Mona Eltahawy
Egyptian-American journalist
Mona Eltahawy (born August 1, 1967) is an Egyptian-American journalist and social commentator based in New York City. She has written essays and op-eds for publications internationally on Egypt and the Islamic world, on topics including women's rights, patriarchy, and Muslim political and social affairs.
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Quotes
edit- We are a racist people in Egypt and we are in deep denial about it. On my Facebook page, I blamed racism for my argument and an Egyptian man wrote to deny that we are racists and used as his proof a program on Egyptian Radio featuring Sudanese songs and poetry! Our silence over racism not only destroys the warmth and hospitality we are proud of as Egyptians, it has deadly consequences.
- "The Arab world's dirty secret", The New York Times (November 10, 2008).
- “Why do those men hate us? They hate us because they need us, they fear us, they understand how much control it takes to keep us in line, to keep us good girls with our hymens intact until it’s time for them to fuck us into mothers who raise future generations of misogynists to forever fuel their patriarchy. They hate us because we are at once their temptation and their salvation from that patriarchy, which they must sooner or later realize hurts them, too. They hate us because they know that once we rid ourselves of the alliance of State and Street that works in tandem to control us, we
will demand a reckoning.”[1]
- “When Westerners remain silent out of 'respect' for foreign cultures, they show support only for the most conservative elements of those cultures. Cultural relativism is as much my enemy as the oppression I fight within my culture and faith.”[2]
- “The most subversive thing a woman can do is talk about her life as if it really matters.”[3]
External links
editEncyclopedic article on Mona Eltahawy on Wikipedia