SOCIETY — March 8, 2026
Afghan Writer Defends Continuing to Document Women's Struggles Despite Skepticism
In a Hasht-e Subh essay on International Women's Day, an Afghan writer recounts her resolve to document women's struggles despite a friend's skepticism that such efforts are pointless in a heedless world. She emphasizes persistence in amplifying silenced voices, noting growing solidarity.
The Ehtebar Desk — originates with Hasht-e Subh — 2 min read

International Women's Day on March 8 marks years of effort, suffering, and resilience by women who fought silently and emerged stronger, learning to raise their voices and break walls of silence. The author, reflecting on Afghan girls whose opportunities have been taken but whose dreams remain alive, recalls her first piece in 2025 about a young Afghan woman's story, written on March 5. This marked her commitment to amplify girls' voices and prevent their stories from fading into silence.
During that writing session, a friend messaged inviting her out, but the author prioritized finishing the piece. The friend questioned its value, asking what good writing does when no one reads or listens to Afghan girls' stories amid countless others, calling it a waste of time. The friend argued that without listeners, efforts are futile, no one will change the situation, and one must accept fate.
The author disagreed, asserting that even if stories go unread initially, there are people who will listen and join in solidarity. By persisting step by step, supporters will emerge, and voices will grow loud enough to demand attention, making support for women natural rather than taboo. She likened changing long-held slave mentalities to freeing a slave—far harder.
Last year, her friend remained unconvinced, and the author admits to moments of waning hope seeing women fight alone amid darkness and ignorance. However, reflecting now, she is glad she persisted. Women once alone now have more voices joining them, with increased solidarity. Though challenges remain, hope is stronger. The author remains committed to writing, even if unread many times, believing it may inspire a girl to realize she is not alone, ensuring no Afghan girl's story is lost to silence.
Read the original reporting at Hasht-e Subh →
Reliability assessment
Single-source personal opinion essay consisting of subjective reflections and an unverified anecdote about a private conversation; no independent corroboration, named officials, or checkable details.
The source language mixes facts with framing or advocacy wording. 'walls of silence to break' (emotional imagery of oppression); 'dreams still alive even if the world tries to extinguish them' (poetic advocacy framing resilience); 'freeing a slave is easy, but changing a slave mentality harder' (metaphorical judgment on societal mindsets).
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Hasht-e Subh
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Society — International Women's Day, Afghan women, women's rights, Hasht-e Subh
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