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Rabia Zahir, political ambitions
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| photo:Jon Gardiner |
By the time Rabia Zahir was only ten years
old, she had already lived in six different countries and through
two wars. Born in 1983 in Kabul, Afghanistan, she moved with her
family to India when she was five to escape the Afghan civil war.
Shortly after their arrival, her father was appointed the Afghani
ambassador to Kuwait, and the family followed him to Kuwait City.
Then came the first Gulf War. "I distinctly remember the beginning
of the war," she says. "We were going to a picnic lunch
that we had every Friday. All of a sudden, my sister came running
out and said that she had seen helicopters with Iraqi flags on
their bellies." Zahir's family rushed inside to watch the
news and learned that the Iraqi army had invaded.
Although she and her family were never threatened with violence,
it was still a difficult period for Zahir. "I remember having
no electricity or water for months."
She also remembers the Iraqi army's burning of Kuwait's oil fields. "The
sky went black for many days. It was like nighttime throughout
the entire day."
Soon after the war ended, Zahir's father was appointed ambassador
to Italy, and the family moved again. However, an increasing number
of warlords began vying for the presidential appointment, and her
father resigned after only eleven months. The family relocated
once again--this time to northwest Pakistan, close to their still-unstable
native country.
Zahir attended school in Pakistan for ten years and intended to
become a doctor. But when she was nineteen, her father died, and
Pakistan became unsafe for her and her family. "Because of
the paternal culture," she says, "it is very difficult
to live alone in Pakistan without a male member in the family." A
family without a father or other male relative is looked down on
and viewed as vulnerable, she explains. They received threatening
phone calls and letters, and their house was repeatedly burgled.
These difficulties, coupled with financial trouble and serious
concerns about the feasibility of living in Pakistan, forced Zahir
to abandon her medical studies for computer science, which was
less expensive and required less schooling. Soon after, however,
Afghanistan regained some stability, and the family took advantage
of the opportunity to return home to Kabul.
She worked in Kabul for about a year. Then, one day, she received
an e-mail message from her cousin about an organization called
the Initiative to Educate Afghan Women that was looking for women
interested in higher education. "I was intrigued," she
recalls, "so I sent my rÈsumÈ to them." Six
months and a handful of interviews later, she was accepted into
the program. She began filling out papers for Duke shortly thereafter.
A freshman, Zahir plans to use her time at Duke as a launching
pad for Afghan politics, which have been historically closed to
women. "This might sound slightly unreasonable," she
says, "but my ultimate dream is to be the president of Afghanistan.
I am setting high goals for myself because I believe that if you
are in politics, you can make more changes in less time."
She says that she also feels a sense of responsibility to her country.
She comes from a family of leaders and wishes to continue that
legacy.
And, she says, she believes that in her lifetime Afghanistan will
elect a female president. "I'm willing to wait," she
says. "I think that Afghanistan will be ready one day, at
least by the time I'm sixty."
----Matt Dearborn '07
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