New York Lifestyles Magazine - May 2021

Page 82

NEW YORK, NY

TIME OUT WITH…

FATIMA GUL, THE SINDHI FOUNDATION By Ann Grenier

ast month, the Sindhi Foundation, a non-profit organization based in Washington D.C. advocating for Sindhi human rights, organized a 350-mile march across five states on the East Coast to raise awareness on widespread human rights abuse and the climate crisis in Sindh, Pakistan. The Long Walk for Freedom, Nature, and Love began at the United Nations headquarters in New York City on April 7th and ended in Washington D.C. three weeks later. Their demands were many: to stop extrajudicial killings, enforced disappearances of Sindhi Hindu and Christian girls in Pakistan. Every year in Sindh, thousands of females between 11 and 28 are abducted, forced to convert to Islam, and married off to their abductors. Sindhi people’s marginalization has gone on too long, and the Long Walk participants hoped to get the international media’s attention with their efforts. New York Lifestyles Magazine sat down with Sindhi-American Human Rights Activist, Fatima Gul, to discuss her background and The Long Walk’s importance.

Sindhi Foundation March

Where were you raised? I was born in a small village in Sindh. My village had a two-room schoolhouse. My earliest memory was when my father left me, at the age of four, at my uncle’s place in Karachi, in the hopes I would get a better education. Instead, knowing my mother and siblings were How did you become a Human Rights activist? back in the village, I was traumatized, and I hardly spoke the entire I started questioning our political system. Citizens continued voting for a political party for decades even though that party time I lived in the city. did nothing for its supporters. I approached the candidate and I was abused by cousins or strangers when I played outside or did demanded that we only vote for her if she did something for the errands. My childhood was defined by fear, abuse, loneliness, and village’s betterment: install a telephone line and electricity and sorrow. These life experiences have made me who I am. It gives me build a separate school for girls as girls had to walk to a different an understanding of Sindhi Hindus’ pain and who must leave their village. This was when I started discovering my power. homes and escape to India because of their extreme marginalization and the struggle of Sindhi left behind. We have a love of the land, In the coming years, when I started working, I faced a lot of a love of nature, and a love of truth. These are values that I carry discrimination being Sindhi and a woman. It wasn’t safe to be an activist in Sindh, so moving to Washington D.C. was the beginning with me. of my human rights advocacy, and I was able to play an even more active role when I became a U.S. citizen. At a congressional When and why did you move to the United States? I came to the U.S. in 2012. I was impressed with the work that hearing on Human Rights in South Asia, I testified, imploring Munawar Laghari was doing in Washington D.C., so I started Congress to pay attention to abuses in Pakistan. volunteering for his publication Sindh Monitor. We both shared a passion for Human Rights, and we wanted to work together for our How did you get involved with The Sindhi Foundation, and motherland Sindh. We decided to become life partners, and we will what is their mission? continue to strive for the rights of Sindhi people together until our As a lifelong Sindhi human rights activist, I’ve decided to join the last breath. Sadly, this work has meant we have sacrificed a lot— Long Walk to make the Sindhi people’s issues more visible. The Sindhi Foundation’s mission is to build bridges between the Sindhi neither of us can return to Sindh because our lives are threatened. people and the international community while strengthening interracial, interfaith, and intercultural harmony. The Foundation Fatima Gul has an additional focus on promoting openness and freedom of thought and expression in Sindhi society. What do you and The Sindhi Foundation hope to accomplish in the next few years? The Sindhi Foundation will continue to build bridges between communities and create space for more profound discourse. Personally, my goal is to make these issues more visible and for mainstream media to pay attention. I will continue fighting for the rights of Sindhi people, especially those still in Sindh province. For more information on Fatima Gul and the Sindhi Foundation, visit sindhifoundation.org. •


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Articles inside

My New York Story: Lyss Stern

2min
pages 80-81

Entrepreneur’s Corner: Brian Kennedy

2min
pages 78-79

Time Out With...Fatima Gul, The Sindhi Foundation

3min
pages 82-84

Don Hershman: A Tribute To Photographer Victor Arimondi

3min
pages 70-71

On The Small Screen

2min
pages 68-69

On Stage: Classic BroadwayHD

4min
pages 66-67

Conserva: Entertaining Made Easy

3min
pages 64-65

Noreetuh: Hawaiian Fare With An East Village Vibe

3min
pages 62-63

Welcome To Our Kitchen: Farm-To-Table Delivered To Your Door

3min
pages 60-61

Balanced Nutrition: Essential Superfoods Make The Difference

3min
pages 56-57

MIFUNE New York: A Dose Of Culinary Drama

3min
pages 58-59

Lymph For Life: Easy Ways To Cleanse Your Immune System

4min
pages 54-55

180 East 88th Street: No Ordinary Residence

1min
pages 52-53

Parker West: The Best Views In Town

9min
pages 45-51

New Frontier In RE: East 57th Condo Listed For Bitcoin

4min
pages 42-44

The Write Stuff

3min
pages 28-29

The Sayre Mansion: Always Room At The Inn

4min
pages 33-35

The Maldives: Time To Fly Away

8min
pages 36-41

Anguilla: It’s A Shore Thing

4min
pages 30-32

Cover Feature: Leesa Rowland

12min
pages 19-26

The Shape Of Things To Come

3min
page 27

From The Publisher

2min
pages 16-18
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