SOCIETY — March 8, 2026
Afghan woman describes renewed resolve on International Women's Day in Amu TV opinion piece
In an Amu TV opinion piece, an Afghan woman details overcoming despair from societal limits on women, inspired by the outlet's International Women's Day coverage to venture out and give red flowers to women as a symbol of defiance.
The Ehtebar Desk — originates with Amu TV — 2 min read

An opinion piece published by Amu TV on March 8 recounts a first-person narrative from an Afghan woman who expresses deep fatigue with restrictions limiting women to no schooling, no employment, no outdoor presence and no role in society. The author likens life to a divine theater script, where individuals must perform assigned roles without deviation or question, like actors bound by a predetermined scenario.
She describes resigning herself to this fate out of exhaustion and anger, pledging to lower her head and comply silently. However, Amu TV's coverage of International Women's Day the previous night stirred a dormant passion within her, evoking a pulsing vein and a "passion in the head" akin to that described by author Orhan Pamuk. This shattered her recently adopted beliefs, restoring her joy in womanhood and an inner vitality.
Her mother, previously alarmed by the author's uncharacteristic silence and obedience, showed relief through sparkling eyes and an unspoken query about her return to a lively, questioning, bookish and debate-loving self.
The author resolves to go outside, stare into men's eyes from beneath her face mask—not in enmity, but to reaffirm her right to walk, look and be seen in the city. She plans to find red flowers and give one to every woman and girl encountered in the streets, viewing it as a small personal symbol of life resisting scripted conformity.
"Maybe the world really is a theater stage," she writes. "But today I realized that sometimes the actor can also write a new scenario in their heart."
The piece clarifies that contributions in this section do not necessarily reflect Amu TV's views.
Read the original reporting at Amu TV →
Reliability assessment
Single-source personal essay; first-hand account of subjective feelings and planned personal actions lacks independent corroboration, named locations, or checkable details.
The source language mixes facts with framing or advocacy wording. Phrases like "so tired that sometimes I hated being a woman," "something ran under my skin," and "a passion in the head" use vivid emotional metaphors and personal anguish to frame resignation and revival, infusing advocacy into the narrative.
Across the newsrooms
Filed by
Amu TV
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Filed under
Society — International Women's Day, Afghan women, women's rights, Amu TV
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