Marzia grew up under the Taliban and was not allowed to go to school. She was a carpet weaver. Her husband, also an illiterate weaver, joined the army but was killed in 2010. They had two children. ‘For the 40-day mourning period I stayed with my in-laws then I moved to my parents' house. I can’t live on my own, I don't have a job. People think when a woman becomes a widow she becomes loose and immoral. They think we are like a pot with no lid, uncovered and ready to do anything. I can’t remarry because my in-laws might take my children away. My son is six. I've admitted him to school. I want him to fulfil his father's dreams. Whenever he went on duty he said, ‘If anything happens to me, don't let my son be illiterate. I want him to become an engineer or a doctor.’
Afghanistan: The war widows
Written by Super User 24 Jul 2014Additional Info
- Pray: for the war widows struggling to find food and raise their children, particularly after NATO leave the country later this year. Pray for the NGO’s to be effective in touching the lives of the vulnerable. (Ja.1:27
- More: http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/magazine-28363211