Saturday, February 4, 2012

Ms. Blogger

Rafia Zakaria Rafia Zakaria
Rafia Zakaria is the first Pakistani American woman to serve as a Director for Amnesty International USA. She is a lawyer and Ph.D. candidate in Political Science at Indiana University. She is currently working on her dissertation entitled "Negotiating Identity: Sharia, multiculturalism and Muslim women." Rafia writes a weekly column for the DAWN newspaper which is the largest and oldest English newspaper in Pakistan. Her work has also appeared in the New York Times, Arts and Letters Daily, the Nation and the American Prospect. She is the only Pakistani American woman recognized by a joint resolution of the Indiana House and Senate for her work on women's rights.

Website: http://www.facebook.com/pages/Rafia-Zakaria/331481391481
Twitter: rafiazakaria

Rafia Zakaria's Posts

Pawns of War and Peace: What Does the Future Hold for Afghan Women?

Pawns of War and Peace: What Does the Future Hold for Afghan Women?

October 6, 2011 by · Leave a Comment 

On November 18, 2001, in a radio address to the nation, then-First Lady Barbara Bush condemned the degrading treatment imposed on Afghan women by the Taliban regime. Thus the story of the U.S invasion of Afghanistan began with women: the promises of liberating them, the efforts to gain their trust and to feed their malnourished [...]

Feudals, Feminists and Foreign Ministers

Feudals, Feminists and Foreign Ministers

August 4, 2011 by · Leave a Comment 

On July 19, Hina Rabbani Khar was sworn in as Pakistan’s youngest and first-ever woman foreign minister. It seemed like welcome news from a beleaguered country whose name evokes visions of misogyny and repression: bearded Taliban burning girls’ schools, rape laws that punish victims instead of perpetrators and women killed by fathers and brothers in pursuit [...]

The Women Within Elif Shafak

The Women Within Elif Shafak

May 10, 2011 by · 1 Comment 

Motherhood is often imagined as a natural state for women, a return to some authentic self that is believed to lie at the core of every woman. In patriarchal societies, writing is rebellion, the woman writer a selfish being willfully defying the image of woman as inherently maternal. What then, is a writer–Turkish and female–to [...]

Irma Medrano: Don’t Send Me Back to My Abuser

Irma Medrano: Don’t Send Me Back to My Abuser

November 1, 2010 by · 7 Comments 

In 1995, Irma Medrano fled El Salvador after being subject to horrible abuse at the hands of her husband. For years he had routinely beaten her, strangled her with a leather belt and threatened to kill her. Every time she complained to the Salvadoran police she was told that they would not intervene in a [...]

Muslim Women Challenge Stoning

Muslim Women Challenge Stoning

October 5, 2010 by · 3 Comments 

Based on these arguments made by brave Muslim women, stoning can be denounced as unislamic and a distortion of Islamic principles of justice

On 9/11, Listening to Muslim Women’s Voices

On 9/11, Listening to Muslim Women’s Voices

September 11, 2010 by · 6 Comments 

Much has been said about Imam Abdul Rauf, the Imam behind the proposed Park 51 Islamic Cultural Center in New York City, which would stand a few blocks from the site of the 9/11 attacks nine years ago today. In the intense controversy surrounding the construction of the community center, he has been called a [...]

Floods and Feminism: The Plight of Pakistan’s Women

Floods and Feminism: The Plight of Pakistan’s Women

August 24, 2010 by · 1 Comment 

As Pakistan’s flood crisis continues into its fourth week, it is the women who are suffering the most. Millions displaced by the flood waters languish with few resources to alleviate their suffering. According to statistics compiled by the Reproductive Health in Crisis Consortium, nearly 85 percent of flood survivors in camps are women [PDF]. In [...]

Now’s the Time to Prosecute the Taliban for War Crimes

Now’s the Time to Prosecute the Taliban for War Crimes

August 13, 2010 by · Leave a Comment 

It is this view that perceives only nation states to be human rights abusers that must change drastically for groups like the Taliban to be held accountable for their brutality. The lack of an existing system of justice in Afghanistan means that unless international mechanisms of justice get actively involved in the situation, Afghan civilians will remain helpless before the bloodthirsty campaign of the Taliban. Women like Sanam Gul will continue to die at their hands in acts of political theatre that manipulate faith to keep a population in constant fear. Because of this Amnesty International is calling for the investigation of Taliban crimes so that they may be prosecuted for war crimes.

The Face We Can’t Ignore: Women in Afghanistan

The Face We Can’t Ignore: Women in Afghanistan

August 4, 2010 by · 27 Comments 

War is horrific, its misery recorded in lurid detail in the tragedy of Aisha’s mutilation, but the war we have waged has required taking sides. Withdrawing without a plan for safeguarding the women who chose to believe in the American promises of empowerment, however deceitfully they may have been made, is to live in denial of a tragedy in which we are roundly implicated.

Justice for Karachi Gang-Rape Survivor: You Can Help!

Justice for Karachi Gang-Rape Survivor: You Can Help!

July 30, 2010 by · 5 Comments 

Jinnah Postgraduate Medical Centre is a teeming hospital in the middle of Karachi, Pakistan, a city of nearly 19 million people. In early July, it was the scene of a brutal gang rape. One of the country’s largest state-run medical institutions, the center houses hundreds of patients, doctors, nurses and other medical personnel. Rampant neglect [...]

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