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Risking All to
Expose the Taliban
Julia Scheeres reports on the
heroines of the Revolutionary Association of Women of Afghanistan
Wired News, August 10, 2001
The seemingly endless list of
activities banned by Afghanistan's ruling Taliban includes taking pictures of
people and animals, using the Internet, educating girls and badmouthing the
government.
The Revolutionary Association of
Women of Afghanistan does all of the above.
The organization of social
activists risks incarceration and worse to expose atrocities committed by one of
the world's most repressive regimes. RAWA was founded in 1977, but only garnered
international fame in 1997 after it launched a website documenting the bizarre
and tragic details of life under the Taliban.
"The Internet is the only
tool that's available to us to make connections with the outside," said
"Treena Hamra," a RAWA leader. "It's been very helpful to raise
awareness and to get financial support for our struggle as well."
After RAWA was featured on the
Oprah Winfrey show in December 2000, over 300,000 visitors stormed the site,
crashing the system, Hamra said.
The 2,000-member strong group is
outlawed in Afghanistan and persecuted in neighboring Pakistan, where it is
headquartered. For safety reasons, members do not use their real names, ages or
any other identifying information.
There's good reason for their
paranoia. RAWA's founder, who was an outspoken opponent of religious and
political repression, was assassinated in Pakistan in 1987.
RAWA's site is not for the
squeamish. Many of the images are appalling: photos of a man triumphantly
hoisting up the amputated hands of a thief; a video of a woman avenging her
son's death by hacking off the head of the alleged killer.
The front page warns visitors
about the disturbing content: "RAWA is dedicated to truthfully reflecting
the reality of life under fundamentalist rule.... To viewers intolerant of gory
scenes and photos, we advise caution in viewing our photos and video links. Our
apology for publishing such material is: this is the reality of life for the
people of Afghanistan."
The word "Taliban" is
the plural of the Persian word "Talib," which means religious student.
Since the fundamentalist group rose to power in the war-torn country in 1996,
only three countries have recognized it as the legitimate government --
Pakistan, Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates. [Saudi Arabia and the UAE
have withdrawn recognition in the aftermath of September 11 - Editor.]
The regime's peculiar flavor of
Islam has amounted to a gender apartheid for women. Among other things, the
Taliban have forbidden women from working outside the home, studying anything
but religious texts, and wearing anything in public but a table cloth-like
covering called a burqa.
Breaking the rules brings swift,
draconian punishment. One woman caught wearing nail polish had the tip of her
thumb sliced off; another was stoned to death for traveling with a male who was
not her relative.
The Taliban has scoffed at
international censure and continued issuing outrageous decrees, such as a May
edict requiring Hindus to wear distinctive label on their clothes.
Because press freedom is shackled
in Afghanistan, the eyewitness reports published on RAWA's site are the only
alternative to state-controlled media.
Ironically, the same burqa that
symbolizes the repression of Afghan women allows them to hide the cameras and
notebooks needed to chronicle their gruesome reality.
Hamra said that Taliban supporters
regularly send e-mail death threats to the RAWA site. For this reason, the group
is asking for donations of miniature digital cameras and camcorders, which are
easier to conceal and add the convenience of allowing the webmaster to directly
upload images to the site. RAWA plans on distributing the electronic devices
among members throughout Afghanistan in an effort to expand coverage of Taliban
activities, she said.
The Web page also serves as a
platform to collect petition signatures and to sell T-shirts and coffee mugs.
Proceeds from the sales are used to finance clandestine girls schools, provide
health care to refugees, and train women to support themselves by raising
poultry or weaving rugs.
"What they're doing is
amazing," said Steve Penners, an Pasadena office manager who started the
Afghan Women's Mission after finding RAWA's website and exchanging e-mail with
the group. "They're risking their lives to help other women and show the
world what's happening over there."
According to an Indian
videographer who spent six weeks filming RAWA's operations in Pakistani refugee
camps, the group has been forced underground in that country too.
"The fundamentalists are
powerful in Pakistan and sympathize with the Taliban," Meena Nanji said.
Nanji decided to visit the
Pakistani camps, which host an estimated 2 million Afghan refugees, after
hearing RAWA members speak at a Los Angeles book store. Her only link to the
group when she flew to Islamabad last October was a cell phone number. And while
she was there, she never learned the true names of her hosts.
"What they're doing is so
huge." she said. "I don't know where to begin explaining the
importance of their work."
Please visit www.rawa.org
Donate
to RAWA
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