Saturday, May 5, 2012

Ghada Shahbender: Egypt's Aunt Peaceful

By Isadora Bonilla, School of Authentic Journalism

When Ghada Shahbender talks about her life, she doesn’t focus on her work as a leader in Egypt´s civil resistance movement. Mainly she talks about those she loves as she describes herself as a mother, a sister, a wife and an aunt.

However, as Shahbender describes her life and work, she also talks about her “Tahrir family” – the people she organizes with and those lost in this nonviolent struggle for a Democratic Egypt and greater human rights. They, in turn, have special name for her: Khalti Silmya, or Aunt Peaceful.

“I have a huge family that I call my Tahrir family” (named for Tahrir Square, the epicenter of the 2011 revolution that brought down Hosni Mubarak after thirty years of his dictatorship) she says, noting that after almost one year of protests that have left more than 3,000 dead, she derives her strength from this family and those who have sacrificed for the struggle.

“´Freedom, dignity and social justice’ is the slogan of our revolution and until we get it we have to keep on going,” she told Narco News during the 2012 School of Authentic Journalism in Mexico, where she participated as a professor. “So is it painful? Yes. Scary? Yes. But will we continue? Yes. Otherwise all these deaths would have been for nothing.”

Although mainstream media made it seem as if Egypt´s civil resistance movement started when nonviolent protests broke out in Cairo´s Tahrir Square in late January 2011, Shahbender knows better.

Her interest in changing her country started about seven years ago when her four children were ages 16 to 22 years old. After a vote on an article in the Egyptian constitution, women who protested were attacked and sexually harassed by the police. Shahbender says she was surprised her children accepted the women being attacked, while she felt it was a direct attack to her values.


See also:

 Simple participation in Egyptian public life remains subject to undeclared prohibition. Ghada Shahbender describes the challenges faced by those who refuse silence

I search for words to describe and tell
Of that bleak unfamiliar picture of Cairo
That only I am seeing
But the words will not come to my rescue...

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