Sabiha al-Shaykh Da'ud

Sabiha al-Shaykh Da'ud (1912–1975) was Iraq's first female lawyer and a prominent women's rights activist.[1]

Sabiha al-Shaykh Da'ud

Life

Da'ud's father Ahmad al-Shaikh Da'ud was among the Iraqi leaders arrested during the 1920 Iraqi revolt and subsequently exiled. Her mother, Na'ima Sultan Hamuda, was also politically active: in 1919 she encouraged Gertrude Bell to provide education for girls, in 1920 she headed a Baghdad women's committee to support the revolt, and in 1923 she was one of the founding members of the Women's Awakening Club.[2]

Da'ud was one of the first girls to receive a public education in Iraq. In 1936, she became the first female to study law at Iraq's College of Law, though she was forced to sit separately from her male classmates.[3] She was active in the Iraqi Women's Union, a nationalist women's organization. She was a director of two of its constituent organizations since the 1940s, and became vice president of the Union in the early 1950s. Her history of the Iraqi women's movement was used as the main source of The Awakened by Doreen Ingrams, the first extended English-language treatment of the women's movement in Iraq.[2]

Works

  • Awwal al-Tariq Ila al-Nahda al-Niswiyya fi al-'Iraq (The Beginning of the Road Towards Women's Awakening in Iraq)[4]

See also

References

  1. Fernea, Elizabeth Warnock (2010-12-29). In Search of Islamic Feminism. Knopf Doubleday Publishing Group. ISBN 9780307773852.
  2. Noga Efrati, The other ‘awakening’ in Iraq: the women’s movement in the first half of the twentieth century, ‘’British Journal of Middle Eastern Studies’’, Vol. 31, No. 2, pp.153-173
  3. Beitler, Ruth Margolies; Martinez, Angelica R. (2010). Women's Roles in the Middle East and North Africa. Greenwood Press. ISBN 9780313362408.
  4. Ali, Zahra (2018-08-31). Women and Gender in Iraq: Between Nation-Building and Fragmentation. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 9781108126113.


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