Damage on Broca’s area. Speak without using connection words, they can express situations but not in a fluent way. In addition is unable to produce the language to match the thought. The individual can get frustrated.…
Sam Robert’s article, “A Decade of Fear,” discusses the various ways McCarthyism' turned American against American in the decade after World War II.the U.S believed that McCarthyism was only proof of a question as if the government and citizens were loyal to america during war.for example during world war 2 many japanese americans were put in internment camps believing they would support Japan in the war. The US put people in camps cause they feared people would trade them and be used as spyce. The fear of communism started in 1949 when communist mao zedong took over china and the soviet union that created fear on the us cause they thought the soviet union had stolen technology files.…
Kiveat and Heidler pair portraits of Afghani women with a short interview about their live in Afghanistan before, during and after the overthrow of the Taliban in their book “Women of Courage: Intimate Stories from Afghanistan.” An interview is conducted with a housewife who burned herself, flight attended, photojournalist, actress, saleswomen, filmmaker, abused wife, presidential candidate and many more Afghani women. The book contains forty interviews with women from different walks of life. The author mentions in the introduction that three of the women have fallen victim since their portrait appeared. Extremists shot two of the women, and another one of them died giving birth to her first child. Kiviat argues that these women were “victim…
“Afghan’s womens movement officially began in 1921, when Kind Amanullah launched an emancipation program for women. The 1921 Family Code forebade child marriages, encouraged girls schools, and banned polygamy for government employees” (Morgan, 1984).…
Target Audience:This essay will apply to many people, specifically those who are born in Canada with parents who have immigrated from another country. “Are You Persian?,” is a humorous piece which explores the blending of two different cultures. In particular, children born in western countries with immigrant parents. However, it is not limited to one group of people, many people could share my experiences through their friends. Through examples and short stories the reader can develop a greater understanding of the Afghan culture. In addition, the piece addresses misconceptions about the Afghan culture. Although this piece speaks about the Afghan culture where readers can connect to my experience by relating similarities they have experienced in their homes.…
In Afghanistan, women are still routinely arrested and jailed for “running away” or for adultery, the current law does not recognize the crime rape, and the rate of forced marriages are sky rocketing. Any woman that dares to speak out or attempts to affect change incurs at best abuse and threats, at worse death. In this culture, if a woman is outspoken and involved in a political and social life then she is bound to be a victim of attack. The Patience Stone by Atiq Rahimi explores the ways through which personal and political oppression can be resisted through acts of self-revelation. I learned the violence that we are capable of imposing upon ourselves and others both in our personal as well as political and social relations.…
The majority of Americans are uninformed about the injustice of the Afghanistan women in the many recent years. The women in Afghanistan didn’t always have a burka hiding their face from others in public. There was a time when the women had a life very much like today’s ordinary American woman. In the book, The Dressmaker, we get to know of how oppression changes the lives of each and every person in a family along with the changes in their community. For the community of Kabul changes lead to a financial and economical struggle. The women’s lives are transformed after the Taliban take control of Kabul. The rights of women are stripped from them and they are left with basically nothing. This change in the lives of the women brings more responsibility…
In this country, discrimination of women and girls is a daily occurrence. During their childhood years 70% of girls do not even attend school, according to Swanson (Swanson & Swanson, 2011) a staggering 94% of female births are not even registered at their births. Boys are considered to be soldiers and at a young age are taught to kill. Afghan men believe all boys even at a young age are already considered to have a promiscuous nature and are encouraged to act on it.…
“Afghan Woman Prisoner,” a heart-throbbing article that opened my eyes into seeing what is really going on around the world, while I live a life where I worry about not liking certain food for supper. Ethnocentrism played a huge role in the article, especially the society of being a woman, living in a lost civilization in Afghanistan. Gulnaz was raped by her cousin’s husband, who “forced his way into her home, tied her up, and then raped her.” However, when courageous enough to report it to Afghan police, she was accused of adultery and sent to prison. Afghan were too proud of ruining their reputation, saving face was the only thing they can do to maintain their name in the village and so sending her to prison was their way of saving face.…
Discrimination is common among girls and women. Throughout early childhood, about 70 percent of school-age girls, do not attend school, while 94 percent of girls are not even registered births (Swanson & Swanson, 2011). The men are the soliders. They are taught at a young age how to kill. “in the minds of Afghan men, are already believed to be potentially (or likely) promiscuous” (Afghanistan, n.d).…
In Afghanistan women basically have no control over their lives. The author of the article states, “Up to 80 percent of marriages in poor rural areas are forced or arranged” (www.trustineducation.org). Forced marriage is a complete denial of human rights. Humans are given the constitutional right of free will. As humans these women should be able to choose if they want to get married, and who they marry. But that right is overwritten when their fathers decide to sell them off to other men. Afghan women are seen as objects that can be sold and bargained for by men. Another injustice stated by the author, “Married girls do not continue their education and remain illiterate” (www.trustineducation.org). After these women are forced to be married they are also forced to discontinue their education. Education is another right given to humans. Afghan women are forced to stop their education so they can get married and take care of the children they are expected to birth. It is assumed that they will not need an education because their husband will have one. This is an injustice because this leaves women uneducated and unable to progress in their future career. They are expected to stay home, clean, and take care of the children while the men provide for the family. The author also states, “Young wives also have low status in the family and are more likely to be abused by their husbands and/or in-laws”…
One reason women’s rights are restricted is the lack of education and illiteracy of Afghan women. Being illiterate prevents a woman from studying Islam. Therefore, when someone tells her something is Islamic, she automatically believes him because she has no way of knowing otherwise. Not only does illiteracy prevent Muslim women from studying Islam, but it also prevents them from studying their legal rights and the Qur’an. Studying the Qur’an and legal rights would cause women to understand what really is Islamic. Women may lack knowledge of how women live in other nations. Therefore, these women do not resist their lack of rights because they are uninformed of alternative lifestyles of women. In 1921, women’s…
I remember the annual summer vacation trips my family had to Afghanistan when I was a child. I could recall holding my mom’s hand while I walked around the bazaars wondering why so many women had thrown blue bed sheets on themselves in this humid weather. I asked my mom and she just laughed and told me it was a fashion statement. When I was older, I learned it was a burka and these women wore it in order to prevent the arousal of men. They oppressed themselves in fear of a distortion of Islam. I realized as an Afghan girl living in a patriarchal society I needed to show the world that I am independent and resilient. I strived to be an exemplar of self-sufficiency and demonstrate that I am no less than any man. This mindset of resistance and…
In the 1900s, life for women in Afghanistan was advanced and satisfying for Afghan women. There were many opportunities for females to form their own lives and live for themselves, with no men or law holding them back. However, once the Invasion of 1979 began, the Taliban began to rise seizing control of the government. Changing laws and restricting women’s life in educational, social, and governmental aspects, life for women became an everyday challenge. Now, women are being to grab the reigns of their life and take back their freedoms, but seem to find challenges on their way to success. The harsh rule and laws from the Taliban has set freedoms in Afghanistan backwards, poorly affecting all levels of Afghan society. Because of the Invasion of 1979 and the rule of the Taliban, Rights…
There is no wonder that we have an obesity epidemic in America. Food is everywhere we turn. Whether it’s sitting along the roadside, calling at you in bright colors from grocery store shelves, glowing in vending machines or even in the elaborate television commercials we watch. There is no way to escape from the never ending advertisements. This is where the epidemic of obesity begins. We as Americans consume more food portions than our body can handle and not enough physical activity, causing higher medical costs and a lower quality of life.…