Women in Afghanistan
[2024-02-23 02:11:25]
Through modern history, Afghanistan is confused. Famine, drought, civil war, and Taleban governance had a great impact on the people of Afghanistan. This has had a very bad influence on all the people of Afghanistan, but I think that no one has a bad influence over women in Afghanistan. Nonetheless, not all West European countries regard it as negative, but it is also considered negative for men and women in Afghanistan. People need to read this sentence, "It is not essential to wear Buluka, but few women are eager to get rid of them" (Germani 14).
I personally think that like women in Afghanistan, like women in Afghanistan, women in America and around the world are obedient and disappear to some extent. No, unlike the rules of the Taliban, no specific rules are stated, but it is hindered by social rules that women are still being understood. These undocumented rules tell us how to act, what to wear, what to go, and what to do. It is these rules that we are no longer equivalent to men, but to be treated as people, not women.
Before the Taliban bought it in 1996, Afghanistan was a very different female country. Between the 1930s and the 1970s, Kabul, the capital of Afghanistan, was admired as Central Asia. By the early 1990s, 70% of teachers, 50% of civil servants and college students, and 40% of urban doctors were female. However, subsequent tribal war, coupled with foreign invasions and Taliban domination, brought about a sharp decline in these numbers that were promising in the past. For women in Afghanistan today, statistics are awful: more than half are widows of war, 85% are not formally educated.
Before the Taliban arrived, women in Afghanistan accounted for 60% of the teachers of Kabul University, 50% of Kabul students, 50% of civil servants, 70% of school teachers, and 40% of doctors . It seems almost impossible for a woman from Afghanistan to go to college for a while, and it seems almost impossible to imagine that there is a bright future before that, but suddenly they are not allowed to go out without male relatives Hmm. By the side. But this happened when the government did not rule it, but that threatened the people not to comply with the rules. Most unfortunately, the Taleban claims to work under the name of Allah (God), everyone asks if everyone feels there is no way out of the problem.