Masuma Esmati-Wardak

Masuma Esmati-Wardak
Minister of Education
In office
1990-1992
PresidentMohammad Najibullah
PremierFazal Haq Khaliqyar
Member of the House of the People
In office
1965–1969
ConstituencyKandahar
Personal details
Born1930 (1930)
Died22 August 2016(2016-08-22) (aged 85–86)

Masuma Esmati-Wardak (1930 – 22 August 2016) was an Afghan writer and politician. She was jointly one of the first women to serve in the Afghan parliament in 1965, and served as Minister of Education in 1990–1992.

Life and career

In 1953 she graduated from Kabul Women's College, and received a degree in business in the United States in 1958.[1]

In 1959, she and Kubra Noorzai became one of the first women to appear in public in Afghanistan without a veil after Queen Humaira Begum had removed hers, supporting the call by the Prime minister Mohammed Daoud Khan for women to voluntary remove their veil.[2]

In 1964 King Mohammed Zahir Shah appointed her to an advisory committee that reviewed the draft 1964 constitution,[3] which granted women the right to vote and stand for election. In 1965 she was elected to represent Kandahar in the House of the People of Parliament, and became a leading advocate of women's rights.[1][4] She was the only one of the four women elected in 1965 to run for re-election in 1969, but lost her seat.[5]

In 1987 she became President of the Afghan Women's Council.[1]

In May 1990 she was appointed cabinet minister of Education and Training in the government of Mohammad Najibullah.[6] She was one of two women in the cabinet alongside Saleha Farooq Etemadi, and one of the first women in the Afghan government.[7]

Esmati-Wardak died on 22 August 2016, at the age of 85–86.[8]

References

  1. ^ a b c Mattar, Philip (2004). Encyclopedia of the Modern Middle East & North Africa: D-K. Macmillan Reference USA. p. 786. ISBN 978-0-02865-771-4.
  2. ^ Tamim Ansary (2012) Games without Rules: The Often-Interrupted History of Afghanistan
  3. ^ Sarfraz Khan (2013) Politics of policy and legislation affectin g women in Afghanistan: One step forward two steps back Central Asia Journal, Number 73
  4. ^ Skaine, Rosemarie (2001). The Women of Afghanistan Under the Taliban. McFarland. ISBN 978-0-78648-174-3.
  5. ^ Louis Dupree (2014) Afghanistan Princeton University Press, p653
  6. ^ Emadi, Hafizullah, Repression, resistance, and women in Afghanistan, Praeger, Westport, Conn., 2002
  7. ^ The first five was Kubra Noorzai in 1965, Shafiqa Ziaie in 1971, Anahita Ratebzad in 1976, Masuma Esmati-Wardak in 1990 and Saleha Farooq Etemadi in 1990.
  8. ^ "معصومه عصمتی وردک وزیر آموزش و پرورش ،شخصیت علمی و پژوهشی افغانستان". www.afghanwomennews.com. Retrieved 2025-12-29.