Shad Begum: How women in Pakistan are creating political change
Shad Begum is a women's rights activist working for the economic and political empowerment of women and youth in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, a province in the northwest of Pakistan. Full bio
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at a local level in Pakistan,
in the political process.
to the place I was raised,
until its merger with Pakistan in 1969.
reserved the right to wear white,
and one percent of girls
and he sent me to school.
when my lessons finished.
and a well-respected community leader.
to the social and political gatherings
about our social and economic problems.
to the public gatherings.
and my place was in the home.
they were happy with this decision.
and not be involved.
that my father could reconnect me
and together we could resolve them.
with women and girls
their problems together.
and views with them.
with these women and girls,
to create a better life
and their families,
to come and help us.
for women empowerment.
to work with me.
had to leave once they got married,
wouldn't let them work.
was given away by her family
her brother had committed.
to continue my struggle.
bearing this brutality.
instead of giving up,
I faced throughout this process, I won.
office for six years.
together with all the members
ladies-only room,
was happening in the council.
was access to clean drinking water.
these women faced.
in the two dried up wells in my locality.
for over 5,000 families.
with other elected women members,
with all the members in the council.
and planning and budgeting,
means no one is fighting for you.
from where I'm here with you today.
will resonate with you,
in miles and in our cultures.
of half a population with them.
of their loved ones from the streets.
for the betterment of their communities
behind with my in-laws.
and relocated to Peshawar,
kept thinking what to do next.
of internally displaced persons,
almost every day,
to their place of origin.
health care units,
over 10,000 women and children
all these visits,
attention towards women's needs.
what is the reason behind it.
of the underrepresentation of women
in our society as a whole.
women's political leadership
political representation,
voice in their future.
potential women and youth
planning and budgeting.
skill development and safe drinking water.
their problems together.
of the women I have been working with:
in Lower Dir, and she won.
infrastructure schemes.
infrastructure schemes ...
too, we can do it.
leading towards girls schools,
to these schools,
of the young leaders forum we established.
for the public office,
female journalist of our region.
and girls' issues and their rights.
they are the living examples
and representation.
women voters in Dir.
during the general elections,
showing up and making it absolutely clear
in building women's leadership.
women in business
making important decisions.
to make herself heard.
every waking moment of my life
to live her full potential.
other young women together,
that benefit all.
can change the world.
ABOUT THE SPEAKER
Shad Begum - Women's rights activistShad Begum is a women's rights activist working for the economic and political empowerment of women and youth in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, a province in the northwest of Pakistan.
Why you should listen
Deeply influenced by the social inequalities around her and inspired by her father's social work in her early years, Shad Begum has become a nationally and internationally known figure because of her determined struggle to improve the conditions of the marginalized segments, especially women, of her community in the northwest of Pakistan -- a deeply religious and conservative area where Taliban publicly execute men and women for nonconformity to their version of Islam. Begum is the founder and executive director of the nonprofit Association for Behaviour & Knowledge Transformation (ABKT), an organization working toward the economic and political empowerment of communities in underserved areas of Pakistan. Her organization was uprooted during the Taliban takeover in Swat due to massive displacement of people in 2009-2010. Against enormous odds, her resilience kept ABKT alive.
Begum previously worked with the UN Human Settlements Program as a consultant for the Building Gender Ladder Project as well as with UNDP's Women Political Participation Program. To encourage women at the grassroots level, she contested local elections in 2001 as an independent candidate and served as councilor for five years in Dir Lower. Begum is an Ashoka fellow, a Reagan-Fascell Democracy Fellow at National Endowment for Democracy and an Acumen Fellow. She won the US Department of State's International Woman of Courage Award in 2012.
Shad Begum | Speaker | TED.com