5 Badass Muslim Women Who Have Led Feminist Movements Around the World
I once was at the United Nations for a conference when one of the white attendees got up and declared that she was organizing a conference on abuse against Muslim and Arab women (they’re not the same thing, but who cares?).
She went on and on about how there is no platform for them to talk about the violence they experience — she felt it is was important that she organize something around it.
After the event, I made my way to her. I introduced myself and told her I was interested in learning about the conference and the speakers she has lined up.
I asked her if she had reached out to any women-run organizations in the Middle East or the Muslim world. Her answer was simple: “No, I’m not aware of any. I don’t think they’re mobilized enough.”
I wish I was speechless but, when you grow up watching TV and seeing people who don’t look like you constantly speaking about your experiences, it becomes the norm.
I casually threw some names out to her but she didn’t bother to write them down. I didn’t bother to follow up with her.
This was never meant for us, and we didn’t need her conference to uplift our voices (or the voices of those who don’t look like us but still speak for us).
This conversation led me to delving deeper into the women who mobilize everyday to create change in their communities. The ones who sometimes go unrecognized by Western feminists because they do not fit the oppressed weak image of a Muslim woman.
So now, let me share with you women who were amazing at leading movements, mobilized, and led change in their spaces.
I share this with you to extend to you an invitation into the worlds in which we already operate in. they have existed for centuries, working tirelessly, to find justice in the most courageous of ways.
1. Hind MakkiWhat started as a personal frustration at the limited spaces for women to pray at mosques, Hind Makki started a Tumblr and Facebook page documenting the differences spaces provided for women in mosques across the world.
This conversation has been happening for years, where Muslim women were growing frustrated at how tiny, unclean, and inaccessible the rooms and spaces provided for women mosque-goers are.
Her idea was to show the disparity between sections and sometimes, the beauty of some spaces who get it right. This project receives hundreds of submissions from around the world of women sending in their mosque experiences.
Hind started the project in 2012 after her friend was nearly kicked out of her mosque after being berated for daring to pray in the male prayer area because the designated women’s section was a hot, moldy basement.
“It is my optimistic belief that as more people see photos of the spaces women must pray in, and hear our stories, we will gain more male allies who will collaborate with us to improve the situation,” Hind states on her Tumblr.
Read more about Hind’s movement and project here.