Roya Rahmani, a longtime women’s rights activist in Afghanistan, remembers the horrors of life under the Taliban in the 1990s. Women were beaten for leaving their homes and barred from holding jobs.
“People were drained of hope,” she says, and like “living zombies.”
It’s a far cry from today. Women now make up 28 percent of the Afghan National Assembly—a higher percentage than are in the U.S. Congress. Nearly 85,000 Afghan women work as teachers, lawyers, law enforcement officials, and in health care, and 100,000 Afghan women attend universities.
There are many problems for women in Afghanistan, including pervasive domestic violence and fewer opportunities for women living in rural areas. Despite this, Afghan women are deeply conscious of their progress and wary of how a peace deal with the Taliban might threaten their gains.
“If the Taliban says, ‘We can find a way to address each other’s concerns,’ that is fine,” Rahmani says. “But given the past experiences, it’s extremely alarming for the women of Afghanistan.”