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RAWA photos, July 2002 - October 2004 |
Natasha Walter reports from a RAWA literacy course in Kabul (The Guardian, July 20, 2002):"... One day, for instance, I visited Sarasia, a bleak little village west of Kabul.... In one of the stark white houses, a literacy class is in progress. The women in this class couldn't be further from the educated elite. Soraya, for instance, is a widow of 50 and has been illiterate all her life. "If you are illiterate, it is as if you are blind," she says.
...Aisha, a middle-aged woman whose husband is too old to work, says, "Because we are uneducated, we can't speak out and defend our rights. We don't want that for our daughters. We want them to know how to speak up in front of outsiders." ... "Of course we want more freedom," says Soraya. "Even women who are not allowed to come to this class want that. But our husbands and brothers and fathers don't want it. The mullahs keep saying freedom is not good for us."
The literacy course in Sarasia is funded by RAWA. This extraordinary organization has been going since 1977 and is a testament to the determined resilience of Afghan women. "
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