Sunday, January 29, 2006
Tajik Girl Challenges 7-century Mindset by... Singing
Sometimes we cannot realize that heroes and heroines live side by side with us and, alas, usually we discover it after they demise.
But it's better to notice it right now that we got one of them alive, lively and young or as AFP reports from Kabul, "sultry", who succeeded to put an end to ages of women's imposed silence on the stage in Afghanistan - Manizhe Dowlat.
We must recognize it and thank her for such a rocking bravery. She had to overcome fears of a war-stricken country like Afghanistan swarmed with blind-minded "puritans" stuck in the 7th century and she did. She went to cure the wounds and maladies of her own Persian sisters and brothers in Kabul and Mazar-i Sharif as the first woman after woeful domination of Taleban and Taleban-alike beings to unvail her face, hair and tastefully dressed figure as a free human being, sing and dance to show a better way to enjoy one's life.
I don't care a button if any financial or vested interests were involved in this perilous adventure or not. It sounds really preposterous to indicate that issue here indeed. All professional performers use their talents as means of their financial independence and self-preservation. But not all of them were ready to face the challenge of visiting their stuck and hapless siblings to take some remedy of music and joy for their exhausted souls. This step for a young and attractive girl like Manizhe derives from some extents of selflessness as well. And the sense of patriotism too. I am proud of you indeed, Manizhe. Well done, sister!
PS. The AFP report is hidden in the title and could be visible by a click of yours. Although it goes a few days back, but good things never age.
Labels:
Afghanistan,
fanaticism,
music,
Tajikistan
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1 comment:
I only hope that the history will be less gender-biased hereafter and remember her heroism for the generations to come.
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