghanistan, and at all levels. There shouldn't be a
glass ceiling for women to say, OK, traditionally women were involved
[only] in teaching and nursing, and they should go back to that. No,
traditionally, they were involved in all kinds of positions, and in
high-level positions."
"Afghanistan needs everything today," she said. And women can give
"hope for the future of Afghanistan."
Amiryar said Afghan women need to know that their contributions are
valued, as Afghanistan struggles to recover from decades of conflict.
She hopes Afghan women will come to see that "your contribution is
really needed here. You are counted again, and respected, as a mother,
as a sister, as a wife, as a daughter. And your place is again in
Afghanistan, as a citizen of Afghanistan. And you are equally
important to the country."
Amiryar, who wrote her Master's Thesis at Georgetown University on
"Women, Islam and the Taliban," said, "For these Taliban to impose
[severe restrictions] on women, not to seek healthcare, not to be
educated, and be virtually prisoners in their own homes, they invented
something, they invented their own religion that I really don't
understand."
The Taliban restrictions on women, she said, cannot be justified by
Afghan tradition, or by Islam. "The Taliban are not religious
scholars, that's the problem. These man-made policies, or
interpretations, those are applied to women only. For instance, Islam
says men have certain responsibilities toward women, but from what
I've seen of these Taliban, none of the responsibilities to protect
women were carried out."
But men also lost their rights under Taliban rule, Amiryar said. "Men
didn't have rights either. They were not able to walk around in
western clothes, they did not have the right to attend sports, or to
be clean-shaven." They watched their wives dying in front of them, she
said, because they couldn't take them to male doctors, and female
doctors were not allowed to work.
Amiryar pointed out that some of the Mujahideen, who preceded the
Taliban in power, also perpetrated terrible atrocities on the Afghan
civilian population, especially women. She said everyone hoped,
originally, that the Mujahideen would return Afghanistan to normal.
"But then I saw that the situation was getting worse."
Visiting refugee camps and talking to Afghan refugees during the two
decades of conflict, Amiryar saw that women and children were once
again the main victims. "The plight of women there was really
terrible. I saw horrible things, I heard horrible things about what
was going on," she said. Women and girls were forced into
prostitution, she said, and she witnessed the deaths of two children
who had been kidnapped from a camp to have their kidneys removed for
black-market transplants. Children died from easily curable illnesses
because of the lack of medical care, she said.
Amiryar said she believes "something good" will happen in Afghanistan
now that the grip of the Taliban has been broken, and the
international community is involved. The biggest need now, she said,
is for "a broad-based government, to include all ethnic groups, and
women as well as men."
She cited the need for non-interference from Afghanistan's neighbors,
and the urgency of rebuilding the education system in Afghanistan as
crucial to the country's recovery from decades of conflict and chaos.
She said removing landmines and providing health care are also urgent
needs.
The Afghan diaspora has a vital contribution to make to the rebuilding
of Afghanistan, Amiryar said. She has been given permission to take
unpaid leave from her position as associate director for affirmative
action programs at Georgetown University to spend time in Afghanistan
helping to rebuild the country's institutions. Other Americans of
Afghan origin would go to help, she said, if it becomes financially
possible for them to do so. "They are able, willing and ready to go
back and help, with humanitarian aid and relief, with reconstruction,
with using their expertise there."
To Afghan refugees waiting to return home, Amiryar said, "Help is on
the way. You will be free once again. It's important not to let the
atrocities of the past take away from you what you had before. Look
forward to the future. Get up and be ready to go back and rebuild the
country."
(The Washington File is a product of the Office of International
Information Programs, U.S. Department of State. Web site:
http://usinfo.state.gov)



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