Posts from — September 2007
First Victims of Freedom
In “First Victims of Freedom”, Amy DePaul interviews Iraq’s most tenacious feminist , Yanar Mohammed, founder of the Organization of Women’s Freedom in Iraq, about why she says the U.S. war and its aftermath have completely disenfranchised women in the country. [Read more →]
September 19, 2007 No Comments
If I Arise: Talking with Malalai Joya, Afghanistan’s Youngest Revolutionary
On December 17, 2003, a 26-year-old woman named Malalai Joya joined hundreds of others in a large tent in Kabul, Afghanistan, to adopt a new constitution for their war-torn nation. The gathering, called a Loya Jirga (traditional grand assembly), was dominated by U.S.-backed warlords who were responsible for mass slaughter and violence in the 1980s and early 1990s. Malalai Joya was present as an elected delegate from the remote Farah province in western Afghanistan. [Read more →]
September 18, 2007 No Comments
Fight! Profile: Lakota Harden
Lakota Harden (Minnecoujou/Yankton Lakota & HoChunk,) is an orator, activist, community organizer, workshop facilitator, radio host and poet. She has dedicated her life, as a daughter of seven generations of Lakota leaders, to liberation and justice. Harden first became an accomplished speaker as a youth and representative of the early American Indian Movement’s “We Will Remember” Survival School on the Pine Ridge reservation, established out of the 1973 Wounded Knee occupation. She has continued her activism over the years, working with the International Indian Treaty Council (IITC), Women of All Red Nations (WARN) and the Black Hills Alliance. [Read more →]
September 16, 2007 No Comments
Postcards from Tora Bora
At the height of the Cold War, the Osman family frantically escapes from Afghanistan while leaving almost everything behind. In the ensuing chaos, their only suitcase filled with family photos is stolen. [Read more →]
September 16, 2007 No Comments
In Her Twilight, 91-Year-Old Activist Shines Brighter Than Ever
In a two-story brick house with red trim and a leaky roof, Grace Lee Boggs, 91, is plotting revolution.
That in itself is nothing new. She’s been doing the same from this very house for 45 years. It was here, at the corner of Field and Goethe on Detroit’s east side, that Grace and her husband James midwifed the birth of the black power movement — producing pamphlets, manifestos and books on racism, class struggle and revolution, creating one organization after another bent on making it happen, and turning their living room into a crossroads for generations of black radicals. [Read more →]
September 5, 2007 No Comments