When Nila Ibrahimi got down to construct a web site telling the tales of Afghan women, it wasn’t simply to present them a voice.
The 17-year-old Afghan refugee was additionally decided to remind her fellow Gen Zs in her adopted nation, Canada, that they have been comparable – they even listened to Taylor Swift similar to different teenage women around the globe.
“I wish to make them as actual as potential in order that different folks, particularly younger folks, Gen Z particularly, can put themselves of their footwear,” she informed the BBC.
Nila spoke to the BBC earlier this week, earlier than selecting up the Worldwide Kids’s Peace Prize beforehand gained by training campaigner Malala Yousafzai and local weather activist Greta Thunberg.
Nila’s is, maybe, not a simple job. The plight of Afghanistan’s ladies and women can really feel a world away to younger folks dwelling in Canada, the place Nila discovered a house after fleeing her dwelling nation because the Taliban took over three years in the past.
In that point, the Taliban have banned teenage women from training, banned ladies from travelling lengthy distances with out a male chaperone, and now ordered them to maintain their voices down in public – successfully silencing half the inhabitants.
The Taliban have defended the rulings to the BBC beforehand by saying they align with non secular texts.
“The variations [between Afghanistan and Canada] are huge, so it makes it laborious for them to really feel related,” acknowledges Nila.
That’s the reason she helped arrange HerStory – a spot the place she and others assist share the tales of Afghan ladies and women in their very own phrases, each inside and in a foreign country.
“So many instances we’re misplaced within the variations that we do not see the similarities and that is our aim, to point out that to the world.”
Nila Ibrahim was chosen from 165 nominees because the twentieth winner of the distinguished prize.
The award recognises not simply the work accomplished on HerStory, but additionally her ardour for standing up for ladies’s rights in Afghanistan.
Nila’s first stand for ladies’s rights got here in March 2021, when she joined different younger Afghan women in sharing a video of her singing on-line.
It was a small however highly effective protest in opposition to a decree by the then-director of training within the Afghan capital, Kabul, who tried to ban women over 12 singing in public. The tried order was by no means carried out.
“That was after I actually understood the significance of performing, the significance of talking up and speaking about these points,” explains Nila, who was a part of a gaggle referred to as Sound of Afghanistan.
However lower than six months later, every part would change – and, aged 14, she must flee together with her household because the Taliban arrived.
The household – who’re a part of Afghanistan’s Hazara minority – made the tough journey to Pakistan, the place they spent a 12 months earlier than being granted asylum in Canada.
It was, after 12 months with out training, a “breath of contemporary air”, she says.
There, Nila was reunited together with her associates from the singing group.
She was additionally invited to talk at occasions, about her experiences of Afghanistan, permitting her to advocate for all the ladies left behind.
Folks, she says, have been shocked at how eloquent she was. However Nila knew there have been hundreds of thousands of girls and women in Afghanistan who have been simply as succesful – though with much less entry to the alternatives she had.
“So I believed if my potential can shock these folks and they do not know about how educated women from Afghanistan may be, what if that info was accessible to them?”
HerStory – the web site which grew out of this thought – began in 2023. It options interviews and first particular person accounts from each refugees and ladies inside Afghanistan.
The concept is to create a protected house the place a gaggle of people that “grew up with the tales of the primary interval of Taliban and the way horrible the lives of girls have been on the time” share their tales – and their “shock and anger” at discovering themselves in an more and more comparable scenario.
The anger is a sense Nila tries to maintain separate from her work.
“If you see Afghanistan going again in time in 20 years, in fact it makes you concern,” she says.
“It is a shared feeling. It is a shared expertise for ladies wherever.”
The award, she says, is an opportunity for Afghan women to as soon as once more remind the world concerning the restrictions they face every day – a reminder “to not overlook Afghan women”.
Marc Dullaert, founding father of the KidsRights Basis, which runs the award, identified {that a} “staggering” variety of younger ladies have been at present being excluded from training.
“Nila’s inspirational work to offer them with a voice that will probably be heard internationally makes her a very worthy winner of this 12 months’s twentieth Worldwide Peace Prize,” he added.
It’s also a reminder that her era – whereas younger – could make a distinction, Nila hopes.
“I believe so many instances once we discuss points and completely different causes, we discuss it with the very grownup like strategy of oh, that is very critical,” she says.
“The world is a really scary place, however there’s an strategy that’s extra Gen Z-like… and we are able to take little steps and… do no matter we are able to.”