An effort by the author to compile and select articles and West and east together to present real texture of modern women, this volume represents 25 identified subjects who have written on the subject of women issues in different societies.
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The story of
Kishwar Naheed
Kishwar Naheed was born in 1940 to a Syed family in Bulandshahr, British India. After the partition, she migrated to Lahore, Pakistan with her family in 1949. Kishwar was a witness to the violence (including rape and abduction of women) associated with the partition of India. The bloodshed at that time left a lasting impression on her at a tender age. As a young girl, Kishwar was inspired by the girls who had started going to Aligarh Muslim University in those times. The white kurta and white gharara under a black burqa that they wore looked so elegant to her and she wanted to go to college, to educate herself.
She finished Adeeb Fazil degree in Urdu and also learned the Persian language. She had become a voracious reader in her teenage years and read everything that she chanced upon — ranging from the works of Dostoyevsky to the English dictionary published by Neval Kishore Press.