Azar Majedi π΄ I like to express my deepest condolences to Yanar’s family, friends and comrades for this great and tragic loss.
The news of her assassination was extremely shocking and heartbreaking. Yanar was a courageous and dedicated activist who worked hard to bring some degree of civility and humanity into the lives of many women who have been not only the victim of backward traditions but more so the victim of a destructive war that the US and its allies waged on the people of Iraq and further in the region. She is first and foremost the victim of this bloody war that the US and the West spearheading by Israel have imposed on the region.
Yanar was the victim of the dark scenario inflicted on Iraq, which became a breeding ground for terrorism. Many Iraqi people have fallen to their death by terrorism, a dark reality that has become so commonplace in the region, thanks to state terrorism.
I met Yanar only a few times. The last time I met her was in an international secular-feminist conference in Macedonia in 2009. I remember Nawal Saadawi was there too. Hundred women activists were there hoping to bring more civility and humanity to their societies which, ironically, all were in one way or another attacked or ruined at one time by the US and its allies. I remember Yanar was very hopeful and energetic. She got her energy from her belief in the possibility of building a better world. This hope and energy kept her fighting until the last moment of her life.
She fought for a noble cause; she lived with hope to achieve her goals. This hope helped her overcome the fear for her life. She knew she was in danger, but she didn’t give up. Her legacy is her resistance, endurance, resilience and courage. The best way to keep her memory alive is to fight for a better world.
Today more than ever the world is witnessing destruction, death and cruelty. We need to fight steadfastly for the cause we have fought for years. We will not give up until we can make this world a safer, a more humane and just world, where bombs are dismantled, terrorism belongs to history books; injustice and discrimination belong to the past.
She is missed and will be missed by many people who met her, knew her and received her care and support.
⏩ Asar Majed is the Chairperson of Organisation for Women’s Liberation.























