Ever since the Taliban became a military and political force in late 1994, women and girls in Afghanistan have become practically invisible in Taliban controlled parts of the country. Who are these men of the Taliban? Members of the Taliban claims that they are students of Islam, and all they wanted to do is to bring Afghanistan under Islamic rule. (The Taliban Story) The impact of these rules are most felt in the cities where women had The Taliban have issued ruling forbidding women from working outside the home, except for a limited role in the medical field. (Women and Girls in Afghanistan) Since the Taliban takeover, women are not allowed to attend school and others have been forced to leave their jobs. There are a few home based schools and some school in rural areas which quietly operate to educate girls. Those women who did work to provide for their families were now out of a job and resorted to begging for money on the street. Women and girls are not allowed to appear outside the home unless wearing a head to toe covering called a burqa. A three inch square opening covered with mesh provides the only means for vision.
It is also illegal for women to wear makeup, nail polish, jewelry, cut their hair short, pluck their eyebrow, wear colorful or stylish clothes, sheer stockings, white socks and shoes, high-heel shoes, walk loudly, talk loudly, or laugh in public. (Buried Alive) To ensure women are effaced as much as possible, the Taliban ordered all exterior windows of homes to be painted black. It is also illegal for women to appear in public with a male Since it is forbidden for women to talk to men except close relative, it made it hard for women to seek medical attention. They can only be examine by female physicians. Many women do not receive medical attention because the amount of female physicians is very limited. The evening curfew begins at 7:30 p.m., after which no one, except Taliban troops, was allowed out, even in medical emergencies. Women who are extremely ill or in labor and needing hospital care must remain at home until morning.
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Taliban troops punish those women who violate these rules. Depending on what rules were violated, they could face imprisonment, flogging, beatings, or death. For example, a young woman was arrested and received 100 lashes for walking with a man who was not a relative. Since she was single, it was punishable by flogging; had she been married, she would have been publicly stoned to death. (Buried Alive) Women have also been beaten if they are found to move about without an explanation acceptable to the Life for women in Afghanistan is very hard. Reducing women to mere objects, the minister of education says, Its like having a flower, or a rose.
You water it and keep it at home for yourself, to look at it and smell it. It [a woman] is not supposed to be taken out of the house to be smelled. (Buried Alive) A Taliban leader is more graphic in saying, There are only two places for Afghan women – in her husbands house, and in the graveyard. With their freedom totally taken away, many women fall into deep depression and some commit suicide. In a way, they are buried alive.
Bibliography:
Work Cited: Goodwin, Jan.
Buried Alive: Afghan Women Under the Taliban. On The Issues. 1998, Vol 7, Num 3. The Story of the Taliban: Gods Holy Worriors or the Devils militia. The Truth About the Taliban. Women and Girls in Afghanistan. Senior Coordinator for International Womens Issues.
March 10, 1998..