Sister dearest talked to me for 10 minutes and then disappeared. This has been happening for so long now I'm gonna go catch a flight to ksa just to be able to talk to her properly 😭😭
I have seen thousands of videos criticising, schooling women, or telling them how to save themselves from rape, being kidnapped etc, I have never seen one video addressing men to not commit crimes against women
@bentheorder2 its not about whether the man was a hero or not -- it is about the fact that a woman gets acid thrown on her and the gov's reaction is to award the man for his bravery. what about the victim? or the measures taken to make sure it doesn't happen again? where is law and order?
Men have too much audacity because other men dont tell them they are being jerks....
Men can not call out their peers ,most oc them know the creeps and choose to stay quite and become enablers .
@chmpgnsoshalist And a poor woman will always be at the far end of the oppression Olympics. Any man having least power in society will have power over some woman so stfu
My daadi used to often address baba by adding haaji before his name because of how much he'd been wanting to do Hajj + visit Kaabah. She's no more with us today, but Baba is finally a haaji 🤧
🎓 “Peace be upon you. From the students of Harvard, to the youth of Dahieh, to the sons of Nabatieh, and the people of Tyre.”
Harvard Medical School graduate Leen Ezzeddine, from the southern Lebanese town of Arabsalim, used her graduation speech to remind her peers of the students in Gaza and southern Lebanon who do not benefit from the same “arbitrary luck and circumstance” that she and her classmates have enjoyed.
Ezzeddine said her presence at that podium was “evidence of what survives the border, the bomb, and the exile,” and of “what becomes possible when people the world has tried to erase are allowed to live.”