Marzia Basel

Marzia Basel (born 1968) is a former judge in Afghanistan. During the rule of the Taliban, she secretly educated women in her own home. She is also the founder of the Afghanistan Progressive Law Organization.

Marzia Basel
Born1968
Kabul
CitizenshipAfghanistan
Alma materGeorge Washington University

Biography

Basel grew up in Kabul within a liberal family.[1] Her father was a judge as well and her sisters are lawyers.[2] In 1995, Basel was sworn in as a judge.[3] A year later, the Taliban banned all women professionals and prohibited educating women. All women then had to wear a burqa and Basel recalls that she felt "imprisoned, both literally and figuratively. In the summer it was so hot that I felt as though I were slowly suffocating. Peering out of that tiny mesh cage, I felt like a caged animal, which is exactly what I and other women had become: caged animals stripped of any freedom or dignity."[1]

When the Taliban was in power, Basel defied the laws against educating women and taught English out of her home between 1996 and 2001.[4] Basel had approximately 350 to 400 students between the ages of eight and fifty.[1] Her students, some of whom were wives of Taliban adherents, warned her if they knew she was going to be visited by the Ministry for the Protection of Virtue and Prevention of Vice.[5] Just before the Taliban regime was removed, Basel fled to Pakistan as a refugee for her safety.[1]

In 2002, she founded the Afghan Women Judges Association (AWJA).[6] Her efforts to help support women working in law in Afghanistan increased the number of women defense lawyers from 1 woman in 2005 to 150 women in 2013.[6] Basel has been the director of the AWJA since 2009.[5]

Also in 2002, Basel went to the United States and met with then President George W. Bush, United States Secretary of State, Colin Powell, and others in order to ask for additional assistance for Afghanistan.[2] Despite being told to respect the customs of the country she was visiting, on her return, she faced severe criticism for not always wearing a chador to cover her hair.[2] There was controversy over whether she was fired, but Basel was recorded in saying that she left to join UNICEF to help create a juvenile justice program.[2]

She continued to be active in women's legal rights and women's rights to practice law.[4] In 2005, she earned her master's in International Law from George Washington University.[7]

Basel eventually had to stay out of Afghanistan because of threats on her life. Messages were left on her door from the Taliban in 2011, stating that if they found her, they would kill her.[6] Her husband and father both urged her to stay out of Afghanistan for her safety.[6] Because of the lack of support systems for immigrants in the United States, she chose to move to Canada.[6] She is currently living in Toronto.[3]

gollark: So your drone is down half the time?
gollark: I think the main issue is just that there isn't enough sunlight to run motors constantly with current solar panels.
gollark: Hardly.
gollark: I mean, it might be *possible*?
gollark: Better idea: giant platforms with fans on them run by nuclear power.

References

  1. Basel, Marzia; Hollywood, Dana Michael (2005). "Under a Cruel Sun: My Life as a Female Judge and Underground Educator Under the Soviets, the Taliban, and the Americans". William & Mary Journal of Women and the Law. 12 (1): 205–238. Retrieved 18 September 2015.
  2. "Afghan Judge in Tangle Over Her Uncovered Hair". Toronto Star. 26 December 2002. Retrieved 18 September 2015 via Newspaper Source – EBSCOhost.
  3. "Contested Terrain: The Future of Afghan Women". International Security. May 2015. Retrieved 18 September 2015.
  4. "Project for Afghan Women's Leadership: Afghan Women Leaders Speak" (PDF). Mershon Center for International Security Studies. Ohio State University. November 2005. Retrieved 13 September 2015.
  5. "Marzia Basel". Wise Muslim Women. Women's Islamic Initiative in Spirituality and Equality. Retrieved 18 September 2015.
  6. Kitch, Sally L. (2014). Contested Terrain: Reflections With Afghan Women Leaders. Champaign, Illinois: University of Illinois Press. pp. 27–30, 84, 181–186. ISBN 978-0-252-09664-8.
  7. Mills, Margaret A. (2006). "'Afghan Women Leaders Speak': An Academic Activist Conference, Mershon Center for International Security Studies, Ohio State University, November 17–19, 2005". NWSA Journal. 18 (3): 191–201. Retrieved 18 September 2015.
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