Asma al-Zahawi

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Asma al-Zahawi, was an Iraqi women's rights activist. [1] She belonged to the pioneer generation of the first organized women's movement in Iraq.

Asma al-Zahawi was the daughter of the mufti Mohammad Fedi Al Zahawi and the sister of the poet and Professor Jamil Sidqi al-Zahawi. In 1923 her brother helped her to publish the first women's magazine in Iraq, Layla , [2] which was edited by Paulina Hassoun.

In 1923 she was one of the group of sixty elite women to became one of the co-founders of the first women's organization in Iraq, the Women's Awakening Club, and served as its president. [3] As the leader of the Women's Awakening Club, she campaigned against seclusion and for women's education and professional life.

References

  1. Al-Ali, N., Pratt, N. (2009). What Kind of Liberation? Women and the Occupation of Iraq. Ukraina: University of California Press.
  2. Zangana, H. (2011). City of Widows: An Iraqi Woman's Account of War and Resistance. USA: Seven Stories Press.
  3. Al-Tamimi, H. (2019). Women and Democracy in Iraq: Gender, Politics and Nation-Building. Indien: Bloomsbury Publishing.