Rural Women's Struggle for Empowerment: A Case Study of Sindhiani Tehreek (1982–2000)
- Authors
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WAQAR AHMAD
EST, IBA Sukkur Institute.Author
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- Keywords:
- Sindhyani Tehreek, Feminist Resistance, Rural Mobilisation, Feudalism, Cultural Identity, Sindh
- Abstract
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This research paper investigates the Sindhyani Tehreek (Women's Movement of Sindh) as a pivotal grassroots feminist initiative that took root in 1982 under the broader political umbrella of the Awami Tehreek. Focusing specifically on the two-decade span from 1982 to 2000, it meticulously scrutinizes the methods through which rural Sindhi women mobilized to confront the interlocking systems of entrenched feudal oppression, rigid patriarchal customs, and the severe political authoritarianism imposed by the Zia-ul-Haq military regime. Utilizing a methodological approach grounded in oral histories, primary archival records, and extensive secondary scholarly literature, this paper systematically reconstructs the movement's complex ideological evolution and assesses its enduring socio-political significance. The Sindhyani Tehreek is intentionally situated within the broader global discourse of South Asian feminist resistance, highlighting its unique and decisive emphasis on securing agrarian justice, universal education, and the implementation of genuine participatory democracy. This analysis posits that, unlike several contemporaneous urban feminist organizations that predominantly framed women's rights through relatively narrow legalistic and class-based lenses, the Sindhyani Tehreek strategically grounded its protracted struggle in genuinely indigenous idioms of resistance. These idioms were profoundly informed by the deep-seated tradition of Sufi egalitarianism and an assertive articulation of Sindhi cultural identity. By consciously bridging the local lived experience with the macro-political sphere, the movement successfully articulated a distinct and powerful feminist consciousness fundamentally rooted in the harsh, material realities of rural women's lives. Its rich and complex legacy continues to critically inform contemporary debates surrounding gender equity, democratic governance, and profound social transformation within Sindh and Pakistan as a whole.
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- Published
- 2025-12-01
- Issue
- Vol 23, Winter 2025
- Section
- Articles
- License
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Copyright (c) 2025 WAQAR AHMAD (Author)

This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License.
