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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
6 pages in length. Despite the fact post-Taliban efforts have attempted to provide some semblance of women's rights in an era of expanding free speech and other civil liberties, those rights may exist in thought and limited application, but they are in constant struggle with the governmental forces that want to maintain a patriarchal ceiling on the extent to which women realize any significant departure from their traditional gender roles. Inasmuch as the barricade toward women's rights "remains deeply rooted in traditional Islamic culture" (Witte, 2005, p. A24), it stands to reason how the nearly seven short years since Taliban rule was overturned is hardly enough time to completely wipe out hundreds of years of gender oppression; as such, the government is not entirely keen on the idea of women's emancipation in virtually any way. Bibliography lists 10 sources.
Page Count:
6 pages (~225 words per page)
File: LM1_TLCTalibWmn.rtf
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application, but they are in constant struggle with the governmental forces that want to maintain a patriarchal ceiling on the extent to which women realize any significant departure from their
traditional gender roles. Inasmuch as the barricade toward womens rights "remains deeply rooted in traditional Islamic culture" (Witte, 2005, p. A24), it stands to reason how the nearly seven
short years since Taliban rule was overturned is hardly enough time to completely wipe out hundreds of years of gender oppression; as such, the government is not entirely keen on
the idea of womens emancipation in virtually any way. Education and human rights are far more important than whether or not a woman wears a burka...We are not talking
about feminism in Afghanistan-were talking about basic human rights (Benet, 2001). When one examines the blatant disregard from a governmental perspective in relation to post-Taliban womens rights, it is
important to consider the historical aspect of gender under Taliban control and how such patriarchy remains despite the more benevolent teachings put forth by Muhammad. As with so much
of religious concepts, interpretation can mean the difference between upholding the fundamental notion of a given guiding principle and completely misconstruing it under the guise of personal agenda. The
Taliban refused to honor Muhammads quest for gender equality by creating a harsh and oppression existence for the female gender; now that this tyranny has given way to a more
democratic way of life, the reality of granting women any solid rights has been fulfilled only on paper or in peoples words. The government has clearly illustrated in a
number of ways how there will be no broad-brush acceptance of womens civil liberties. One of the most transparent examples of such defiance resides with the imprisonment of a
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