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Afghanistan - Annual report 2008 From Reporters Without Borders For Press Freedom: Afghanistan, which has been destabilised by an increasingly violent civil war, finds it difficult to protect its journalists.   Details...      FSR elects new Board of Directors In keeping with our model of building self-reliance, a new team of SF Bay Area Afghan American youth have taken over the helm of FSR.  Details...      Conflict threatens access to children by humanitarian organizations in Afghanistan KABUL, Afghanistan, 8 July 2008 Special Representative of the Secretary-General for Children and Armed Conflict Radhika Coomaraswamy (left) and UNICEF's Director of Emergency Programmes Louis-Georges Arsenaul have completed a five-day tour of Afghanistan.  Details...      AFGHANISTAN: 1.5 million "severely" hit by drought KABUL, 17 July 2008 (IRIN) - At least 1.5 million people in 19 of Afghanistan's 34 provinces - mostly farming communities in the north - have been severely affected by drought and are in need of urgent humanitarian relief, an Afghan minister told IRIN. Read the full report...  Details...      Need for Survival Fuels Sex Work, High Birth Rate Kills Mothers in Afghanistan feminist wire | daily newsbriefs: July 21, 2008. Women and young girls are being pushed to commercial sex work due to high food prices and widespread unemployment in Afghanistan. High fertility rates, poor health services, and a high maternal mortality rate compound these issues.  Details...      AFGHANISTAN: High birth rate killing mothers, infants - UNFPA expert KABUL, 14 July 2008 (IRIN) - Afghanistan has the highest fertility rate in Asia - 6.7 - which not only means the deaths of thousands of young mothers and infants every year but also poses long-term challenges, an expert of the UN Population Fund (UNFPA) warned.  Read the full report...   Details...      Afghanistan continues to suffer... ...from a pervasive culture of impunity and a weak rule of law. Read the full 2008-2009 OHCRH report...   Details...      Alarm Bells in Afghanistan 07/18/2008. Center for American Progress. Caroline Wadhams & Colin Cookma. Reprinted from e-Ariana. The forgotten war in Afghanistan has once again leapt back into the news with disturbing reports of rising international casualties and large-scale Taliban offensives in the south. Read the full article...  Details...       --= NFSP =--      AFGHANISTAN: Food prices fueling sex work in north? MAZAR-I-SHARRIF, 16 July 2008 (IRIN) - High food prices, drought, unemployment and lack of socio-economic opportunities are pushing some women and young girls in northern Afghanistan into commercial sex work, women’s rights activists and several affected women told IRIN. Read the full report....   Details...      
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The Afghan Freedom Quilt - Silenced Voices of the Afghan Diaspora PDF Print E-mail
Afghan Freedom Quilt ProjectView the Afghan Freedom Quilt
Weavings of War exhibit
July 17 - September 23, 2007

View photos of the quilt project! We are currently editing, and posting a pictorial history of the quilt, so check back often for new images.

FREMONT -- Between the stitches in the Afghan Freedom Quilt are stories of three decades of war, struggle and survival, of hope and sorrow.

Whitney Chadwick, noted SF State art historian and author of the widely used text Women, Art and Society, reflects on the quilt: " In recent years, many women have responded to the world around them by searching for forms of creative expression that document and express aspects of loss, trauma, reconciliation or renewal. Sometimes the sources of the trauma are personal, rooted in the conditions of an individual’s life and/or psychic reality. At other times the sources of the trauma are to be found in historical events. Often the work that grows out of experiences of loss, longing, war, famine, dislocation, etc. is motivated by a sense of urgency, a desire to give form to painful experiences, to resist erasure, and to ensure that memory is given form and meaning in the physical world. Women have chosen many media as vehicles for communicating personal and collective histories, but perhaps none has served them as well as needlework. With its long history, its existence as both a personal and a collective expression, its links to materials and processes that have been necessary for the survival of individuals, families and cultures, needlework has often given visible form to women’s pain, hope and joy. The Afghan Freedom Project takes its place in the multiple histories through which women have made their lives and stories visible and enduring. To give form to the experiences that most deeply mark one is a sign of courage and a marker of faith in the future. The Afghan Quilt Project speaks powerfully to that courage and that faith." Whitney Chadwick, July 21, 2006.

Faith Ringgold, whose painted story quilts are part of the permanent collection of many museums including the Studio Museum in Harlem, the Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, The Metropolitan Museum of Art, and The Museum of Modern Art, comments: “I am deeply touched by the fact that so many American women have reached out to Afghan women to heal and build hope for a bright future with peace and freedom for all. The Afghan Freedom Quilt Project is such a project and it has my sincere hope for on going success.” Faith Ringgold, July 26, 2006.

History of the Quilt

The Afghan Freedom Quilt, a collaborative sewing/fundraising project, began in July 2003.

During the summer of 2003, Afghan American women traveled to Afghanistan, gathered contributions for the quilt, then brought them back to Fremont, CA.

Over the past few years, women met once or twice a month in Fremont, CA to work on the assembly of the quilt. The quilt was finished on April 09, 2006.

The quilt is a mixed media collage of images from war widows in Afghanistan and the San Francisco Bay Area. It has joined the hearts and hands of local Afghan American refugee women with the hearts and hands of the women they left behind in Afghanistan.

Pieces sewn for this amazing quilt are symbolic interpretations of what human rights, empowerment, equality, peace, hardship, sisterhood, and freedom meant to the individual contributor.

MAKE A DONATION

E-Booklet and CD
We are in the process of writing and publishing an e-booklet and CD that share photos and narratives about the women in Afghanistan who contributed squares for the quilt, and the refugee women who have been assembling the quilt in Fremont.

With the assistance of Moira Roth, Trefethen Professor of Art History at Mills College, notable academic art historians are writing a collage of reflective paragraphs to be included in the booklet introduction.


VOLUNTEERS HELPING COMPLETE THE QUILT BOOKLET INCLUDE:


Nicole Clausing - freelance writer and editor
Oakland, CA
Clause and Effect
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510.384.7573

Kasturi Rangam - photographer
Santa Clara, CA
Kasturi Photography
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408.980.9680

► Debra Tremper - epublisher
Fredericksburg, VA
Six Penny Graphics
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540.891.7704

For more information about the Quilt project, contact:
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