Invitation For a ceremony honoring the Egyptian Woman
posted by NADRF 29-03-2010
The National Association for the Defense of Rights and Freedoms holds a great jurist ceremony in
cooperation with the Center for Studies and Research on Women – Faculty of Mass Communication- Cairo University. On
the next Thursday, April 1, 2010 – at12:00 afternoons –in the conference hall of the faculty of Mass Communication-Cairo
University- the fourth round.
The event was designed to honor a number of female characters, who played a great role in the support and
development history of Egyptian women; and struggled for their rights.
(21) Amal Soliman. The First woman to be a Marriage Official in Egypt.
posted by NADRF 21-03-2010
She is from Alsharkia governorate- Alkanayat headquarters. She is married with 3 children. She studied Islamic law and religion decencies; she got the master's degree on the law.
Amal Soliman – 33 years- is the first Egyptian woman to become a marriage official in Egypt and the Arab world. this decision was taken by the consultant \ Mamdouh Mara'i ; the minister of justice on February 25,2008 who decided to appoint Amal Soliman as a marriage official in her town after applying to this job with a lot of men.
(20) Eva Habil The First Woman Mayor in Egypt
posted by NADRF 20-03-2010
The first Egyptian woman to be appointed as a mayor of her village, she helped her father for a lot years when he was a mayor since 1990. Then her father died on 2002 at the age of 85 and she hoped to be a mayor after him.
Eva Habil kreles – 53 years old – unmarried woman, she get her bachelor in the faculty of law-Ain Shams University on 1980. She is a rural Christian woman works as a lawyer. All these features for the first woman mayor in Egypt.
(19) Rose Alyosef Lebanese woman, but she loved the soil of Egypt and became one of its people.
posted by NADRF 19-03-2010
She is Fatma Alyosef, a Lebanese woman from a Turkish origin, she originated as an orphan in a Lebanese Christian family which raised her and named her "Rosa". When she became a young woman, she traveled to Egypt and there she discovered her literal and acting talent.
She was born in Lebanon in 1888 and died in 1958 and her real name Fatima Mohammed Mohideen Yousuf.
(18) Safia Elmohandes The Mother of the Egyptian Broadcasters.
posted by NADRF 18-03-2010
She is the daughter of the Egyptian linguist Zaki Elmohandes, the Dean of Dar Al Uloom Faculty and Vice-President of the Arabic Language Academy in Cairo. She is the elder sister of the late artist Fouad el-Mohandes, and she was the reason for his work in acting. She was born in 1922 and died in the June 13, 2007.
(17) Hekmat Abu Zed The first woman minister of the Social Affairs in Egypt.
posted by NADRF 17-03-2010
At the beginnings of the sixties, the late leader Gamal Abdel Nasser issued a republican decision to appoint Hekmat Abu Zeid as a minister of the Social Affairs in Egypt to become the second woman in the Arab world who became a minister after Naziha Eldlemi. Through her position, she opened the scope for the Egyptian woman to hold leading positions. Through her position, she managed of turning the ministry into a ministry for the society and the family.
The Constitutional Court's decision to appoint women judges in the State Council is a gift for women in their anniversary.
posted by NADRF 16-03-2010
The National Association for the Defense of Rights and Freedoms welcomes the Constitutional Court's decision
on the day before yesterday that resolved the crisis of the women judges of the State Council. After the Special counseling room in the court which headed by consultant Farouk Sultan, had confessed the women's right to become judges of the State Council.
(16) Hamida Khalil The first woman martyr of the 1919 revolution.
posted by NADRF 16-03-2010
On March 16, identified as Egyptian Women's Day; hence the National Association for the Defense of Rights and Freedoms selected today's character to be in the series " women paved the participation way " " she" the Egyptian militant / Hamida Khalil, the first woman martyr of the revolution; which occurred on 1919.
The Egyptian woman participated in demonstrations and strikes with the help of Hamida Khalil
(15) Rawia Attia The first Egyptian vice after the revolution and the mother of the fighters
posted by NADRF 15-03-2010
July 14, 1957 this day was the date of entry of the first woman to parliament after a fierce battle to get their rights; that women had all her political and social rights. And the first constitution in Egypt was issued in January 1956, which included the equality between men and women in the political rights and women gained the right of nomination and election with the first parliamentary elections for women in 1957.
(14) Enas Haa'i. The First Egyptian Woman Swimmer
posted by NADRF 14-03-2010
Enas Haa'i is the first Egyptian woman swimmer, the first girl to win the world title in the first long-distance swimming for girls in 1955 in France; she was born in 1930 in Hadai'k Elkoba, married to the artist Adel Khairi in 1956, and died on February 19, 2009.
The late President Gamal Abdel Nasser's granted her the State Medal First Class....
(13) Aisha Rateb The first instructor- A Professor of International Law. First ambassador to Egypt abroad
posted by NADRF 13-03-2010
Through her life, she had a certificate of 30 years spent in political work in the era of Naser and Sadat. She was the first instructor in the faculty of law, the first professor of the international law, and the first ambassador to Egypt abroad. Also she was the first woman to hold two different ministries continuance. She considered the most famous one who waged battles to in defend women's rights.
Dr\ Aisha Rateb the former Minister of Insurance and Social Affairs ....
(12) Doria Shafik (The Daughter of the Nile)
posted by NADRF 12-03-2010
She is one
of the pioneers of the women liberation movement in Egypt; she fought against the British occupation of Egypt, she is an Egyptian researcher who born in Tanta on 1908 and died in Egypt on 1975. She was the reason to make the Egyptian woman obtain the right to vote in elections and nominating in the Egyptian constitution on 1956.
She studied at the French Delegation School in Tanta....
(11) Mofida Abdel Rahman The First Egyptian woman Lawyer
posted by NADRF 11-03-2010
She was born
on January 19, 1914 Drab al-Ahmar district; and died on September 3, 2002 at the age of 88 years; after a legal life in the bar of nearly sixty years. Mofida Abdel Rahman is the first Egyptian lawyer who practiced the legal profession.
She was married to the Islamic writer Mohammed Abdul Latif Ibn al-Khatib, the father of her 9 children and 20 grandchildren , when she was a wife and a mother for four children, she got her law degree I 1939 ....
(10) Amena Alsaied "The first Egyptian woman works in journalism"
posted by NADRF 10-03-2010
She was born
in Assiut Governorate, in May 20, 1910; and was one of the pioneers of the women's movement calling for the emancipation of women; and the first Egyptian woman works in the press, she called for the liberation of the woman and deleting the legality courts, and granting women all her political rights. ....
(9) Nabwia Mosa The first Headmistress of a school
posted by NADRF 09-03-2010
She was born
on December 17, 1886 in the village of Mjul - Center Banha - Qliubia - her father was an officer in the Egyptian army and he traveled to the Sudan two months before she was born and died there; and she died in 1951.
Nabwia Mosa- the lover of education- is one of the pioneers of education and social work education during the first half of the twentieth century, she was the first Egyptian headmistress and she was one of the sponsors of Dr. Samira Moussa ....
(8) Suheir Alqlmaoy Of the first Egyptian to receive a doctorate degree in the literature to the first woman to head the book institution
posted by NADRF 08-03-2010
She was one of the pioneers of girls who entered the university and the first girl in Egypt to get a doctorate in literature.
Suheir Alqlmaoy appeared at a time when women haven't roles in the society. She was born on July 20, 1911, to a Kurdish father who was a doctor in Tanta and a Circassian mother; she died in 4/5/1997. She got a baccalaureate from a school (College of American girls), and in 1929 she was the first girl to join Fouad I University (now Cairo University) ....
(7) Samira Mosa The First Egyptian Atom Scientist.
posted by NADRF 07-03-2010
She was born in the great village Snobo_ Zefta headquarter _ Algharbia governorate in March 3, 1917 and died on August 15, 1952. She was nicknamed as "East's Miss Cori". She is the first lecturer in the Faculty of Science, Fouad I University.
Samira Mosa is the first Egyptian Atom scientist, when she was young, she learned writing and reading, she memorized some parts of The Holy Koran, and she was the first Egyptian girl that the council of ministers held a meeting to discuss the decision of allocating her in the university.
(6) Malak Hefni Nasef The Desert Researcher
posted by NADRF 06-03-2010
She is an Egyptian activist in women and human rights field, and also facing the British colonial in Egypt. She was called" the desert researcher".
Malak Hefni Nasef was born on December 25, 1886 and died on October 17, 1918. She is an Egyptian author and an inviter for the social reform and the liberty and justice of the Egyptian woman in the early twentieth century; she was raised in a house of knowledge and literature, she found great care of her father when he saw her intelligence and genius.
(5) Siza Nabarawy The third Egyptian woman in terms of fame.
posted by NADRF 05-03-2010
She is Hoda Sharawi's friend, she accompanied her in the international and national conferences. They were the first women to take-off the veil in Egypt after they had returned from the west where they attended the international women's union conference which was held in Rome 1923 AD.
Her real name is Zeinab Mohammed Morad ,she is a pioneer of the pioneers of the women's movement in Egypt since 1919AD, and is the third Egyptian women in terms of fame in that historical period.
(4) Hoda Sharawi taking-off the veil to establishing 15 women's associations in Egypt.
posted by NADRF 04-03-2010
Nour Elhoda Mohammed Sultan one of the Egyptian activists who advocate the national independence in Egypt and the feminist activity in the late nineteenth century and until the mid-twentieth century.
She is Hoda Sharawi who was born in the city of Minya, June 23, 1879; she is the daughter of Muhammad Sultan Pasha, she was educated at the home of her parents; and married at the age of thirteen of the son of her aunt, he was older than her by nearly forty years, then the name of her family changed into " Sharawi".
(3) Safia Zaghloul "The mother of the Egyptians".
posted by NADRF 03-03-2010
She had a prominent role in the Egyptian political life. She was born to an aristocratic family; her father is Mustafa Fahmi Pasha who was one of the first prime ministers in Egypt since Egypt knew the ministry system in the early nineteenth century.
Safia Mostafa Fahmi who was nicknamed as Safia Zaghloul was born in 1878 and died on January 12, 1946, leaving behind her non-traditional life of the Egyptian girl and sincere wife believing in her husband
(2) Princess Fatima Esmaiel…. Earth and jewelry for the renaissance of the education.
posted by NADRF 02-03-2010
The Egyptian woman supported education throughout the ages for the advancement of society. The women renaissance associated with the societal issues raised by the necessities of progress throughout her long procession that spanned nearly a century and a half century. One of the proofs of the renaissance is educating girls, this renaissance which had contributed mainly until now.
(1) Hatchbsot….. The Greatest Pharaonic Queen
posted by NADRF 01-03-2010
Pharaonic civilization was at the forefront of the civilizations that respect and grantee human rights and gave human all rights as survival, health, education and other rights, and applied these rules through the ages.
At the beginning of the old state era, the pharaohs summarized the human rights in one word " ma'at", and this word means justice, truth, and right, and the manifestations of respect for human rights in the ancient Pharaonic civilization represented in recognizing the right to live that the ancient Egyptians was delaying the execution of pregnant women until she gives birth.
And the Egyptians knew the principle of equality among all citizens that all Egyptians are equal before the law, as for education the Pharaonic Egypt encouraged their children both male and female education.