Women's Rights & Issues
Related: About this forumAfghanistan's First Female Orchestra
Afghanistans First Female Orchestra
Zohra is Afghanistans first all-female orchestra featuring 30 musicians ages 14-20. Named after a Persian literature goddess of music, the orchestras founder, Ahmed Naser Sarmast, hopes they can help revive Afghanistans rich musical tradition that has been muted after decades of war. The orchestra members play European instruments including the piano, violin and oboe, as well as traditional South Asian instruments such as the sitar, the rubab and the tabla. They perform an eclectic mix of numbers ranging from Beethovens Ninth Symphony to traditional Afghan folk songs.
The orchestra is conducted by two young women, one of whom is Negin Khpolwak, a member of the conservative Pashtun ethnic group. When she was a child, her father brought her from their school-less village in the eastern province of Kunar to live in an orphanage in Kabul, where she was recruited to attend the Afghanistan National Institute of Music (ANIM).
Many of the orchestra members are students at ANIM in Kabul, where half of the slots are allotted to girls and homeless or orphaned students. As of now, the school is operated largely by Western educators off foreign donations, but Sarmast, the first Aghan to earn a doctorate in music, is slowly attempting to accumulate more Afghan faculty. This year, the girls won the 2017 Freemuse Award, which declared, With exceptional courage and dedication these young women are breaking new ground and have become important role models for any Afghan welcoming the return of music and the rights to exercise and take part in cultural life.
Security for the girls and the school is a major concern. Under Taliban rule, music was banned, musicians were exiled and girls education in music was forbidden. Even though the ban is lifted, some girls still face death threats from their own families. Sarmast says, We are working in an environment where we have millions of supporters, but we also have some very vocal enemies who are very much pro-Taliban minded.
. . . .
And now, the first female orchestra.
http://feminist.org/blog/index.php/2017/03/15/afghanistans-first-female-orchestra/
shenmue
(38,506 posts)littlemissmartypants
(22,853 posts)I love Afghanistan. Mes Aynak in particular. Thank you so much for this! ♡