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#pakistani women
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Hello,
So each month we're going to be withdrawing how much we've raised. This month we've raised $171. While this wasn't our goal, it wasn't so bad.
My friend really appreciated all the donations you've given and we really hope this month it will pick up. In order to keep up a consistent monthly payment to my friend while she saves up to escape with her mother and sister, we're going to increase the amount little by little till we get what we need for them.
This month's new goal is $350. We really hope that we can get more donations this month especially. I'll be updating you further on how it goes. Thank you to all who donated and gave support!
I wish you all a Happy Eid and a joyful coming 4th of July,
Sana
Currently, we're at $201/$350
Let's keep the momentum going! Keep Sharing and Keep Supporting by giving whatever you can!
Thank you
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cozmicangel · 9 months
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You make me do
Fatima Jinnah
Known as Madar-e-Millat or mother of the nation. She was crucial in the Pakistan's fight for independence.
And founded Jinnah Medical College for Girls.
Too much labour
Yasmeen Lari
Pakistan's first female architect. She went from designing shiny corporate structures such as Karachi's finance and trade center.
To helping build shelters for those affected by earthquakes (since 2005) with the resources they had available.
All day everyday
Zennat Haroon Rashid
Founding member of the Woman's national guard in Pakistan.
Her daughter created the "Zeenat Haroon Rashid Writing Prize for Women" in her honour. Which works to support women who want to pursue writing as a career.
Therapist Mother Maid
Azra Haq
A member of the Woman's national guard in Pakistan who helped to support and aid women who had been abandoned during the partition.
Nympth and a virgin
Sheherezade Alam
A renowned ceramist who themed her work around the earth. Founder of LAAL, an artistic movement to promote and preserve Pakistani art and culture.
Nurse than a servant
Mehnaz Rafi
One of the first members of the Woman's Action Forum (WAF) who worked to help woman fight for their rights.
Just an apandage
Madeeha Gauhur
Pakistani actress, playwright and director. Founded the Ajoka theatre in 1984, which stages social themes in theatres, on the street and other places in the public.
Live to attend him
Bapsi Sidhwa
Pakistani world renowned author, essayist and playwright. Well known for her novels which reflect her personal experiences of Partition, her life in Lahore, diasporic stories, identity etc.
So that he never lifts a finger
Begum Ra’ana Liaqat Ali Khan
The 1st First Lady of Pakistan, became the first Muslim female delegate to United Nations. In 1954, she became the first woman ambassador of Pakistan and was sent to Netherlands. In 1973, she became the first female governor of Sindh and later on, the first Chancellor of Karachi University and Sindh University.
Begum Ra’ana was awarded Nishan-e-Imtiaz. She was also given Order of Merit of Italian Republic, Order of Orange Nassau, Netherlands and the UN Human Rights Award 1978.
24/7 baby machine
Dr Sania Nishtar
She is the Special Assistant to the Prime Minister of Pakistan on Poverty Alleviation and Social Protection and the Leader of Global Health and Sustainable Development.
Since 2018, Dr Sania has been the leader of the poverty reduction program in Pakistan called Ehsas, which strives to provide livelihood and improve the social situation of many people in the country.
So he can live out
Muniba Mazari Baloch
Due to suffering a spinal cord injury at 21, Muniba used it as fuel to encourage women and girls that have experienced discrimination or violence to not fear or fight the pain.
She is as Pakistan’s first National Ambassador.
His picket fence dreams
Asma Jahangir
Pakistani politician, lawyer, and human rights activist. She chaired the Bar Association of the Supreme Court. She has won numerous awards for her work on human rights, including the Martin Ennals Award.
It's not an act of love if you make her
Tahira Qazi
A beloved Pakistani principle who was held hostage at her school with her students by terrorists.
Although she had the opportunity to escape and save her own life, she chose to save her students.
"They are my children and I am their mother.”
She fought for them but unfortunately lost her life that day, on December 16th 2014.
You make me do too much labour
Malala Yousafzai
Pakistani activist for women's rights to education. Fighting for her right to education since she was a child, getting shot in the head by the Taliban for her efforts.
She continues to fight and was the youngest person to be awarded a Nobel peace prize.
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indizombie · 1 year
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There is already a significant pay gap between men and women in most countries. In the US, for example, 2022 data shows that for every US dollar a median man working full time makes, a median woman earns about 83 cents. In the UK, using the same parameters, the gap is marginally smaller, at about 85 pence to the British pound. According to the United Nations, the global gap is about 77 cents to the dollar, predominantly driven by women being under-represented in decision-making roles, doing more unpaid work than men and being over-represented in lower skilled and lower income work. Discrimination may also factor in, but that’s something that’s hard to measure and often difficult to prove, meaning that it can persist for years unnoticed. Yet women of colour earn even less. Research from the Center for American Progress (CAP), for example, showed that in the US, Hispanic women earned just 57 cents for every $1 earned by white, non-Hispanic men in 2020. For black women in the US, the wage gap may be responsible for an average of $976,800 in lost wages over a 40-year career, while resulting in losses of $1.15m for Latinas and $1.08m for Native American women. In the UK, ONS data shows Pakistani women earned about 69 pence for each pound earned by a man. As women of colour lose their opportunities for advancement and workforce tenure, it will be challenging to close this earnings gap, and enable them to gain footing in pay equality.
Josie Cox, ‘The perfect storm keeping women of colour behind at work’, BBC
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stablediffusionxl · 10 days
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Pakistani woman 🇵🇰
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abwwia · 1 month
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Misha Japanwala is a visual artist and fashion designer of Pakistani origin. Japanwala created art work dedicating to women rights in Pakistan, and her art has been featured in Vogue and V Magazine. In June 2021 Japanwala designed breast plates for American rapper Lizzo's music video "Rumors". Via W
Japanwala was born in London, but to a family from Karachi, and was brought up in Islamabad in a liberal family background. She graduated from the New York Parsons school of Design in 2018 and works in New York City.
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rania-zara · 5 months
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Buy Soraya Dress from Rania Zara
The Soraya collection from Rania Zara is a stunning embodiment of timeless elegance and intricate craftsmanship. Each piece in the Soraya collection is a masterpiece of design, meticulously crafted with the finest materials and adorned with exquisite embellishments.
The Soraya collection features a diverse range of luxurious fabrics, with a focus on silks, velvets, and brocades. These opulent fabrics are meticulously embellished with intricate embroidery, hand-stitched beads, and shimmering sequins. The result is a collection of garments that are both breathtakingly beautiful and exquisitely detailed.
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weepingwidar · 16 days
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Nadia Waheed (Pakistani, 1992) - A Fundamental Archetype (2023)
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Video
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GulAhmed Lawn and Saya Lawn - Branded Pakistani Lawn in USA and worldwide
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soracities · 21 days
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Ankita Saxena, on her translation of Fahmida Riaz's poem "A Woman Is Laughing", pub. Modern Poetry in Translation [ID'd]
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mehreenkhan · 1 year
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I just think that Nadia Jamil in the 90s
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xubsurat · 18 days
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Durefishan
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menalez · 1 year
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obsessed
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grapeszn · 1 year
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daakvaak: Love this painting of two women lost in intimate conversation by Abdur Rahman Chughtai Image: University of Toronto Archives
(via daakvaak on IG)
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dykefaggotry · 10 months
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any brown man: h-
every white woman in a 10 mile radius: PEDRO PASCAL??? OMG HAS ANYONE TOLD YOU YOU LOOK LIKE PEDRO PASCAL? HE LOOKS JUST LIKE PEDRO PASCAL. PEDRO PASC-
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thenerdsofcolor · 9 days
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‘We Are Lady Parts' Returns to Peacock in May for Season 2
Nida Manzoor’s masterpiece of a show starring Muslim women of color makes its long-awaited return. Three years after its debut, We Are Lady Parts will return for a second season on Peacock on May 30. Continue reading ‘We Are Lady Parts’ Returns to Peacock in May for Season 2
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