• Email Us: [email protected]
  • Contact Us: +1 718 874 1545
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar

Medical Market Report

  • Home
  • All Reports
  • About Us
  • Contact Us

‘This is how we dress’: Afghan women overseas pose in colourful attire

September 15, 2021 by David Barret Leave a Comment

September 15, 2021

By Zeba Siddiqui

(Reuters) – Afghan youth rights activist Wazhma Sayle says she was shocked to see a photograph online, apparently of women dressed in black all-enveloping niqabs and gowns, staging a demonstration in support of the country’s new Taliban rulers at Kabul University.

The 36-year-old, who is based in Sweden, later posted a photograph of herself on Twitter dressed in a bright green and silver dress captioned: “This is Afghan culture & how we dress! Anything less then this does not represent Afghan women!”

“It’s a fight for our identity,” Sayle said in a telephone interview. “I don’t want to be identified the way Taliban showed me, I cannot tolerate that. These clothes, when I wear them, speak for where I come from.”

Other Afghan women overseas have posted similar pictures, striking a chord in Kabul.

“At least they are able to tell the world that we, the women of Afghanistan, do not support the Taliban,” said Fatima, a 22-year-old in the Afghan capital. “I cannot post such pictures or wear those kind of clothes here anymore. If I did, the Taliban would kill me.”

Many women said they believed the purported protest, which has appeared on social media and in Western media, was staged and that several people dressed in the head-to-toe black burqa gowns were men. Reuters has not verified the authenticity of the pictures.

“It is good our women (overseas) were able to protest about it,” said Khatima, another young woman in Kabul. “The reality is, the burqa is not representative of women in Afghanistan.”

When the Taliban was in power two decades ago, women had to cover themselves from head to toe. Those who broke the rules sometimes suffered humiliation and public beatings by the Taliban’s religious police.

While the new Taliban regime has promised to allow women more freedoms, there have been reports of women being barred from going to work, and some being beaten in recent weeks for protesting Taliban rule.

Universities have installed curtains inside classrooms to segregate men and women.

The online campaign with hashtags such as #DoNotTouchMyClothes and #AfghanistanCulture began when U.S.-based Afghan historian Bahar Jalali tweeted to criticise the black garments worn by the university demonstrators.

“No woman has ever dressed like this in the history of Afghanistan. This is utterly foreign and alien to Afghan culture,” she said.

Jalali then posted a photograph of herself in a green dress with the caption, “This is Afghan culture,” and urged others to post too. Dozens of women did.

“We don’t want the Taliban to dictate what Afghan women are,” said Lema Afzal, a 25-year-old Afghan student in Belgium.

Afzal, born in Afghanistan under the first Taliban rule that lasted from 1996 to 2001, said she was horrified when she saw the picture of the black-clad demonstrators.

Her mother had worn the long blue burqa gowns forced upon women at the time and found it hard to breathe or see from under them, she said.

“The picture made me worried that history is repeating itself. My mom’s family didn’t cover their heads at all in the 70s and 80s, when it was fancy to be wearing mini skirts in Afghanistan.”

(Reporting by Zeba Siddiqui in NEW DELHI; Additonal reporting by Natalia Oriol; Editing by Raju Gopalakrishnan)

Source Link ‘This is how we dress’: Afghan women overseas pose in colourful attire

David Barret
David Barret

Related posts:

  1. Exclusive-Aerospace firms warn of snags over U.S. engine rule delays
  2. Iceland’s Crowberry Capital launches $90M Seed and Early-stage fund aimed at Nordics
  3. Soccer-Alves boycotts Sao Paulo over club debt
  4. Disney to debut rest of 2021 films exclusively in theaters

Filed Under: News

Reader Interactions

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Primary Sidebar

  • The First Wheelchair User To Travel To Space Is About To Make History
  • “It Was Bigger Than A Killer Whale”: 66 Million-Year-Old Tooth Suggests Mosasaurs Were Hunting In Rivers, Not Just Seas
  • Killer Whales And Dolphins Team Up In First-Ever Footage Of Cooperative Hunting
  • Why Does Chocolate In Advent Calendars Taste Different From Normal Chocolate?
  • Why Do Sheep And Goats Have Rectangular Pupils?
  • What Kind Of Parents Were Dinosaurs?
  • First Images Of A Tatooine-Like Planet That Orbits Its Two Stars Closer Than We’ve Seen Before
  • JWST Finds Earliest Supernova Yet, From When The Universe Was Just 730 Million Years Old
  • How A Comet On Christmas Day Changed What We Knew About Space
  • What Color Was Diplodocus? First-Ever Sauropod Fossils With Melanosomes Bring Us A Step Closer To Finding Out
  • Why Do NASA’s Voyager Spacecraft Sometimes Get Closer To Earth, As They Head Out Of The Solar System?
  • What Is The Fastest Animal In The World?
  • Would The Burglars Have Survived “Home Alone”? We Asked An Intensive Care Doctor
  • World’s First-Ever Dictionary Of Ancient Celtic Languages Set To Be Created
  • Fresh From Capturing Image Of 3I/ATLAS, NASA’s MAVEN Suffers “Anomaly” And Is No Longer Communicating With Earth
  • Thought “Superflu” Was Bad? Strap In: It’s Norovirus Season In The US
  • Why Does Evolution Turn Everything Into Crabs?
  • Neil deGrasse Tyson And Professor Brian Cox Talk Interstellar Comet 3I/ATLAS And Alien Spacecraft: “It’s Older Than Us”
  • New Species Of Tiny Pumpkin Toadlet Is The Size Of A Pencil Tip, And We Cannot Cope
  • Watch The World’s Most Metal Frog Take Down A Giant “Murder Hornet”
  • Business
  • Health
  • News
  • Science
  • Technology
  • +1 718 874 1545
  • +91 78878 22626
  • [email protected]
Office Address
Prudour Pvt. Ltd. 420 Lexington Avenue Suite 300 New York City, NY 10170.

Powered by Prudour Network

Copyrights © 2025 · Medical Market Report. All Rights Reserved.

Go to mobile version