|
A - I n f o s
|
|
a multi-lingual news service by, for, and about anarchists
**
News in all languages
Last 40 posts (Homepage)
Last two
weeks' posts
Our
archives of old posts
The last 100 posts, according
to language
Greek_
中文 Chinese_
Castellano_
Catalan_
Deutsch_
Nederlands_
English_
Français_
Italiano_
Polski_
Português_
Russkyi_
Suomi_
Svenska_
Türkçe_
_The.Supplement
The First Few Lines of The Last 10 posts in:
Castellano_
Deutsch_
Nederlands_
English_
Français_
Italiano_
Polski_
Português_
Russkyi_
Suomi_
Svenska_
Türkçe_
First few lines of all posts of last 24 hours |
of past 30 days |
of 2002 |
of 2003 |
of 2004 |
of 2005 |
of 2006 |
of 2007 |
of 2008 |
of 2009 |
of 2010 |
of 2011 |
of 2012 |
of 2013 |
of 2014 |
of 2015 |
of 2016 |
of 2017 |
of 2018 |
of 2019 |
of 2020 |
of 2021 |
of 2022 |
of 2023 |
of 2024 |
of 2025 |
of 2026
Syndication Of A-Infos - including
RDF - How to Syndicate A-Infos
Subscribe to the a-infos newsgroups
(en) Afganistan, AF: 8 MARCH - Afghan Women: Caged But Never Tamed (ca, de, it, pt, tr)[machine translation]
Date
Thu, 9 Apr 2026 07:27:19 +0300
On this International Women's Day, Afghan women and girls are living
under one of the most totalitarian gender apartheid systems the modern
world has ever produced. And yet they are still here. Still resisting.
Still speaking, even when speaking has been made a crime. ---- Afghan
women have never stopped fighting. Long before the Taliban, they lived
under cycles of war, invasion, and patriarchal violence that tried to
erase them from public life. Soviet occupation, Mujahedeen warlordism,
civil war, each chapter brought new forms of brutality against women's
bodies and women's freedom. They survived all of it.
When the first Taliban regime seized power in 1996, it built a system of
total gender apartheid. Women were banned from schools, from work, from
public spaces. They could not leave their homes without a male guardian.
They were beaten in the streets for showing their faces, for laughing
too loudly, for existing without permission. For five years, an entire
generation of girls grew up locked inside their homes, their futures
stolen by men with guns and patriarchal dogma.
Then came 2001. Western powers arrived with bombs and promises. Schools
for girls opened. Women entered universities, parliaments, courtrooms,
hospitals, newsrooms. These gains were real, built not by the generosity
of occupiers but by the courage and determination of Afghan women
themselves who seized every millimeter of space available to them,
knowing it could be taken away at any moment.
It was taken away.
In August 2021, the Taliban returned. Western forces withdrew, leaving
behind not liberation but a new prison. Within days, everything
collapsed. Girls above 12 years old were banned from school. Women were
banned from most workplaces. Universities closed their doors to women
entirely. The streets emptied of women's presence. Afghan women watched
twenty years of struggle erased in a matter of weeks.
Since 2021 the Taliban have gone further with every passing month. Women
cannot travel without a male guardian. They cannot visit parks, public
baths, or gyms. Their voices cannot be heard by men outside their
family. Female aid workers have been banned, leaving millions of women
without access to healthcare. Girls born after 2009 have never known a
day of secondary school. An entire generation is being deliberately kept
illiterate, isolated, and invisible under a system of patriarchal
totalitarianism that treats women's minds and bodies as property of the
state and the family.
And still they resist. Underground schools meet in secret. Women record
and smuggle out testimony at enormous personal risk. Afghan women in
exile organize, document, and refuse to let the world forget. Inside
Afghanistan, women have stood in the streets with handwritten signs
knowing they will be beaten and arrested. They do it anyway.
The liberation of Afghan women did not come with American bombs in 2001
and it will not come from any outside power. Twenty years of occupation
left behind a state built on corruption and dependency that collapsed
the moment its foreign sponsors left. Liberation from above, whether
from Washington, Moscow, or any capital, is always temporary, always
conditional, always serving the interests of the liberator rather than
the liberated.
The only liberation that lasts is the one built from below, by the women
themselves, by horizontal networks of solidarity, by the refusal to
accept invisibility as a permanent condition.
On this 8th of March we honor every Afghan woman who defied them. Every
girl who studied by candlelight in a secret classroom. Every woman who
walked into a street knowing she would be beaten. Every woman who
smuggled out testimony so the world could not pretend not to know. Every
woman in exile who keeps the struggle alive from afar. Every woman
inside Afghanistan who is alive and still fighting.
They have banned their faces. They have banned their voices. They have
banned their education, their movement, their presence in the world.
They have not banned their resistance.
And they never will.
Work, Bread, Freedom!
Education, Work, Freedom!
Woman, Life, Freedom!
https://www.facebook.com/photo/?fbid=10234300912247610&set=a.10209183989140230
_________________________________________
A - I N F O S N E W S S E R V I C E
By, For, and About Anarchists
Send news reports to A-infos-en mailing list
A-infos-en@ainfos.ca
Subscribe/Unsubscribe https://ainfos.ca/mailman/listinfo/a-infos-en
Archive: http://ainfos.ca/en
- Prev by Date:
(en) Italy, FDCA, Cantiere #42 - Venezuela: Against Imperialism and Dictatorship - Libertarian Communist Platform (ca, de, fr, it, pt, tr)[machine translation]
- Next by Date:
(en) France, UCL AL #369 - Antipatriarchy - Afghanistan: Segregation and Persecution of Women, Let's Break the Silence (ca, de, fr, it, pt, tr)[machine translation]
A-Infos Information Center