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Islam, Women and Feminism ( 15 Aug 2023, NewAgeIslam.Com)

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Pakistan Woman Seema Haider, Who Came To India, Hoists Tricolour; Indian National Anju Celebrated Pakistan's Independence Day

New Age Islam News Bureau

15 August 2023

• Pakistan Woman Seema Haider, Who Came To India, Hoists Tricolour; Indian National Anju Celebrated Pakistan's Independence Day

• After Anju, Yet Another Woman, identified as Deepika Patidar, From Rajasthan Ditches Family For Boyfriend, Converts To Islam

• Egyptian Young Woman Identified As Maryam Samir Fayez, Forced Back To Christianity After Converting To Islam

• Muslim Women With Burkini Prevented From Swimming In Northern Italy

• Five Key Moments In The Crushing Of Afghan Women's Rights

• Netflix and AFAC launch training program for female filmmakers

• Afghan Women Set Up Secret Businesses To Escape Taliban Bans

Compiled by New Age Islam News Bureau

URL:  https://newageislam.com/islam-women-feminism/pakistan-seema-tricolour-independence/d/130450

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Pakistan Woman Seema Haider, Who Came To India, Hoists Tricolour; Indian National Anju Celebrated Pakistan’s Independence Day

 

Seema Haider and Sachin Meena join the 'Har Ghar Tiranga' celebrations at their residence in Uttar Pradesh's Great Noida

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by Ritu Singh

14-08-2023

Pakistani citizen Seema Haider, who illegally entered India to live with Sachin Meena, was seen hoisting the Indian flag with her family in Noida ahead of India's 77th Independence Day. In a video that has surfaced on social media, Seema Haider and Sachin Meena were seen hoisting the Tricolour on Sunday as part of the “Har Ghar Tiranga” celebrations at their residence in Uttar Pradesh's Greater Noida. Clad in a Tricolour sari and donning a patriotic headband, she was also heard raising the slogans of ''Jai Mata Di,'' and chanting ''Bharat Mata ki Jai'' and ''Vande Mataram''.

During the occasion, Mrs. Haider, who had reportedly been offered a role in a Hindi film, also clarified that she has turned down the offer.

Meanwhile, across the border in Pakistan, Indian national Anju was seen celebrating Pakistan's Independence Day. Pakistan marks its independence day on August 14 every year, a day ahead of India's Independence Day.

Notably, Anju, who hails from Rajasthan, travelled to Pakistan on a month-long visa and married her Facebook friend Nasrullah, on July 25 after converting to Islam. The couple has been staying at Nasrullah's home in the Upper Dir district of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, as per PTI reports. The 34-year-old's husband said they are not divorced yet. The couple has a 15-year-old daughter and a six-year-old son.

In a video shared on social media, Anju was seen cutting a cake along with Nasrullah at an event. The room was decorated with Pakistan's national flag and the people were seen singing and clapping.

Seema Haider, who hails from Sindh province in Pakistan, says she got in touch with Mr. Meena, 22,  while playing the online game PUBG in 2019-20 and eventually the two talked over WhatsApp and Instagram before falling in love with each other. She entered India illegally along with her four children on a bus via Pakistan on May 13 and was arrested. However, she was granted bail by a local court on July 7.

The couple now lives in the Rabupura area of Greater Noida, near Delhi, where he runs a provision store, according to Uttar Pradesh Police.

Both love stories, which bear striking similarities, have generated massive public interest, in both nations. Seema Haider's viral videos, in particular, have opened floodgates of memes on social media.

Source: Ndtv.Com

https://www.ndtv.com/india-news/seema-haider-pak-woman-who-came-to-india-hoists-tricolour-and-heres-what-anju-did-4297946

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After Anju, Yet Another Woman, identified as Deepika Patidar, From Rajasthan Ditches Family For Boyfriend, Converts To Islam

 

Representative Photo

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By Prakash Kl

August 15, 2023

In a case similar to Anju, who went to Pakistan to tie the knot with her Facebook boyfriend, a woman and a mother-of-two eloped to Kuwait with her boyfriend.

The woman identified as Deepika Patidar fled with her friend Irfan Haidar. Her family came to know about it after photos of the woman wearing a burqa were shared on social media, PTI reported citing police.

Patidar Samaj and other Hindu organisations have demanded the action against the man with whom the woman left the country. They have also submitted a memorandum to the collector and the superintendent of police.

On July 15, Mukesh Patidar, the husband of the woman, who is employed in Mumbai, filed a missing person report at Chitri police station. According to him, they have a son and daughter.

Mukesh Patidar informed the media on Monday that Haidar had brainwashed his wife and converted her to Islam. Haidar is a resident of Himmat Nagar in Gujarat, the police said. The woman often visited Khed Brahma in Gujarat's SabarKantha to meet Haidar. It was later found that he took her to Kuwait, Chitri SHO Govind Singh said. The matter is being investigated to ascertain how she met Haidar and secured a visa.

Pakistan Extends Visa For Indian Woman Anju After Converting To Islam And Marrying FB Friend Pakistan Extends Visa For Indian Woman Anju After Converting To Islam And Marrying FB Friend

Anju, who was born in Kailor village in Uttar Pradesh and lived in the Alwar district of Rajasthan, travelled to Pakistan legally from India via the Wagah-Attari border. She was married to Arvind, who is in Rajasthan. They have a 15-year-old daughter and a six-year-old son.

Anju, who now goes by the name of Fatima after converting to Islam, on July 25 married her 29-year-old friend Nasrullah. They became friends on Facebook in 2019.

Source: Www.Oneindia.Com

https://www.oneindia.com/india/after-anju-yet-another-woman-from-rajasthan-ditches-family-for-boyfriend-converts-to-islam-3610059.html

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Egyptian Young Woman Identified As Maryam Samir Fayez, Forced Back To Christianity After Converting To Islam

August 15, 2023

The case of an Egyptian young woman who publicly converted to Islam then appeared a few days later with her family praying inside a Church has stirred controversy on social media, amid reports she was forced back to Christianity.

Local media sites identified the young woman as Maryam Samir Fayez, a research assistant at the University of Arish.

According to the sites, the young woman’s family lost contact with her on 30 July after she told them that she would be busy. Later, she appeared in a video on YouTube in which she announced that she had converted to Islam and presented a certificate of conversion to Islam officially signed by Al-Azhar.

In the video, Maryam stressed that she had not been kidnapped, and that her decision was of her own free will.

The young woman’s family reported that she had been kidnapped and said the State Security has returned her to the church through a person named Naguib Gabriel.

Gabriel appeared in a video clip, with the young woman and her family while they were praying inside the church.

However, social media users said the young woman was forced back to Christianity.

Over the past years, the issue of Egyptian Copts’ conversion to Islam has sparked widespread controversy, amid accusations that the church was kidnapping those who take this step, and forcing them back to Christianity.

Social media users have also criticised what they described as “the silence of Al-Azhar” on such issues, and the failure to demand the state protect the freedom of those who want to become Muslim.

Source: Middle East Monitor

https://www.middleeastmonitor.com/20230815-egypt-young-woman-forced-back-to-christianity-after-converting-to-islam/

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Muslim women with burkini prevented from swimming in northern Italy

BurakBir

14.08.2023

A group of Muslim women in northeastern Italy were not allowed to swim with burkini swimsuits, local media reported on Monday.

The women were prevented from swimming by another group of women on the women-only section of the Lido Pedicin beach, Europe's only segregated beach, in the Trieste city, according to the state-run ANSA news agency.

Later, the Muslim group asked for clarification from the beach management but they were told that there is no regulation on the issue.

The incident came a month after Anna Maria Cisint, the mayor of northern Monfalcone town, wrote an open letter to the Muslim community, saying being fully clothed on beaches is "unacceptable."

Source: Www.aa.Com.Tr

https://www.aa.com.tr/en/europe/muslim-women-with-burkini-prevented-from-swimming-in-northern-italy/2967648

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Five key moments in the crushing of Afghan women's rights

By Yogita Limaye

15-08-2023

"We are going to allow women to study and work within our framework. Women are going to be very active in our society," the Taliban announced in their first press conference shortly after seizing power on 15 August 2021.

Two years on, these assurances have been firmly demolished by the Taliban government's actions. The suppression of women's rights under their rule is the harshest in the world, brought in through a relentless series of religious decrees from the Taliban leadership, and regional rulings that have been steadily imposed across Afghanistan.

During each of these moments, the BBC has been on the ground speaking to Afghan girls and women - documenting grief, fear, hope and resolve as their lives and world have shrunk.

The first indication of the Taliban's attitude to women came a month after the takeover. Secondary schools opened for boys following a ministry of education statement which made no mention of girls.

"Locally, we were told not to attend classes," a 17-year-old female student told us in Kabul at the time. "For 11 years, despite the risk of violence, I worked hard so I could become a doctor. I'm devastated," she wept, as she waved goodbye to her brothers heading off to school.

In the same week, female employees of the Kabul city administration were told by the mayor to stay at home, with only those who performed jobs which couldn't be done by men, allowed to continue.

But still, some women felt hope. "They've kept universities open, so I think they will change their policy soon," one university student told us.

At the time, we visited the headquarters of the Taliban's moral police, the Ministry of the Propagation of Virtue and the Prevention of Vice. It had been set up in the same compound where the Ministry of Women's Affairs of the former regime once was - a government department scrapped by the Taliban weeks after taking power.

Source: Www.Bbc.Com

https://www.bbc.com/news/world-66461711

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Netflix and AFAC launch training program for female filmmakers

ARAB NEWS

August 14, 2023

LONDON: Netflix and the Arab Fund for Arts and Culture have announced a new training program for female filmmakers in the Arab world.

The program, called “Women in Film: Introduction to the Creative Process,” will focus on introducing the creative filmmaking process and the different roles that women can play behind the camera.

“At Netflix, we are passionate about amplifying women’s voices behind the camera,” said Nuha el Tayeb, director, content director, Middle East, Africa and Turkiye at Netflix.

“AFAC has been a long-standing partner and has done some incredible work for under-represented voices within the film fraternity in the region. Through this partnership, we are discovering a wealth of promising Arab talent and working to ensure that women are represented both on and off camera.”

The program is open to emerging female filmmakers aged 21 to 27 who have graduated from film studies and are living in Egypt, Jordan, Saudi Arabia, Kuwait or the UAE.

The 45 selected participants will receive training from established female filmmakers from the Arab region, and they will also have the opportunity to network with other aspiring filmmakers.

AFAC’s Director Rima Mismar said that the initiative reflected a long-standing commitment to “supporting bold creative voices of women and men artists, who are trying to push boundaries and challenge status-quos.”

Mismar said that the program was part of AFAC’s efforts to favor the emergence of regional women talents and “allow for a deeper understanding of the inequities and inequalities that women are subjected to in the film industry.”

The program is also part of Netflix’s wider commitment to promoting gender equality in the Arab cinema industry through its “Because She Created” initiatives.

Last year, the streaming giant teamed with AFAC in a scheme that gave five female Arab producers and directors a total of $250,000 via Netflix’s Fund for Creative Equity.

Applications for the program are open from Aug. 17 to Sept. 8. Successful participants will be selected by an external jury and notified on or before Oct. 17.

Source: Arab News

https://www.arabnews.com/node/2354996/media

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Afghan women set up secret businesses to escape Taliban bans

REUTERS

August 15, 2023

LONDON: Five months after Taliban supporters smashed up her restaurant, Afghan entrepreneur Laila Haidari opened a secret craft center where women earn a small income stitching elaborate dresses and fashioning jewelry from melted down bullet casings.

Her workshop is among an array of underground businesses that women have launched since losing their jobs after the Taliban grabbed power in 2021, ranging from gyms to beauty salons and girls’ schools.

The Taliban administration, which marks two years in power on Aug. 15, has banned women from most jobs, barred girls from secondary and higher education, and imposed harsh restrictions on their freedom of movement.

But thousands of women continue to run micro-enterprises from their homes — which officials broadly allow, while others like Haidari oversee more clandestine businesses.

Haidari, 44, used to own a lively Kabul restaurant that was known for its music and poetry evenings and was popular with intellectuals, writers, journalists and foreigners.

But a few days after the Taliban seized the country, gunmen and locals threw out the rehabilitation center’s patients, destroyed her restaurant and looted the furniture, Haidari said.

Her handicrafts enterprise now subsidises an underground school providing 200 girls with lessons in maths, science, and English. Some attend in person, others online.

“I don’t want Afghan girls to forget their knowledge and then, in a few years, we will have another illiterate generation,” she said, referring to the women and girls deprived of education during the Taliban’s last rule from 1996 to 2001.

The Taliban’s return to power has rapidly reversed two decades of internationally backed efforts to boost economic opportunities for women that saw donors pour several billion dollars into empowerment programs.

Most businesses set up by women prior to 2021 were informal cottage industries like bakeries, but they had increasingly made inroads into traditionally male sectors such as IT, media services, exports, travel agencies and even construction.

Others, like Haidari, were running cafes and restaurants – also considered a male domain in Afghanistan, given the taboos around women interacting with men outside the home.

But many others have closed their businesses amid Afghanistan’s severe economic crisis. The Taliban takeover triggered the meltdown after foreign governments cut funding and froze the country’s bank assets.

The crisis has hit all businesses hard, but the difficulties for women are compounded by Taliban curbs on their movement including a ban on travel without a “mahram” — a male relative to act as a chaperone.

Dressmaker Wajiha Sekhawat, 25, used to go to Pakistan and Iran to buy fabrics for her tailoring studio in the western city of Herat, from where she creates outfits for clients inspired by celebrities’ social media posts.

With her income already squeezed by the economic crisis, she cannot afford to take a chaperone with her. But when she sent a male family member to Pakistan in her place he returned with the wrong fabrics.

Sekhawat’s monthly income has fallen from about $600 to $200 or less. Demand for party dresses and outfits for professional women plummeted after most lost their jobs.

The Taliban’s rules on chaperones make it difficult for women to buy raw materials, meet people to do business with or sell their merchandise. The restrictions also make it harder for female customers to reach them.

The Taliban’s restrictions are particularly hard for the country’s estimated 2 million widows, as well as single women and divorcees. Some are their family’s sole breadwinner, but may not have anyone to act as a mahram.

In the aftermath of the Taliban takeover, social media was awash with images of beauty salons where posters of women’s faces had been painted over. But rules varied between districts and many businesses — unlike Sadaf’s — were allowed to reopen.

However, last month the authorities ordered all salons to shut, saying they offered treatments that went against their Islamic values.

Despite erasing women from most areas of public life, the Taliban have not banned them from running businesses, and some aid organizations continue to oversee employment projects.

“There is so much demand because no one wants to have to be reliant on humanitarian aid,” said Melissa Cornet, an adviser to CARE Afghanistan.

“We’ve had to refocus more on training women in crafts they can do from home — tailoring, embroidery or making foodstuffs like cookies, jams, pickles etc,” Cornet said.

Although incomes are typically less than $100 a month, Cornet said this could be life-changing for a family at a time when unemployment is through the roof and 85 percent of the population is living under the poverty line.

Source: Arab News

https://www.arabnews.com/node/2355401/pakistan

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URL:  https://newageislam.com/islam-women-feminism/pakistan-seema-tricolour-independence/d/130450

 

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