Orphanages

OrphanagesIt has been estimated that there are 28,000 children living in the streets of Kabul. This does not include the other cities or villages in Afghanistan or in Pakistan that also have their share of homeless children. It also does not include children who are living with one or both parents, but whose parents are unable to feed or clothe them properly. It also does not represent the numbers of children put to work at a young age in order to help provide for their families and who thereby miss out on education. AWM and RAWA can address this problem through your generous financial support.

The expenses of an orphanage include; food, toiletries, books and stationary, clothes, shoes, bedding, health care, rugs, kitchen items, building rent and utility costs, purchase price of major appliances, salary for administrator, assistant, cook and guards. As an example of the frugality with which RAWA runs their orphanages, consider that the highest salary, that of administrator, is almost $60 per month or about $700 per year.

OrphanagesOperating six orphanages in Pakistan with help from the Afghan Women’s Mission, RAWA is nurturing and caring for 341 Afghan refugee children. Orphanage staff members try their best to make the orphanage environment like home, even arranging holiday and birthday parties for the children. Girls and boys attend classes from first grade through high school — at either the more expensive Pakistani schools or at RAWA schools in or near the orphanage.

OrphanagesThough there is some hope that the country can change for the better, many Afghans have lived through years of war and need help to rebuild their lives. Only a lack of funds keeps RAWA from accepting more children in their orphanages — there are many thousands of suffering children who need care.

OrphanagesIn recent years RAWA also operated orphanages inside Afghanistan, such as Watan orphanage in Farah Province. However, due to a lack of funds, it had to be shut down, and orphans returned to family and friends.

Your support is needed to keep RAWA’s existing orphanages alive!

Your donation earmarked for orphanages will help empower AWM and RAWA to provide a loving home for Afghan orphans and positively influence the future of Afghanistan and the world.

To give a donation to keep the doors of RAWA’s orphanages open, click here. Thank You!

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Awareness

Coming soon …

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Request a Speaker

Spokespersons from Afghan Women’s Mission are available in Southern California to give educational talks about our work. It is possible to host an AWM spokesperson outside Southern California, or even a member of RAWA but all travel costs will have to be borne by you.

Honorariums are appreciated and will go directly toward’s RAWA‘s important work.

If you would like to invite a speaker to your community please email us using the form below.

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    Posted in How You Can Help | Comments Off on Request a Speaker

    Organize a House Party

    You can do your part to help RAWA by raising crucial funds for this remarkable organization by organizing a house party. Your efforts will help sustain RAWA’s life-saving projects.

    What: Movie screening of View From a Grain of Sand

    Where: your house or a friend’s house

    When: Any time

    6 easy steps to planning your inspiring and informative party:

    1. Download the complete house party kit [MS Word] [PDF]
    2. Order a DVD of View From a Grain of Sand from the film’s website.
    3. Pick a date and location to host your party. (TIP: Make it a potluck! Have everyone bring a dish to share and save yourself some effort).
    4. Drop us an email to help us keep track of all the events
    5. Invite your friends, neighbors, and local activist groups. (TIP: Send out free invitations online using Evite.com)
    6. Using the house party kit, print up flyers and collect pledges and donations from your guests after viewing the film. Checks can be made out to “SEE/Afghan Women’s Mission.” Mail in pledges and donations to SEE/AWM, 22231 Mulholland Hwy, Ste 209, Calabasas, CA 91302

    Find out more about the film View From a Grain of Sand here.

    Posted in How You Can Help | Comments Off on Organize a House Party

    Volunteer Your Time and Services

    With the ever-worsening state of the economy, we understand that many of you don’t have the means to donate much financially. But if you’d like to help Afghan women, there are many ways to put your time and efforts to work:

    • The most direct way you can help Afghan women in your own community is to organize a local fund raiser in your community. An easy way to do this is to host a house party.
    • Help us receive in-kind donations from local vendors to raise awareness of RAWA. AWM needs: T-shirts, posters, coffee mugs (we can provide the logo), as well as brochures, etc. We can provide tax-exemption to vendors for their donations. Contact us if you find a vendor willing to donate these items.
    • Host AWM or RAWA spokespeople at your local university or college campus, church, or community center. Travel and lodging costs will have to be borne by you or your organization. Contact us if you want to arrange a speaker.
    • Increase media awareness of Afghan women. Contact your local newspapers, radio stations, TV stations, and ask them to cover the situation of Afghan women. Media can arrange interviews by calling us at 626-676-7884.
    • If you live in the Los Angeles area where our headquarters are based, and are willing to help us set up information tables at various local events, contact us to volunteer.

    If you have any other ideas that are not listed here, but that you think could benefit this organization, please do not hesitate to contact us.

    IMPORTANT NOTE: If you are interested in traveling to Afghanistan or Pakistan and volunteering on the ground, we CANNOT help you. The Afghan women we work with do not need skills and equipment, as much as they need funds to do the work themselves.If you feel nonetheless, that your physical help in Afghanistan or Pakistan will make a big difference, please email us.

    Posted in How You Can Help | Comments Off on Volunteer Your Time and Services

    Donate Stock, Property, Real Estate, and More

    To make a donation to Afghan Women’s Mission, click here. OR, consider some other options:

    • Transfer stock – You receive a tax deduction and offset capital gains taxes when you give stocks that have appreciated in value. Consider donating stocks that do not meet your criteria for social responsibility and we will convert them into positive action.
    • Bequest – When preparing or revising your will, you can make a lasting gift to IHC/Afghan Women’s Mission by designating it as a recipient of part of your estate.
    • Trusts – Certain trust actions may reduce your taxes now or in the future, while supporting IHC/Afghan Women’s Mission. We can work with you and/or your financial advisor to set up such an arrangement.
    • Real estate and other property – You may donate any properties, residences, or even a vacation home, while retaining the right to use it during your lifetime. Gifts of real estate to IHC/Afghan Women’s Mission can help you avoid eventual capital-gains or estate taxes as well as conserve the property while ensuring it’s use for your future generations.
    • Life insurance, IRAs or pension plans – You may list IHC/Afghan Women’s Mission as a beneficiary of a life insurance policy, IRA, or pension plan. This affords tax advantages and allows you to give a larger gift than you might otherwise be able to.
    • Memorial – You may honor a friend or a loved one with a memorial gift that can act on his or her beliefs. IHC/Afghan Women’s Mission will use it to empower Afghan women through medical care, educational and other programs. To do so, use our online donation form and add a note to let us know in whose name you are making the donation.
    • Employer Matching Funds – If your employer has a policy of matching charitable contributions your donation to IHC/Afghan Women’s Mission will automatically increase.
    • Donate In-Kind – While we do not accept unsolicited in-kind donations such as used clothes and books, you can buy a new item off RAWA’s Amazon.com “wish list.” It will be sent directly to us and delivered to RAWA. RAWA uses educational materials like DVDs, and electronic parts for their web operations that are often only available outside Afghanistan. Click here to see RAWA’s Wish List.

    For more information on any of these programs, contact us and we will be happy to work with you.

    Posted in How You Can Help | Comments Off on Donate Stock, Property, Real Estate, and More

    Afghan feminists fighting from under the burqa

    Jon Boone in Kabul
    guardian.co.uk
    Friday 30 April 2010 17.30BST

    Afghan women wearing burqas walk towards a market in the center of Kabul.

    Afghan women wearing burqas walk towards a market in the centre of Kabul. Photograph: Emilio Morenatti/AP

    As a committed feminist, there are few symbols of women’s oppression that Parween hates more than the burqa.

    But compromises are necessary in a country where fighting for women’s rights can be a controversial and dangerous business, and she is not above donning the all-concealing garment if it helps her to stay one step ahead of the authorities.

    “I don’t like the burqa, but sometimes I have no choice when I’m moving around Kabul – it’s a great disguise,” she says. Parween, who is in her mid 20s, is not using her real name. The only personal information she reveals to the Guardian is that she spent much of her life growing up in a refugee camp in Pakistan, attended Kabul University, and is a member of one of the country’s most intriguing and secretive organisations: the Revolutionary Association of the Women of Afghanistan, or Rawa – regarded as a dangerously subversive outfit by the authorities.

    Official disapproval means the group has many of the attributes of an underground movement. Parween only knows a handful of other members because, like a terrorist network, it operates through a cell structure. The idea is to protect the wider membership of around 2,000 women by not allowing a single activist to reveal names to the NDS, the country’s intelligence service (which Parween refers to as Khad – its name during the Soviet occupation of the 1980s when the service was controlled by the KGB).

    During Taliban rule, Rawa ran secret girls’ schools and filmed the state killings of women using cameras hidden under their burqas, creating footage that helped to fuel international outrage against the regime. Members are careful to regularly move their meetings to different houses, and no one keeps any incriminating materials in their home.

    Rawa’s magazine is stashed in a “very secure place” and is produced and distributed with enormous difficulty. Librarians who have dared to stock it have had the NDS on to them.

    Withering critiques

    Such precautions might seem extraordinary for an organisation that runs orphanages, female literacy classes and is committed to improving the lot of women – a commitment that President Hamid Karzai and his international backers frequently cite as one of the success stories of post-Taliban Afghanistan.

    But Rawa is famous for its withering critiques on what it sees as the underlying problems for women: Karzai, the warlords who surround the president, the Taliban and, for good measure, the US-led Nato forces in the country.

    Attacking hardline Islamic conservatives and, in Parween’s words, “Karzai’s criminal government”, wins Rawa few friends. On its website are harrowing images of women who have been abused by their husbands or have turned to self-immolation as a means of escape from a life of abuse. Running alongside them are diatribes against some of the most powerful men in the land. One headline says that flushing vice-president Mohammed Fahim down a toilet would not be enough to cleanse the “warlord-mafia regime of Karzai”.

    With enemies like that, Rawa’s eight orphanages, each with around 800 children, and four female literacy centres are run under different names.

    “The government sees Rawa as Maoist planning to overthrow the government, and against the mujahideen,” Parween said.

    “Khad is always following us and finding reasons to visit our orphanages and accuse them of being run by Rawa. They accuse us of opening up a brothel and allowing foreigners to visit.”

    Having the word “revolutionary” in their title does not help, Parween admits. But she said the organisation would never drop the name, because serves as a reminder that “we need a revolution in the treatment of women like European countries had before”.

    Covert recruitment

    Parween says the NDS believes that Rawa is using the orphanages to persuade more young women to join the association. “They probably have a point there,” she laughs. “Women who come to our literacy classes have no idea that it’s organised by Rawa. But through the books that we use, we help to raise their awareness of women’s rights and some of them eventually become members.”

    The NDS is particularly demonised among Rawa members because of its alleged role in the assassination of Meena Kamal, the association’s founder, in 1987. She was killed in the Pakistani city of Quetta, after leading the association for 10 years. She and Rawa became famous for public demonstrations against the Russian occupation of Afghanistan.

    Kamal set up Rawa as a student at Kabul University, which in the 1970s was a hotbed of political activity and spawned many Islamist groups that Rawa still regards as deadly enemies.

    The group particularly despises the country’s warlords, the former resistance leaders who are regarded as heroes by their supporters and blamed by their enemies for a period of anarchy, corruption and brutal suppression. Various militia leaders still enjoy considerable political power and, as Parween points out, hold views just as radically restrictive to women as the Taliban.

    She says: “They have very bad laws against women and at that time they made Afghanistan the house of terrorists. It was not Mullah Omar who invited Osama Bin Laden to Afghanistan, it was [Abdul Rasul] Sayyaf [a mujahideen leader]. They are criminal and with them in power, we cannot have a democratic government.” Rawa’s uncompromising stance has earned respect among rights campaigners. One western gender specialist said Rawa is suspected of the being main organising force behind the extraordinary public demonstration last year against a law that gave Shia males the right to demand sex from their wives while denying them basic rights, including leaving the house without permission. Hundreds of women took part, braving an angry counter-demonstration. It was thought to be the first time since the 1970s that women had dared to take to Kabul’s streets.

    But others say their radicalism comes at the cost of effectiveness. Wazhma Frogh, an independent women’s activist, says only a tiny minority of literate, urban women are even aware of the “ghost” association. “They have created trouble for other women activists who are usually labelled as linked to Rawa.”

    Despite the role the US-led intervention in Afghanistan played in sweeping away the Taliban, and unlike the many mainstream women’s groups who look to western embassies for moral support in their various struggles for equality, Rawa has no time for Nato, which it heavily criticises for killing civilians.

    Parween said: “There are three enemies in this country: the Taliban, the [former mujahideen commanders] and the Karzai government, and foreign troops. All three of them commit crimes against our people.

    “When the foreign troops go, we will only have two left to deal with.”

    guardian.co.uk © Guardian News and Media Limited 2010

    Read original article.

    Posted in Afghanistan News Wire, Featured | Comments Off on Afghan feminists fighting from under the burqa

    Afghan Crafts at Antimall this Saturday!

    If you missed our Fair Trade and Conscious Gifts Holiday Bazaar last weekend because of the heavy rains, not to worry – you still have the chance to purchase our one-of-a-kind hand-made items from Afghanistan this Saturday at the Antimall!

    WHAT: 8th Annual Antimall
    WHEN: Saturday December 19th, 12 noon – 7 pm
    WHERE: 3400 N. Figueroa Street. Cypress Park, CA 90065

    Antimall is an annual alternative holiday market and festival. This year the event will be outdoors, with an entire street blocked off and filled with vendors. Look for the AWM table! We will be offering our purses (large and small), wallets, pillow covers, table cloths, wall hangings, jewelry, T-shirts, books, and DVDs.

    There will be live music, DJs, surprise guests, Food, Toy giveaways, and Free Coffee. This is a family-friendly event!

    For more information, email elpuente52@yahoo.com.

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    4th Annual Fair Trade and Conscious Gifts Holiday Bazaar

    Tired of submerging your conscience every holiday season?

    Worried you won won’t be able to afford gifts this year?

    JOIN US for the 4th Annual Fair Trade and Conscious Gifts Holiday Bazaar!

    WHEN: Saturday December 12th 2009, 11 am – 4 pm

    WHERE: Immanuel Presbyterian Church, 3300 Wilshire Blvd, LA (Geneva Room – wheelchair accessible)

    PARKING: Street parking near the church, church lot, or Athena Parking lot across Berendo.

    Browse through a large selection of affordable, sweatshop-free arts and crafts made by artisans internationally and locally, including embroidered pillow-covers, wallets and purses from Afghanistan, locally made jewelry, blankets, scarves and tote-bags, soaps, candles, oils, conscious books, CDs, and much more!

    Entrance is Free. Complementary tea, coffee and pastries.

    All proceeds will directly benefit the artists and workers who made the items.

    Buying gifts for your loved ones doesn’t have to violate your ethics or drain your bank account!

    Posted in AWM News | Comments Off on 4th Annual Fair Trade and Conscious Gifts Holiday Bazaar

    A Woman Among Warlords – Malalai Joya Available for Interviews

    FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

    CONTACT
    Voice: 626-676-7884
    E-mail: info_at_afghanwomensmission.org

    Malalai Joya, the young woman who the BBC has hailed as the “bravest in Afghanistan,” has published her memoirs, A Woman Among Warlords: The Extraordinary Story of an Afghan Woman Who Dared to Speak Out.

    Joya, now 31, was the youngest ever woman elected to the Afghan Parliament in 2005 and is an outspoken critic of the Karzai government and NATO occupation. She will be touring North America between Oct. 23 and Nov. 27 to speak about her new memoir, co-written with Canadian activist and writer Derrick O’Keefe.

    With U.S. President Obama considering escalating the war in Afghanistan with over 40,000 more troops Joya’s speaking tour and book release is timely. “Afghan women like me, voting and running for office, have been held up as proof that the United States has brought democracy and women’s rights to Afghanistan,” Joya writes. “But it is all a lie.”

    Her book tells the story of her life in the context of three decades of war. Joya details her reasons for opposing NATO’s war and suggests concrete steps for building an independent and genuinely democratic Afghanistan.

    Malalai Joya, often compared to Burma’s Aung San Suu Kyi, has emerged as a symbol of Afghans” desire for freedom from corruption, warlordism and foreign occupation. Her father, who lost a leg fighting the Soviet occupation of Afghanistan, named her after a 19th century hero in the fight against the British Empire, Malalai of Maiwand.

    Today, Joya brings to a North American audience the lessons of Afghanistan’s long history of occupation and resistance. And she hopes her book will “correct the tremendous amount of misinformation being spread about Afghanistan.”

    “Afghans are sometimes represented in the media as a backward people, nothing more than terrorists, criminals and henchmen. This false image is extremely dangerous for the future of both my country and the West. The truth is that Afghans are brave and freedom loving people with a rich culture and a proud history. We are capable of defending our independence, governing ourselves and determining our own future.”

    Malalai Joya will be traveling through the US for a brief book tour at the following cities: New York, Boston, Cambridge, Washington DC, Los Angeles, Irvine, Berkeley, San Jose, Seattle, and Bellingham.

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