National Union of Algerian Women
You can help expand this article with text translated from the corresponding article in Swedish. (November 2022) Click [show] for important translation instructions.
|
The National Union of Algerian Women (UNFA) is a women's organization in Algeria, founded in 1943.[1]
The women's movement in Algeria originated in the liberation movement from French colonialism in the 1940s, when women were mobilized in the struggle and integrated in the political system. The two pioneer women's groups were the National Union of Algerian Women (UNFA), which was affiliated with the Algerian Communist Party (PCA), and the Association of Algerian Muslim Women (AFMA), founded in 1947 to mobilize women in support of political prisoners and their families.
The two women's groups both offered a more public role for women, which made it possible for them to leave traditional seclusion and participate in public life, but the contrasted from each other. The UFA included many women in all levels of the Algerian Communist Party, who advocated equality between men and women, both educational professional and political, while the AFMA mobilised women as well as men in the struggle from French colonialism, but expected women to step back from public life once independence from France had been won.[2]
References
- ^ Valentine Moghadam: Gender and National Identity: Women and Politics in Muslim Societies
- ^ Valentine Moghadam: Gender and National Identity: Women and Politics in Muslim Societies