Since the Taliban’s return to power in August 2021, Afghanistan has witnessed a systematic dismantling of women’s rights. Girls are barred from secondary and higher education, women are excluded from most forms of employment, and public life is heavily restricted. This institutionalized oppression has been termed “gender apartheid” by human rights organizations, highlighting the regime’s deliberate efforts to erase women from public and private spheres.
Amid this despair, Batol Gholami, a courageous young activist from rural Baghlan province, emerged as a beacon of hope. Forced into exile but unyielding in her mission, Batol continues to lead the Afghanistan Youth Leaders Assembly (AYLA) — a grassroots volunteer organization she co-founded in 2019 dedicated to empowering Afghan women and youth, especially those in rural areas left behind by development. Her story is a testament to resilience, the enduring power of education, and the urgent need for global solidarity in ending gender apartheid in Afghanistan.
The Rise of Gender Apartheid in Afghanistan
Batol Gholami: A Voice from Baghlan
Batol Gholami is originally from Baghlan province, one of Afghanistan’s most underdeveloped and conservative regions. In her own words:
“I am from Baghlan province, one of the very undeveloped cities of Afghanistan. There were no educational opportunities, conferences, and programs like in developed provinces. For attending a very simple event I had to travel to the capital province and big cities of Afghanistan. Traveling was not easy for a young girl in such a society from the perspective of security as well.”
Faced with these hardships, Batol resolved to take action locally, not just wait for change elsewhere. In 2019, alongside students from different provinces, she co-founded the Afghanistan Youth Leaders Assembly (AYLA) to empower women and youth in rural areas like her hometown:
“We students from different provinces of Afghanistan started establishing a volunteer team for women and youth empowerment by the name of Afghanistan Youth Leaders Assembly (AYLA) in 2019.”
Since then, AYLA has grown into a platform that supports women and young people, especially in rural communities, through informal education, training, and advocacy. Though forced into exile, Batol continues her work remotely with unwavering resolve.
“Now I am living in exile, but still I am working voluntarily for the AYLA team. I am trying to find opportunities for Afghan girls and women who are deprived of education and participation.”
What is AYLA?
AYLA — the Afghanistan Youth Leaders Assembly — is a grassroots initiative that began as a volunteer platform for youth and women’s empowerment. After the Taliban’s return to power, AYLA adapted to meet the growing needs of Afghan girls forced out of schools and public life.
Since 2021, AYLA provides online classes, scholarships, and mental health support to help Afghan girls continue learning in secret and in exile. Despite the Taliban’s crackdown on any semblance of education or dissent, AYLA creates a virtual lifeline for many girls across Afghanistan.
AYLA’s mission is not only educational but deeply political: by fostering leadership skills and creating safe spaces for dialogue, it directly challenges the structures that marginalize Afghan girls and young women. This approach is vital, given that the Taliban’s return rapidly reversed the decades of progress witnessed since 2001 — when nearly 3.7 million girls were enrolled in school, compared to virtually none under the Taliban’s previous regime.
AYLA’s impact extends beyond urban centers to remote communities where government outreach is weak or nonexistent. Such grassroots mobilization is crucial in a landscape where international aid is frequently restricted and political uncertainty abounds.
Exactly after August 2021 as the 2nd Team in Afghanistan we started AYLA online classes, scholarship tips, and community networks. We created safe, virtual spaces where they can continue learning and feel part of a wider, supportive community. We also collaborate with organizations inside and outside Afghanistan to provide resources like learning material, Language certification material, mental health support, and leadership training. Most importantly, we listen to the girls, their dreams, their fears, their ideas and from the fall of Afghanistan we tried to make sure they know they are not forgotten. They are still the future of Afghanistan, and we stand beside them, no matter where we are.
Life in Exile: Beyond Safety
Redefining Freedom: A Fundamental Human Right
For Batol and millions of Afghan girls, freedom is no abstract ideal. It is the right to attend school, work, move freely, and participate fully in society — rights stripped away by the Taliban’s policies.
“After everything I've endured, freedom means more than just movement or speech, it means dignity. It means being able to dream without fear. To study without hiding. To raise your voice without punishment. Freedom, to me, is not just personal, it’s collective. It’s seeing every girl in Afghanistan, and everywhere, have the right to live fully, to decide her own future. Freedom is not something I take for granted anymore. It’s a daily fight, a quiet hope, and a promise I carry with me wherever I go."
This statement lays bare the brutal reality of life under Taliban rule, where girls above grade 6 have been banned from attending school, women are excluded from universities and workplaces, and strict dress and mobility restrictions confine them to their homes. The UNICEF estimates that 1.2 million girls have been denied secondary education nationwide, with the rural poor disproportionately affected.
The implications are dire: denial of education and economic participation condemns a generation to poverty, illiteracy, and social invisibility. It also threatens Afghanistan’s future, as half its population is barred from contributing to development, governance, or public discourse.
Batol’s definition reminds us that freedom is multi-dimensional — education is foundational, but equally vital are dignity, agency, and political voice.
The Global Responsibility and Global Silence
Despite international condemnations, effective action to uphold Afghan women’s rights remains inadequate. Global powers, fatigued by complex geopolitics and competing priorities, have largely failed to deliver on promises of support.
Batol’s activism is aligned with a broader call by Afghan women leaders demanding international inclusion:
It is clear that their silence is not neutral, it is a choice. By staying quiet, injustice grows bolder. Women and girls only demand their basic rights, their humanity. Your words, your pressure, your actions can make a difference. History will remember not just what the oppressors did, but what the free world allowed. Silence is easy but courage is what is needed now for Ending gender apartheid and violence against women’s rights.
Initiatives like Spain’s HearUs platform seek to amplify Afghan women’s voices in exile and provide support. However, the fragmented nature of international aid and political engagement has left many women feeling abandoned.
This silence is costly — without consistent international pressure and funding, the Taliban’s gender apartheid will become normalized. The world risks allowing systemic oppression to persist under the guise of “stability.”
What the World Must Do Now
To reverse this catastrophic regression, the international community must:
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Ensure Afghan Women’s Inclusion: Afghan women must have a seat at every negotiation and policy forum concerning their country’s future.
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Expand Education Access: Remote learning, scholarships, and community-based programs are urgently needed, especially in rural provinces.
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Support Grassroots Groups: Funding and logistical support to organizations like AYLA ensure localized and culturally sensitive empowerment.
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Protect Refugees: Accelerate asylum pathways and improve support services for Afghan women displaced abroad.
Such measures reflect Batol’s vision for restoring dignity, agency, and hope to millions of Afghan women and girls.
How You Can Make a Real Impact
Change begins with individuals. You can:
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Donate to grassroots Afghan women’s organizations like AYLA.
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Advocate for Afghan women’s rights by sharing their stories and urging political leaders to act.
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Volunteer skills or mentorship to Afghan refugees rebuilding their lives.
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Educate yourself and others about the historical and current struggles Afghan women face.
Batol Gholami’s journey — from the conservative valleys of Baghlan to the uncertain exile — symbolizes both the trauma of Afghanistan’s gender apartheid and the indomitable spirit of its women. Her leadership exemplifies the critical role of grassroots activism in confronting oppression.
Yet, without sustained global solidarity and concrete action, Afghan women’s futures remain at risk of being written by silence and neglect. The world stands at a pivotal moment — to choose justice, inclusion, and freedom over complicity and erasure.
The story of Batol and thousands like her reminds us: the fight for Afghan women’s rights is not only a local struggle but a universal test of human dignity and the global commitment to gender equality.
Support Ayla
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