From Rawa.org
MEENA
(1956-1987)
Meena was born on
February 27, 1956 in Kabul. During her school days, students in
Kabul and other Afghan cities were deeply engaged in social activism
and rising mass movements. She left the university to devote herself
as a social activist to organizing and educating women. In pursuit
of her cause for gaining the right of freedom of expression and
conducting political activities, Meena laid the foundation of RAWA
in 1977. This organization was meant to give voice to the deprived
and silenced women of Afghanistan. She started a campaign against
the Russian forces and their puppet regime in 1979 and organized
numerous processions and meetings in schools, colleges and Kabul
University to mobilize public opinion. Another great service
rendered by her for the Afghan women is the launching of a bilingual
magazine, Payam-e-Zan (Women's Message) in 1981. Through this
magazine RAWA has been projecting the cause of Afghan women boldly
and effectively. Payam-e-Zan has constantly exposed the criminal
nature of fundamentalist groups. Meena also established Watan
Schools for refugee children, a hospital and handicraft centers for
refugee women in Pakistan to support Afghan women financially.
At the end of 1981, by
invitation of the French Government Meena represented the Afghan
resistance movement at the French Socialist Party Congress. The
Soviet delegation at the Congress, headed by Boris Ponamaryev,
shamefacedly left the hall as participants cheered when Meena
started waving a victory sign. Besides France, she also visited
several other European countries and met their prominent
personalities. Her active social work and effective advocacy against
the views of the fundamentalists and the puppet regime provoked the
wrath of the Russians and the fundamentalist forces alike and she
was assassinated by agents of KHAD (Afghanistan branch of KGB) and
their fundamentalist accomplices in Quetta, Pakistan, on February
4,1987.
Meena gave 12 years of her short but brilliant life to struggle for
her homeland and her people. She had a strong belief that despite
the darkness of illiteracy, ignorance of fundamentalism, and
corruption and decadence of sell outs imposed on our women under the
name of freedom and equality, finally that half of population will
be awaken and cross the path towards freedom, democracy and women's
rights. The enemy was rightly shivering with fear by the love and
respect that Meena was creating within the hearts of our people.
They knew that within the fire of her fights all the enemies of
freedom, democracy and women would be turned to ashes.
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