Pakistan’s Aurat March

Pakistan’s Aurat March

The Pakistan’s Aurat March (Women’s March) is an annual march that takes place on International Women’s day in the streets of Pakistan. Such a tradition started in 2018 in the streets of Karachi and has since spread to 3 other cities. The march is set with a mission to advocate for the rights of women through the use of legal empowerment. Since the start of the march, the march has obtained the title of a social movement and organizers of such an event have voiced their desire to fulfill their long term goal of bringing an end to and solving misogynistic cultural norms. The March started off as a simple way to celebrate International Women’s Day, but has since become a movement with women across Pakistan uniting to demand legal and cultural reforms. 

The March has been divided into different geography-based chapters. The march taking place in the streets of Lahore, or the Lahore Chapter, has become responsible for producing thorough public declarations relating to issues of women’s development. The 2021 March was focused on the idea of women’s healthcare within Pakistan. The march that takes place in the streets of Karachi, or the Karachi Chapter, takes on the social media campaign which aims to bring awareness to gender violence. The different chapters do target different aspects of change, but all have a common goal of working to obtain better livelihood for the women of Pakistan

The 2021 Aurat March Lahore Chapter discussed the flaws within the introduction of the Anti-Rape Ordinance. Individuals partaking in the Aurat March argued that the solutions mentioned within this Ordinance were “a short-term solution that perpetuates the faulty notion that rape is a crime of sexual desire rather than power.” In 2020, the Lahore Chapter emphasized the need for the Protection Against Harassment of Women. They emphasized the need for the Workplace Act to include sections outlining the protection of working women in areas of both independent and sub-contract workers. To further obtain such, the idea was argued more in the 2021 chapter of the Aurat March.

Despite such a successful implementation of an idea, since its start the march and its organizers have received an overwhelming amount of challenges, and little to no support from superior individuals within the nation. 

For years now, the rights of women within Pakistan have been very limited. Various cultural and religious norms have limited women to staying inferior to their male counterparts and have forced their voices shut. The past few years have seen a rise of women within the Pakistani workforce, however the amount of violence, harrassment and intimidation and discrimination faced by these women have them questioning their safety and security at all times. 

Islamist groups within the nation denounce the individuals suppourting, organising and promoting the march and have defined the march and its activits as “immoral or misguided blasphemers”. Other individuals throughout the nation see the movement as “Western cultural imperialism”. The nation’s prime minister has made comments about how women were responsible for the ills that face them in various incidents. Recent comments stated by the prime minister have connected the rise of rape incidents to the clothing a women choses to wear. Such comments made by the head of a nation, and the lack of support shown for such a march clearly indicate that there is very little room for advocacy of women’s rights within Pakistan. 

“Whenever the Aurat March or feminism is mentioned in public [within Pakistan], tension is palpable”. Such a statement was made by a young woman who struggled to find volunteers to partake in Multan’s first chapter of the Aurat March in 2021. She mentinoed how whenever she would raise her voice about such a topic, the reponse the community gave was that such a march or the idea of feminism isn’t meant for their communities. 

The idea of feminism, especially the idea of feminism within the media have left Pakistani women living in constant fear of engaing within the march. Women within the nation are encouraged to support such a movement which aims at creating unity within the female Pakistani population, allowing them to advance as a whole. This march is a process of educating women around the nation. It is a time for women throughout the nation to come together to fight for the idea of feminism to become the norm within the nation. 

Within the march some common phrases are uttered. “Mera Jism Meri Marzi” (My Body My Choice), or “Khud Khana Garam Karlo” (Heat Up Your Food Yourself), phrases intended to highlight the disproportionate unpaid labor expected of women at home have been distorted by the media various times. The Pakistani media have taken various actions to limit the effect of such a march by changing the meaning of various things said within the March. The media, alongside superior individuals have taken various steps to denounce the march and continue to do so.

Despite being one of the first attempts of bringing feminism to the face of Pakistan, the Pakistan Aurat March and its organziers have struggles with facing an immense amount of challenges. Despite the various downs faced in their journey of coordinating the march, women throughout the nation are not ready to stop.

The Aurat March is a sisterhood, one which grows each time the media or superior individuals attack them or attempt to pull them to the ground. Pakistani women have fought society and its cultural norms and have endured the consequences far too long. Each time they are pulled down, the sisterhood reemerges. The only difference is that this time they are stronger than ever. 

My name is Azbah Wasim and I’m 17 years old. I was born and raised in Brampton, Ontario, Canada, however my upbringing was heavily influenced from my Pakistani background.In Pakistani culture, women are oppressed culturally, and many of them don’t use the voice they have. This is what sparked my interest in feminism. When I visit back home I see women around me living as the minorities their culture expects them to be. This idea seems out of the norm to me as a woman living in a much more accepting and open community. I have always wanted to step out and let other women know that they have the ability to use their voices. My mom and older sister are the two women in my life who I see living in a manner which the culture of their background would completely disagree with. I have seen the strength they carry, and it inspires me. They have proven to not only themselves but to the world around them that even as women, they too can accomplish whatever they set their mind to, and I aspire to be just like that. I want other women to know that they too can accomplish dreams that they have. I want the world to know that there is more to women than outdated gender norms. I believe that there shouldn’t be a scale of superiority between genders, and I will continue to preach that, and will strive to spread the message of feminism.