Act Together: Women's Action for Iraq
We are a group of UK-based Iraqi and non-Iraqi women. We formed in 2000 to campaign against the economic sanctions on Iraq and, since late 2001, also campaigned against the US/US invasion of Iraq. Now our focus is on the occupation and the support of independent grassroots women’s initiatives in Iraq.

Further information on issues relating to women in Iraq:
Womens League for Peace and Freedom's WOMEN, PEACE AND SECURITY: IRAQ

 

An appeal, May 2008:

SARWA ABDUL WAHAB AL DARWISH

Sarwa Abdul Wahab Al Darwish was a 36 year-old Iraqi journalist from Mosul. On May 4th, Sarwa was in a taxi returning from the market with her mother. The car was stopped and she was dragged out by two men who attempted to kidnap her. Sarwa screamed and struggled against her would-be abductors. So they shot her twice in the head and drove away. Read the full appeal here.


Recent events:

Open Shutters

10 March 2008, 6-8:30pm
Khalili Lecture Theatre, SOAS, Russell Square, London

Act Together: Women’s Action for Iraq invites you to join us in marking International Women’s Day 2008.

In the context of the ongoing occupation and escalating violence against women in Iraq, Act Together organized an event to share experiences and stories about and by Iraqi women. Presented were photos and narratives by a group of 8 Iraqi women – and a six year old child – who participated in a unique creative event in the spring of 2007. Using digital photography, the women set out at considerable risk to make deeply personal and emotional photo stories of their lives in Iraq, now.

The event was sponsored by the Centre for Gender Studies, SOAS.

 


Recent reports about women in Iraq:
April 2006: Iraqi Women Under Siege: A Report by CODEPINK and Global Exchange shows that from 1958 to the 1990s, Iraq provided more rights and freedoms for women and girls than most of its neighbors. Though Saddam Hussein's dictatorial government and 12 years of severe sanctions reduced these opportunities, Iraqi women were active in all aspects of their society. After the occupation, with the exception of women in Iraqi Kurdistan, women's daily lives have been reduced to a mere struggle for survival.

February 2005: Iraq: Decades of suffering, Now women deserve better, a report by Amnesty International, shows that Iraqi women continue to live with violence & fear. Women have been targeted and abused by US-led forces and insurgents, many are forced to stay at home, and they struggle economically. Female Genital Mutilation, honour crimes and domestic violence have been on the increase in the context of general violence and lawlessness.


Speeches, books & articles:

Iraqi Women: Untold Stories from 1948 to the Present
by Nadje Sadig Al-Ali (founder member of Act Together)

Zed Books, 2007

The war in Iraq has put the condition of Iraqi women firmly on the global agenda. For years, their lives have been framed by state oppression, economic sanctions and three wars. Now they must play a seminal role in reshaping their country’s future for the twenty-first century.

Nadje Al-Ali challenges the myths and misconceptions which have dominated debates about Iraqi women, bringing a much needed gender perspective to bear on the central political issue of our time. She traces the political history of Iraq from post-colonial independence, to the emergence of a women’s movement in the 1950s and Saddam Hussein’s early policy of state feminism. The book also discusses the increases in social conservatism, domestic violence and prostitution, and shows that, far from being passive victims, Iraqi women have been, and continue to be, key political actors. Following the invasion and occupation, al-Ali analyses the impact of Islam on women’s lives and argues that US-led calls for liberation may in the long term serve to oppress the women of Iraq further.
See more on the book.

Read review in Dar Al Hayat
Read review in Le Monde diplomatique

See here for articles written by members of Act Together

See more on Act Together's involvement with the CODEPINK initiative - Women Say No To War

See here for the call for submissions for a project about daily life in Iraq under occupation.

See here for a list of grassroots organisations working in Iraq that need support.

See more on all Act Together activities

OUR LIFE IN PIECES
Objects and Stories from Iraqis in Exile

A document of this exhibition is now viewable on-line. Click here......