Financial Feminist - 73. Sustaining the Fight for Women's Rights with Lina AbiRafeh

Episode Date: February 28, 2023

“If you aren’t present at the table, you’re on the menu” is a quote made famous by Senator Elizabeth Warren and is a summation of today’s guest, Lina AbiRafeh’s, life's work as a feminist ...activist. As a kick-off to women’s history month, we asked Lina to join us to share about the state of women’s rights around the world, how to recover from activist burnout, and how we can continue to fight for women’s equality and support women globally without falling into the trap of “saviorism.”  Learn more about Lina, read transcripts of our episodes, and find additional resources on our show notes page: https://herfirst100k.com/financial-feminist-podcast Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices

Transcript
Discussion (0)
Starting point is 00:00:00 Hello, financial feminists. Welcome back. I am coming to you from the past, recording this because I am taking some time off. Busy winter of writing the book, promoting the book, editing the book, and it's nice to have a little bit of time, and hopefully future me is having a good time on a beach somewhere. It's been so thrilling meeting all of you in our cities for our book tour, and we're so thrilled to be heading out more in the future once I'm back and rested. We're going to be hitting a few cities across the US. So make sure to check out herfirst100k.com slash events to keep up with where we'll be next. And if you don't see your city on that list, here's how it goes. I need
Starting point is 00:00:39 you to call your independent bookstore and they need to request that we come. This is kind of like the order of operations. So many people are like, come to my city, come here, come there, and I would love to come meet you. However, we have to have the bookstores reach out to us to coordinate an event. So if you do want us to come to your city, if you would like to meet me and get your book signed, have the independent bookstore of your choice reach out to us and do a little bit of logistics, and we will hopefully be seeing you soon. Okay, today's episode is fundamental to understanding why I do the work that I do and why feminism is so much more than just a theory or a concept. It is a daily practice and lifelong work, and few are more intimately acquainted with that work than Lina Abarafi. Lina is a lifelong feminist activist, aid worker, and academic
Starting point is 00:01:26 with decades-long experience working on women's rights worldwide. She's fucking incredible. Her work has taken her to over 20 countries in the last 25 years, and she has served in a range of organizations in a senior advisory capacity, including the Arab Institute for Women at the Lebanese American University. And she sits on various international boards, including She Decides, the Global Institute of Women Leadership, the Global Women's Institute, and more. Lena shares about her experience emigrating to the United States as an Arab woman in the 1980s, her work that she does globally for women and girls experiencing violence, and how we can be better advocates and feminists in our own communities while supporting women's rights globally. We definitely dive into a few heavy topics in this
Starting point is 00:02:08 episode, but Lena's passion for her work is so infectious and is so, so, so important as we continue to define and redefine what feminism is every single day. Let's go ahead and get into it. But first, a word from our sponsors. Do you ever come to New York? All the time. It's my favorite. Did you say Manhattan or where are you at in New York? Yes, I'm in Manhattan. I did a stint in New York like seven, eight weeks back in the spring because I've always wanted to live in New York, but I didn't want to like commit, make the big switch. So I did an Airbnb in Brooklyn in Bed-Stuy for, yeah, like seven weeks and I absolutely loved it.
Starting point is 00:03:04 It was great. Oh, it's so beautiful. I mean, I always wanted to live in New York. And after decades overseas, that's, I figured it was New York or nowhere, as they say. And it was certainly true for me. Yeah. I mean, you just gave me the perfect transition. But like, tell us about your background, how you came to work in this field of women's rights and equality. And I mean, yeah, you've been all over the world, Afghanistan, Haiti, Pap And I mean, yeah, you've been all over the world, Afghanistan, Haiti, Papua New Guinea, like, tell us who you are and what you do. Well, you know, I'll start at the beginning. I think there's a point in so many of our lives
Starting point is 00:03:36 as women and as girls, when you realize that the world just doesn't see you as equal. So you come to understand from a very early age that the world looks upon you as less than and I think I realized that at a young age as well I am Lebanese and Palestinian by background raised in Saudi Arabia at least for the first 10 years and so very early on I started to ask a lot of questions why things were the way they were or still are the way they are. And I didn't put a name to it until I was a teenager. I was 14 and I was in a class called Comparative Women's History. And I thought, well, this is interesting. I'd like to learn about my own history. But what I learned about was the history of violence against women. And that's when that
Starting point is 00:04:20 inequality really was brought home for me. And I thought, I can't, I can't sleep at night. I can't exist unless I do something about this. And that's when I learned the word feminist. And I took that on as my identity, as my country, as my calling, as a duty. And I've done nothing else ever since. You know, it's been decades and I didn't imagine I'd still have to do this work, but sure enough, here we are. Well, and what for you at 14, it sounds like it was the class, what resonated so much with you? Because I had a very similar thing where I grew up believing, of course, that I could do anything a boy could, but didn't really experience direct sexism until around the same age. I was playing for an all-girls baseball team, and we were beating a bunch of the boys' teams. And I remember not only the boys, the 13-year-old boys hating it, but their dads. Their dads who were the coaches
Starting point is 00:05:15 were so upset and tried to sabotage us. And I remember that was my first experience with direct, at least that I remember, with direct sexism. But I didn't have a word for it that young. I didn't, you know, I didn't know that was sexist. I didn't know truly what feminism was. So what about that really adjusted your thinking or got you on this path? And why do you think it happened specifically at like 14, which I feel like is such a pivotal age? It really is because you start to notice the
Starting point is 00:05:45 difference. But I think I had internalized a lot of those inequalities much younger. Again, growing up in Saudi Arabia brought a lot of questions up for me about what women can and can't do and understanding gender roles and relationships and boundaries and covering and restrictions. And so for me, I just, I was a constantly curious child. I wanted to know why women couldn't go there and do that and say that and be that. And so it really started there for me, but also in school as a kid, you know, watching playground behaviors, looking at what boys get away with, how boys behave, how they answer questions in a classroom, how they treat women, girls, and get away with it. And so I felt like, as that kind of child that was, well, never the
Starting point is 00:06:33 popular one, I think I was the geek in the corner, I started to take note of that and really put the vocabulary to it in this class, because I saw that women were subjected to that kind of inequality manifesting as violence in all its forms everywhere in the world all the time in every country so that for me just blew my mind wide open and that was it was it the what was it affirming to know that there was almost like an outside word for it or something? Because I imagine like having that experience of like, oh, this isn't just me or this isn't just in my own brain. Like there is an issue with inequality across the world. Like I imagine that would feel unfortunately, like, of course, devastating, but like weirdly comforting of, oh, okay, this feeling I have, I've experienced is not completely siloed to me.
Starting point is 00:07:29 It was infuriating. That's what it was for me. I was in, I mean, as angry as my 14 year old self could be. I could not imagine the extent of injustice and the, the types of crimes that I was learning about that I had never heard of before. And that none of us are immune to them and they're everywhere all the time. So on the one hand, yes, I did feel a little bit comforted by the fact that all of these things that I had picked up and absorbed and kind of stored in my stomach, these little angry balls, picked up and absorbed and kind of stored in my stomach, these little angry balls were not just mine to carry. But I also was very sad for that. Because I think in a way, I would have rather
Starting point is 00:08:13 that it was just my unique experience, and not an entire global problem. Totally. Yeah. You talked about like the injustices or the crimes against women. What sort of crimes against women were you learning as a 14 year old girl? exploitation, everything from intimate partner violence that happens everywhere all the time in every country to rape as a weapon of war. I mean, as a 14 year old, I'd never heard those terms. And I started to write papers on them and do research. And so every class I took after that, if I if it was a world history class, or an English lit class, or whatever you might take as a high schooler, I started to, what I now call, overlay a feminist framework onto those classes. So if we were talking about world religions, I was looking at the way religions treated women.
Starting point is 00:09:17 If we were talking about world history, I was looking at women sidelined and discriminated against and kept out of historical record. So whatever classes I attended, I was that person. I was the feminist in the room. And so I took that on from a very young age. And I feel like I've been relentless ever since, which is what clearly led me to you. Which I'm so excited you're here. I imagine we have some listeners who have just heard, okay, at 14, you were learning about genital mutilation. And I imagine there's some people going like, that seems really young to learn that. But my response to that is if you're old enough, unfortunately, for that to happen to you, I think you're old enough to learn about it.
Starting point is 00:10:03 Young children, young girls are being sexually assaulted, unfortunately, all the time. And so these graphic violent events, I imagine that was really difficult to hear. But also, I wish I would have known about more of that sooner. I don't think I heard about genital mutilation until college. So I had the immediate response of like, wow, 14, that's really young. But at the same time, that's who it's happening to. Even younger. I mean, for me, this was baptism by fire, as they say. And so I learned about every, I mean, from the fetus to the funeral, right? They kept nothing from us. And granted, I was in an all girls school, which was the right kind of environment for me at that time. And it was a very liberal school.
Starting point is 00:10:48 And so they exposed us to all of it. And I'm so thankful for it because that was the explosion of my feminist consciousness. That was my anger finally having a name and me finding my voice. Absolutely. That was it. That was the moment. You were mentioning these moments of women being left out of history or being siloed or being persecuted. Do you have a particular story that really resonated with you? Is there one you'd like to share of a moment that you remember of like, oh, this is such, again, unfortunately, a great example of the work I'm trying to do or the work I'm trying to, I guess, go against in that way? women who are left out of opportunities and have no choice and voice and access to resources and who are living their lives in very confined and restricted ways. So not so much about the famous
Starting point is 00:11:52 women who are left out of history. Those are very important because we tend to not learn about women's history. We don't even know our own history. But the reality for me and the part that's so painful is the women whose names we'll never know, who perhaps are not doing remarkable things because they've dedicated their lives to simply survive it. So those are the women for me that I worry about the most, the ones that we don't see and that we don't hear about. And we have absolutely no idea what they're going through. And they seem, unfortunately, to be beyond our reach. We're just not doing enough to help the people who need it. you know, I think about the suffragette movement and, you know, that was lauded as, you know,
Starting point is 00:12:50 women's rights. And in many ways it was, but also they were actively barring black and brown people from gaining the right to vote in order for them to have the right to vote. And even like just that particular instance that was taught to me as like such a, you know, movement for women, it was, but also it was way stickier and grayer than that. And I think that that's really important for us to keep in mind is the amount of women that we'll never hear about, either because unfortunately they didn't get the opportunity to be significant or because history has forgotten them. Absolutely. I mean, there are layers of discrimination and the world is just starting to unpack and unravel all of that. And we have a long way to go. And it's a challenge
Starting point is 00:13:31 because there are so many issues and so many causes and so many people in so many communities who are vulnerable, who are marginalized, who are minorities, who are forgotten. So I think we all have to do our part and focus on those that at least are nearest to us, or accessible, or do stand up and do something. So that's how I started working on women and girls. And really, from 14, I mean, I was already volunteering, the minute I heard about the things I told you the crimes that I had finally put a name to, I started doing the work. I mean, as much as I could as a teenager, and I've done nothing else since then. Which is incredible. And our research about you, you experienced, you said you experienced this like cultural whiplash moving to the United States.
Starting point is 00:14:15 And of course, I know from, you know, discussing this on previous episodes, you know, having conversations with friends that like the immigrant experience, I think, especially coming to the United States is very common. What for you took the longest to adjust? What was that period like? And what was the whiplash that you experienced? Well, I moved to the States when I was 10. So this is the mid 80s. It was 1984. And I mean, is the mid 80s. It was 1984. And I mean, I'm Arab, I'm brown. That was already challenging enough, coming to terms with that identity, and the labels that were hurled at me, that I was a terrorist, and whatever types of conversations people were having, and unfortunately, continue to have. And because I hadn't ever grown up in either of my home countries, you know, I really wasn't equipped to defend myself. I think I really understand the perspective of those who are the underdog and those who are bullied and geeky, certainly. And then, you know, having
Starting point is 00:15:26 this background and this baggage and moving to the States and not understanding how things go. I mean, I never felt like I fit in. And I think it took me, probably took me decades to be able to leverage that to my advantage to say, well, belonging nowhere and that feeling of getting lost in all the hyphens of your identity really means that you can belong everywhere. And so that's what I did when I started working overseas. I said, well, you know, I'm just going to start in this place because this is as much my place as any other place. largely in the field of focusing on protecting women from violence after natural disasters, which is something that, you know, to be honest, when I'm thinking about feminism is probably like lower on the list in terms of like, I don't think about that. But of course, the moment you start, you realize just how deeply women are affected. So what does this look like? And specifically, why is this work so needed?
Starting point is 00:16:31 Well, what I started out doing was just working on women and girls. So that was kind of my entry point. And I started very young, I was in my early 20s. And I wanted to do that overseas. And what that led me to was working specifically on violence against women, because that was the greatest need. And that was obviously where my my passion and my anger was born. So using that as the entry point, working on violence against women, I came to understand that that is magnified, is made much more serious, much more extreme, much more severe in emergency situations. So what I did was started to work in war zones and also natural disaster, but it was actually mostly in countries in conflict and post-conflict. My first entry into that world was 2002 when I moved to Afghanistan. So before that I had worked in, let's say more stable or relatively stable countries.
Starting point is 00:17:19 Afghanistan for me was my first war zone. So throwing myself into that experience for me was incredible. It was an extraordinary time to be there. It was after 9-11. So I was quite early in my time going to Afghanistan and had no idea what I was doing. Stayed there for four years working with women and supporting them in any way that I could. I was, for the initial period, running an organization, the Afghanistan Office of Women for Women International, which is an international NGO that supports women in crisis and emergency situations. So I did that and was just overwhelmed by the need. I was supporting 3000 women in the first year of operation and had never run anything like that in my life, but could not stop running literally because the need was so great. I think a lot about the realization of like, yes, I can see change in
Starting point is 00:18:18 my work. Like we get messages from people all of the time that our work impacts them. We can see that, you know, laws are hopefully starting to change, that just the narratives around how we consider women pursuing wealth are starting to look different. But also, I experienced this predominantly when I was writing my book, where all of this just feels so big. It feels so big and beyond me, definitely at an individual level, but it's just so big. And I had moments of helplessness of just like, what's the point? Like truly, like, yes, I know I'm seeing progress. Yes, I'm going to continue to do this. But how do you deal with that? Because that's something I'm struggling with all of the time of like, I am only one person. And yes, we're now a team and we have a movement and all of these things. But like, I am only one person. And yes, we're now a team and we
Starting point is 00:19:05 have a movement and all of these things. But like, I am one person with a limited amount of energy. How do you reckon that with these global problems that feel so beyond us and beyond our bandwidth? I feel that all the time. I feel the constant sense of overwhelm and the feeling that I have zero success rate, let's say, in my job because I cannot understandably eliminate sexual violence anywhere. I cannot single handedly do it, nor can I do it in my lifetime. You know, I tell people all the time, even though I want to be cremated, I say, dig me from the grave. I'm, even though I want to be cremated, I say, dig me from the grave. Let me know how we're doing, because this is a long haul operation and we have to be in it forever. Otherwise we're never going to win it. And I certainly hope we achieve it in, if not my lifetime, you know, the next generation. But to answer specifically, you know, I, I measure it in very small things as you probably do too. I look at the tiny successes and And you know, maybe it's
Starting point is 00:20:05 an email I received from somebody saying, you know, that blog you wrote really touched something with me. And I need to do something about that. That's all we have. Like, that's all I have is these microcosms, these like Instagram DMs and email, you know, meeting like, I just got back from Boston, where I spoke two nights ago and you know I had multiple women crying very beautifully vulnerably telling me how my work has impacted them and like that is so touching and like that for me that's all I have like that's the realization is you just have these microcosms and you you can see the work in a big way but very specific with individuals or with groups of people.
Starting point is 00:20:47 Yeah, absolutely. You know, and I think of women I've met and been fortunate enough to work with and have tried to work for and support. And the little changes, you know, I mean, I can tell small, small stories. Afghanistan is an incredible example of having moved to a place where there was so much poverty and women on the streets with their hands outstretched, begging for money with children to feed and nowhere to go and no idea how to start. And a 97 percent illiteracy rate, 97 percent at that time, 2002. So, you know, what do you do? And they said, you know, please just give me money, get me training, get me a job. Tell me how I can, I can survive. So, you know, and I think of you and I think like financial feminists,
Starting point is 00:21:34 and I love that so much because for me, it is so, it's so painfully personal. I think of these women who need to earn a living. And even if that living means here are three chickens, you can sell these eggs and then you can make some money. And that means your daughter might be able to go to school. You know, that for me is revolutionary stuff. And it sounds small, but it is life changing. And I remember stories, you know, having experienced these kinds of things that are overwhelming because I say, OK, I might not see this gigantic, large scale, you know, global success in my lifetime. But if it's made a difference for one woman in that one moment, you know, I remember another woman who came to me and said, I just want money. You just tell me, give me a job or get me some training or teach me how to earn an income. I don't care. I need to survive. I have four kids. I have no husband.
Starting point is 00:22:26 earn an income. I don't care. I need to survive. I have four kids. I have no husband. We're on the streets. I have no other choice. And I said, but you know, would you also like these other courses that we offer as part of this program? I said, we have conversations about women's rights. She's like, no time for that. I said, how about literacy? No, no time for that. And I said, all right, fair. It's about basic needs. It's about survival. So about six months into the program, she went through a training program, learned a skill. At that time, they were learning how to make, this one in particular, was learning how to make wicker furniture. And so she was doing that and selling pieces. And she had a little bit of a sense of security. And she came to me and she said, you know, you asked me six months ago if I wanted to
Starting point is 00:23:06 enroll in a literacy class. And I said, no. I said, but I realized recently that I've never once written my own name. And I said, well, would you like to try that? Just try that. And that's all. And so we brought her into the room and had the instructor write her name in Dari. They speak in Afghanistan. And so she kind of traced over it and copied it and wrote it a few times. And everybody clapped and she cried and I cried. And it was just such an incredible moment because I realized, like, unless you have that kind of financial security, unless you are
Starting point is 00:23:45 able to fend for yourself and, and feed yourself and your family, all of those other things are not going to be important. She had no time to have conversations about her rights and role in the new Afghanistan back then, no time for other sort of high level stuff. But then when she was ready, and when she had a base of support and security, you know, that for her was opened up all of these doors. And it was an incredible moment to witness. So things like that. I joke, I cry every episode. And I knew that this was going to happen today. Okay, so I have to unpack that one. What a powerful story. Thank you for saying that. Again, I can't imagine not even being able to write my own name and how I don't even have the word for it. How you don't even have your own
Starting point is 00:24:38 identity. You don't, you don't have your own identity to not have your own name or have the ability to write your own name. And so what a gift you gave her. And literally, I don't know your own identity to not have your own name or have the ability to write your own name. And so what a gift you gave her. And literally, I don't know if I've heard a better story that explains the work I'm trying to do. Because my entire, the podcast, the company, but really like the book, I'm trying, the thesis of the book is me attempting to show people that when you have money, and I'm not talking Jeff Bezos money, I'm just talking like enough money that you are stable and secure, every single part of your life changes, every single part. And to your point, she couldn't give a shit about the
Starting point is 00:25:16 rest of it because the Maslow's hierarchy of needs was not like, learn about gender inequality in your country and write a thesis paper paper about it you can't do that if you can't provide for your family and if you don't know where your next meal is coming from like you you can't exactly and it's the same with rape survivors you know when i was in haiti for instance you know all of these women who uh were being raped you know en masse and it was and in all of the countries i've been in, it's not exclusive to Haiti. But everywhere, they've always said, I've said, well, okay, medical care, psychosocial support, other types of counseling, what can we do? And they say, job. I wouldn't be in this
Starting point is 00:25:59 vulnerable situation, or I'd be better able to get out of it if I had money, if I had financial security, if I had that power, if I could control my own life and choices, you know, I wouldn't be here. I wouldn't be in this camp. I wouldn't be fetching water from miles away. I'd have water that was more accessible to me. I wouldn't be using the latrines, you know, with my daughter that are, you know, 300 meters from here. I'd have my own. So all of that, it buys your freedom. It buys your safety. I mean, what more important than that? And then it buys the opportunity for you to get psychiatric help or for you to have more choices or for you to be able to even think past, again, next meal, or how am I going to provide for myself and my
Starting point is 00:26:46 family? That unfortunately is a luxury to think past tomorrow. I mean, when I wrote to you all, I mean, I had this, I had a very unusual kind of feminist upbringing, despite, you know, growing up where I did. But I was, I was very young, I was maybe seven or eight. And my father sat me down and said, I'm going to ask you the same question every day. And you're going to give me an answer. We're going to repeat this until you really understand what it means. And I said, gosh, all right, what's this big question? And he said, Lena, what's the most important thing for a woman?
Starting point is 00:27:19 And I thought, hell, if I know, I'm only seven. I don't know. And he said, the answer is financial independence. And I was like, well, look, I'm only seven you know I don't know I don't know and he said the answer is financial independence and I was like well look I'm seven I don't know what that means and he's like doesn't matter repeat it repeat it and he would ask me every day and I would have to parrot that back to him until I really understood what that meant and he sat me down and he said listen this is because you need to have the power to control your own choices. You might not have to make that money for yourself. You might not have
Starting point is 00:27:53 to fend for yourself, but the ability to do so, no one can take that away from you. And I thought, right, okay, I understand. And every year we went through that same kind of conversation and explanation and every year it made more and more sense to me. And here I am at almost 50, well, 48, but you know, close enough. Oh my gosh. Drop the skincare routine. You look great. It's funny because I spend so much time thinking about like other stuff out there that I'm like, oh, what am I going to grab from CVS? Like there's really nothing that I'm like, oh, what am I going to grab from CBS? There's really nothing that I do, which is hilarious and terrible at the same time, especially now that I'm starting to age and realizing it. But this idea of you will always land on your feet. And he kept telling me,
Starting point is 00:28:37 you should never have to depend on someone else. You should always be able to get out of a situation if you need to, survive if you need to, put your skills to work. Your brain is your asset. No one can take it away from you. And you can use it whenever you need. And that, for me, was really the greatest lesson. And I saw that all the time with the women that I worked with. And I thought, yeah, that's exactly right.
Starting point is 00:29:04 I mean, ironic that I went into yeah, that's, that's exactly right. I mean, you know, ironic that I went into a field that really makes very little money. You know, you go into the nonprofit sector and well, I'm sure you've heard of people like me. So it becomes a challenge when you think like, wait a minute, you know, I do need to start making money for myself. I need to start recognizing my worth and my value. Your own oxygen mask on before helping others. Yeah, to start recognizing my worth and my value. Your own oxygen mask on before helping others. Yeah. Exactly.
Starting point is 00:29:26 Exactly. But, you know, for me, there was no stopping me from doing this. I was absolutely determined and there was nothing that would, no amount of conversations about won't you go to law school or how about a degree in architecture or engineering. I mean, I was a one-trick pony from day one. You mentioned your work in Afghanistan. What are some of the systemic barriers women face
Starting point is 00:30:00 in Arab countries and around the world when it comes to making meaningful change? And literally one of the questions that my team provided for me is like, how can we help without starting a war? We seem to be really good at helping by starting a war, and I put helping in quotes there. So like, how can we create meaningful change in that way? I mean, there's helping in the political sense, and we're going to sideline that because that is beyond us. Although I do believe that the work that we do and the change that we make is political, you know, lowercase
Starting point is 00:30:35 p. But what can we do? I think, first of all, there are movements happening and there are feminists and there are feminist movements and women-led organizations and journalists and activists and all of that all over the place all the time everywhere. So none of that stuff actually needed to be imported or imposed. It is indigenous to every place I have ever been and the places I have not been. So with that in mind, I think following those voices, listening to them, amplifying them, and they will tell us what they need that in mind, I think following those voices, listening to them, amplifying them, and they will tell us what they need. You know, I literally wrote, and my second book, which was on Afghanistan, was entirely on that. I mean, it's the book that
Starting point is 00:31:14 could have been a tweet in the sense that I've said, we didn't listen to women and we should have. And if we had listened to them, we wouldn't be in this place. And I fundamentally believe that that is true. And so right now, women's voices in places like Afghanistan and in Iran and in Ukraine and absolutely everywhere are telling us what needs to happen. They're also telling us what is going wrong. They're like the early warning systems. They will tell us what is going wrong before it actually happens. Because women's mobility, women's safety, women's security, women's freedom are, for me, the indicators of stable and successful societies. And if things for women are not going well, if suddenly women are not out in the streets or in the market or
Starting point is 00:31:59 in office or in public office or girls in school or whatever, There is no safety. People are staying in their homes. They're not moving around. That is a sign that society is not going in the right direction. And there is research to back that up too. That's my opinion, but there is also research that says that even for countries, the best chance they have of peace and prosperity and progress isn't about your economy, the health of the economy, and isn't about the type of government you have. It's about how the country treats its women. And there is ample evidence for peace agreements that last longer when women are involved, all of that stuff. And you look at things like, you know, places like Afghanistan, where peace deals are signed, that not only sell out women, throw women's rights under the bus, basically, and don't have women
Starting point is 00:32:46 present at the table. You know, if women aren't present at the table, they're on the menu, and that's problematic. So, you know, with all of that in mind, I think on the, for those of us on the outside who watch these women's movements, and, you know, who are part of women's movements here, like, look at what's happening in the States. You know, people say, wow, Afghanistan, like, look at what's happening in the States. You know, people say, wow, Afghanistan, like that sucks. And I say, yeah, well, Texas, that sucks too. You know, everywhere, like we are fighting for fundamental rights and freedoms that we should have had and that are being reversed, gains made by our grandmothers that are being taken away from us. So that fight is all around us. You know, and for me, having worked in over
Starting point is 00:33:26 20 countries over these decades in extraordinary places, it's ironic to come back home to the States to see that the front lines are right here and the fight is right here. So it's like it never ends. So what are we doing about it? We've got to do whatever it is within our means to do. You know, if that means amplifying causes, supporting movements, funding organizations, even just listening to people when they're telling you what they need, I think is already critical and already something that sounds very simple. You know, and I'll give you one really basic example. And it was the start
Starting point is 00:34:05 of the COVID pandemic. So in March 2020, I was here in New York, we were getting text messages from the onset of the pandemic saying, stay home, stay safe. And I thought, well, that's going to be interesting because that makes a dangerous assumption that home is safe. Well, home should be safe, but actually for a lot of women and girls, it isn't. That is a crime and a whole other story. But the messaging itself actually didn't listen to women. I don't think women were consulted. So that went on, stay home, stay safe for about six weeks. And then somebody else must have gotten a hold of the text messaging. And suddenly the message tone was different. And it said, well, if home isn't safe, don't worry. Call this number.
Starting point is 00:34:50 Here's a hotline. You can get help. It's safe. It's free. It's confidential, whatever. And I thought, okay, that's great. Thank you. But it's also too little too late.
Starting point is 00:34:58 You know, why did we not understand from the very beginning? I mean, I could have, I could have told them, you could have told them that being locked up at home while, yes, there are public health reasons for that, also is going to bring certain consequences. Women who are locked at home with their abusers, new forms of abuse that are being created as a result of the situation that was perpetrated by the pandemic. So, you know, how do we not listen to what is, in effect, more than half of the population when we're designing these kinds of things, even if it's something as simple as text message? Well, and I literally posted this in our notes, because I want to cross stitch it on a throw pillow. If women are not at the table,
Starting point is 00:35:40 they're on the menu. I've never heard and like wow yep i mean that's it and i also really appreciate too you calling out the colonialization of support or help right like there is a colonialization aspect of advocacy work of you know i think i think the the most obvious example of this is like typically evangelical or a lot of like Christian church communities going to Africa on mission trips. Or, you know, it's like that is in theory helpful, but like it really does more for you and to pat yourself on the back than it does, I think, to actually support those communities. You know, I think what we fail to see, you know, the problem isn't the help that's coming, you know, to other countries, those countries, those people, those women. It's, you know, the failure to see that this is also about you and me and women here that we know and our friends
Starting point is 00:36:42 and our family and our neighbors and our community and our schools and our offices and all of it. And when I tell people one in three women and girls will experience some form of violence in their lifetime, that is true. And that is here. And that is now. And that is you. I mean, and if you are telling me as a woman in any country, any place, any time that you can freely and comfortably and safely walk outside of your house at night by yourself without holding your keys between your fingers so you can poke somebody's eyes out, you know, I'd say, well, that's amazing for you. But so many of us have to restrict our lives and curb our freedoms and limit our potential, our possibilities, and limit our potential, our possibilities, limit our lives, live these small lives because of our security.
Starting point is 00:37:29 And the problem, in addition to that, being that our security is our own responsibility, that we shouldn't have been out and we shouldn't have been drinking or wearing that or talking to this person or going to this place or alone or why didn't you text somebody? Why were you doing this and that? So the constant accusations that we have to face as if we are the ones who have brought the crime upon ourselves. It never ends.
Starting point is 00:37:56 Well, and the, I've always talked about, and again, in the book, I talk about all the time, like the playing small that women are forced to do, right, or encouraged to do. And I really, again, just everything you're saying is just like, I wish I had like a bell and just ringing a bell of like everything you're saying. That's fantastic. But sometimes, like, you're exactly right. It's less about like societal expectations of us playing small, but also literally the requirement to play
Starting point is 00:38:22 small in order to be safe. I think about like, I've traveled alone pretty frequently and I love that, but the amount of like, my parents are worried all the time and they encourage me not to go places, but now I'm adult and they can't, you know, they can't tell me no. And they are so terrified sometimes rightfully so, but there is again, this expectation, like if I go somewhere alone, what does that mean for me? Right. Or like, what is the potential danger? And there's like been jokes by multiple comedians and like TikTok makes this joke all the time that like, especially if you're, you know, a woman dating a man, you are literally dating your predator. Like you are, you are engaging with your predator, with the person or the,
Starting point is 00:39:05 the group, the population, a group, a thing that is literally the most, has the most potential to hurt you. Like it's so crazy. Absolutely. And we have to,
Starting point is 00:39:22 you know, everybody is guilty before proven innocent and that's you've got to constantly be vigilant and that is an exhausting way to live you know I keep saying imagine your life if you didn't have to have those restrictions imagine if you could go anywhere and travel and do anything and see anything and be anything without these restrictions imagine the kind of life you'd have you know and on the flip side I say well you know imagine the kind of life you'd have. And on the flip side, I say, well, imagine the kind of life I'd have if I didn't have to do this for a living, because actually, how fucked up is it that I have to do this for work when it should just be, as I've said many times before, common sense? Why do I have to have this as a job? I mean, the fact that this is so
Starting point is 00:40:02 much of a problem that I have dedicated three decades to doing this, I mean, the fact that this is so much of a problem that I have dedicated three decades to doing this. I mean, maybe I would maybe I could have been an artist or maybe I could have been an architect. I don't know. I never cultivated any other skills because all I do is this. Yeah, feels very familiar. And again, like I love this work. And I you know, this work in many ways we've we've as a company made love this work. And I, you know, this work in many ways, we've, we've, as a company made a lot of money. And hopefully, you know, we're redistributing that. But also, yeah, no, it's like, I would love to not work anymore. But I feel called to this work now. Like, I can't just quit. Because what does that mean? What does that mean for everybody who's
Starting point is 00:40:39 engaging with it? Yep, totally. Um, exactly. And now that I finished my book, one of the first things I'm going to do is sign up for some of your courses, because I've just launched something independent. And I need to, I need to figure out how I'm going to manage my money like a grownup, finally. So you work with the Arab Institute for Women. And I think it's really easy for us stateside to have very narrow views on what women's lives are like in countries like Afghanistan or Iran, Lebanon. What are some of the most egregious mischaracterizations that you've seen? Well, I can tell you this.
Starting point is 00:41:15 I mean, my experience in the Arab region has been over the last seven years. I mean, yes, those are my origins, but also running this institute. And I left them in February and now I'm independent, but in my time, yes, which is, which is wonderful. I still support them. I'm still their biggest champion and cheerleader. Absolutely love this institute. And this institute itself is going to be 50 years old next year. So, I mean, to answer your question, we don't hear any of the good news stories. We don't hear any of the successes. We don't hear any of the, um, the activism, the movements, the momentum. We don't hear enough of that stuff. I mean, this institute itself is the owner of the very first feminist journal in the region that's
Starting point is 00:41:57 been in publication continuously since 1976. So, I mean, that kind of stuff already is so very progressive but for me what I love about the region and what has been the subject of my third book that I submitted yesterday with my co-author is about young Arab feminist movements because there are young women and men actually who are alive ignited angry out on the, organizing in ways that are intersectional and organic and fighting all of these issues and just not taking any more crap. And we don't hear about those kinds of stories. So I hope actually by writing this book, that it brings that to the fore that people say, oh, well, look at this, you know, this activism is alive and feminism is ignited and is a movement
Starting point is 00:42:45 and movements, plural, all across the region. And it's not just the stuff we happen to hear about in the moment. It's not just the, you know, Iran, which has captivated our attention for about five minutes, you know, and then we turn on to the next thing. This is about continuous battle on the front lines and the front lines being everywhere. You know, women telling me like, I go out on the streets and I fight the patriarchy and come home and I have my dad and my brother to deal with and that's the micro patriarchy.
Starting point is 00:43:16 Like I'm fighting battles everywhere all the time. And I think that's great. Like this is a generation that is just not gonna put up with it. And I love that for them. Like this is a generation that is just not going to put up with it. And I love that for them. And I'm so happy. I wish we had given them a better world to work in. I'm sorry they have to continue those battles.
Starting point is 00:43:34 But I feel like they've got a better chance of winning them. And the way that they express themselves. And there's a whole chapter in the book about art as activism. So talking to women who are street artists and musicians and using that for public protest and to make comment about society and the things that they see that need to be changed, the things that they won't put up with. And I think for me, that is, there's magic in that and there's hope in that. You have mentioned during our time together, the word anger a lot, right? Feeling angry when you were a girl and starting to learn about these things, feeling angry in your work. I know from both research and my general experience as a woman about town that anger is not one of those emotions that we are, A, comfortable feeling as women, but B, comfortable seeing in women. We are not comfortable with rageful, angry women.
Starting point is 00:44:41 And we are often not comfortable being rageful, angry women. I've experienced anger as one of my most powerful tools in my work. And I imagine you have as well. What about your experience has been motivated by anger? And how can we use anger as a tool to better our world? as a tool to better our world? Anger for me is the catalyst for my activism. And I think it is the cumulative effect of the microaggressions that you experience on an everyday basis. The little things that happen, the little moments where you say, and it just sits in your stomach.
Starting point is 00:45:20 I feel it. I feel these little pebbles that build up and form a rock and a boulder and a mountain, and you just want to explode. And you think, if this is happening to me, and if this is my experience, how much worse is it for somebody else? So, you know, when I talk about anger, and I tell people all the time, I say, you know, if you look around you, when you pay attention, you open your eyes eyes and you start to understand things, you know, ideally through the lens of women and girls, you know, you never can unsee that kind
Starting point is 00:45:49 of stuff, that injustice. You will never forget it. And if you have seen it, you are ignited. You are alive. You have to do something about it. It's impossible not to, you know, as a living, breathing person on this planet. And if you are not angry, you're asleep. You know, what are you doing? How can you not be angry about that? How do you allow this to happen on your watch in your lifetime? I simply don't.
Starting point is 00:46:14 So, you know, it is about the tiny moments where you feel slighted, sidelined, ignored, dismissed, discriminated against, marginalized, you know, and those get bigger and bigger and bigger, you know, it tends to not be as much about the giant transgressions as those little things that you see on an everyday basis. And that, for me, is where I guess that anger as a girl started to build up, and meeting communities of people who were also angry about those same things and deciding that that anger for me was going to drive me to action. And so that's what I tell
Starting point is 00:46:53 people to do. I say, you know, you can, you don't have to take on every social justice issue. There is a lot to be angry about. You can be angry about the environment. You can be angry about racial issues. You can be angry about all kinds of things. There's a lot, you know, not to say there is not to be happy about because I generally, surprisingly lean to the positive despite my, despite my anger and activism. But I say, there's going to be one thing for you. You know, there's going to be something that like hits you in the stomach where you say, okay, that's it. That's my line.
Starting point is 00:47:27 That is the thing, you know? And for me, it was women and girls. And I said, this is the one thing that I am angry enough about that I cannot accept. And I cannot accept it enough that I'm going to act and I'm going to do something. So, you know, that's what I would tell people. Find that, find that thing for you, that moment where you say enough and then step over it. What is one? Yes. What is one thing you want somebody to take away from our conversation today? You know, I keep telling people it is all around us and you have to just see it through the lens of women and girls. And believe me, like it is, if everybody stood up and did something in the, in the small spaces they occupy, you know,
Starting point is 00:48:12 I gave an entire TED talk on this and I said, start where you stand. You don't need to do it the way I did it. You don't need to go off to Central African Republic. You know, most people can't even find it on a map. You don't need to go to those kinds of places. You actually can do it right here in your life, in your home, in your community, in your school, with your family and friends, with your peer group. You can turn to somebody in your peer group and say, you know what, enough. No, stop. And if you do that, you know, I'm not saying police each other, but call it out because we feel it. We know it. You know, you know, when somebody has crossed the line, you know, when somebody is treating another person badly and it is hard to be the person who stands up and says,
Starting point is 00:48:54 stop, don't do that anymore. Leave her alone, but please do it. Do it safely, do it carefully, but do it because the price of staying silent, that's too big a price to pay. Right now, I'm in what I'm calling phase three of my career, which, you know, might be the last one. So I've launched something independent. I don't yet know what that's going to look like. But, you know, the idea of finding partners for creative collaborations, like let's collectively do something. Let's make it meaningful, but let's reach beyond the echo chamber. You know, there is, as I see it, there's a big group of people somewhere in the middle. You know, we've got the entrenched
Starting point is 00:49:35 opposition. That's tough. We've got the people who are like us. That's great. But we've got the movable middle. There's a lot of squishy in the middle. Let's find ways to work better with those people. Let's find ways, you know, now after a lifetime of nonprofit work to work with the private sector, to work with a different audience, to be able to reach wider, to mainstream this. You know, I constantly challenge myself. I think, how did something like, you know, wearing a seatbelt, how did that messaging get across? Like our parents, you know, they never wore seatbelts, right? That just, that wasn't what you did back then. Nobody thought they were there, but no one thought of it. Now. Or like smoking, right? Like everybody smoked. Everybody smoked. Social change is possible. Behavior change is possible. We see it all the
Starting point is 00:50:23 time. But what is that magic thing what's the moment what's the recipe what's the secret it is it's about mainstreaming it in ways where you just can't ignore it and now you know you or I I imagine can't get into a car without automatically boop you know you buckle up it's just your arm does it without your brain thinking it how do we do that but let's talk about that actually for a second, though, because I think, again, I did not live in the time where smoking was a thing and then it was largely eradicated. There's still plenty of people who smoke. There's still plenty of people who don't wear seatbelts. Right. But like the vast majority of people do. And I think about like
Starting point is 00:50:58 masks and how it was so still is so goddamn difficult to get a certain group of people to wear a mask. And, you know, I imagine and I'd have to go research this, that the idea of wearing a seatbelt or, you know, stopping smoking was one, you're going to be healthier for it. Right. Like the risk to your life goes down and to the risk to other people's lives, rather than, you know, secondhand smoking, somebody getting hit by a car and, and being injured or dying that goes away as well. So it's like somewhat selfish, but also empathetic. There was not even selfishness when it came to masks, like people wouldn't even do it for their own health, yet alone the health of somebody else. Are we in the time where empathy and even selfishness is not a good enough tool anymore?
Starting point is 00:51:53 It's hard to say because at the same time, I see both sides of it. I see people who exercise great empathy and who really care for each other and who are concerned and who want things to be better. I think maybe they don't know how, you know, there's a lot of questioning around that, like, you know, aside from being angry out in the streets or, you know, using social media, which has its pros and cons, you know, concretely, what can people do? I think, you know, that is, that continues to be a challenge, but I want to think we're getting better. You know, I'd like to think that we are now starting to pay attention. We see that we are connected much more. We see that these issues are all around us. We see that
Starting point is 00:52:35 public health crises don't stay confined within their borders, right? We've learned that lesson. Wars don't stay confined within their borders. You know, even if it is not your war in a way, you know, if you are funding it, supporting it, engaged in it, if people are moving, people are migrating, they're coming here, they're looking for, you know, it is yours. It becomes yours. You know, so we are we are each other's caretakers in many ways now. And I'd like to think I'd like to think we're understanding that a little bit better oh and i don't mean to say like there's no empathy in the world right but we have a certain group of
Starting point is 00:53:11 people where like that doesn't seem to connect or like i mean climate change is another great example of like it is so pressing of there will not be a world and i mean i don't know the year now but like we're getting we're getting to the precipice of like if we don't get our shit together in the next couple of years, like there is no world. And I would argue actually their selfishness in that regard is preventing them from seeing anything. Right. Because I don't think there's any one. There's the denial of science, but also like, oh, well, I'll have a world. So it doesn't matter that somebody else won't. So I'm, I'm, I'm reckoning those issues too, with, again, we see beautiful, you know, incredible movements around protecting our world and protecting land and protecting
Starting point is 00:53:55 land and resources for the future. I also see Mitch McConnell. So like, it's, I don't know, I don't know how to reckon. Like there's so many, and I am, I am, I don't know, I don't know how to reckon. Like, there's so many and I am I am I agree with you. I am an optimist. Like I truly do try to see the good as much good as I can. And everybody. I also Yeah, see all the bullshit as we all do. And I think that that's really interesting of like, there's a lot of people doing a lot of good. There's also a lot of people directly contradicting it. That's true. And I find that the more I focus on that, you know, then it's just becomes too big for me. And I think, you know what, forget all of that. And what can I do today? You know, can I do something small today? And that's, to be honest, that is the
Starting point is 00:54:40 only way that I've survived. Like, if I have something to say, you know, I'll say it and I'll ignore all the comments. There's always all the negative comments. I'll try and do the things I feel like me doing better than not doing them. What's the alternative? You know, for me, there isn't a choice. It's, you know, if I feel like something needs to be done or said or supported or amplified, I will just do it and then then accept the risks of that. And try and ignore those who don't agree, I think is the only way to keep going. Otherwise, we drown in the negative voices. And that, you know, that's enough to stop you, you know, they become really, it can be really toxic, and also can be somewhat scary. So I think the less I focus on that for my own sanity, the better.
Starting point is 00:55:27 Thank you for your work. Thank you for this conversation. Wow. That's all I can say. I'm speechless. You're absolutely incredible. Where can people find you and connect with you? Well, if you can spell my last name, you can find me. I'm very easy to Google. I'm across all social media. I think that's, you know, who knows how that's going to evolve. But for now I am and I have a website. It's linaabarafi.com. And people always write to me with questions and ideas. And I would welcome that. Please do. You know, if you need inspiration for how to start, where to start, what to do, I absolutely welcome and encourage that because, you know, paralysis is not a response. And overwhelm is understandable, but even small action is meaningful. And that has a cumulative effect. You know, I keep saying, if you do something good and you demonstrate that kind of good behavior, you know, those things are behaviors contagious. So you might as well make it good. And you don't have to go far to do good. You can do it right here in the very small spaces. And I think it's easy and it's within our reach to do it. I think about the ripple effect too, with the example you gave of the Afghani woman of like,
Starting point is 00:56:50 you know, she's now able to provide for her family and potentially her community and even just like a neighbor next door. And then that neighbor provides for somebody else. And like, it changes, has the impact to change the entire community and then communities change and the world starts to change. So thank you for your work. Absolutely. Thank you for your work. I love it. We have so many things in common. It's just we've got to connect these dots. A huge thank you to Lena for joining us. Please make sure to check her and her workout. We've linked everything in our show notes. And if you're enjoying this podcast, please share your favorite episodes with your friends, share them on social media. It helps people continue to discover the show and helps us create the show and produce
Starting point is 00:57:25 the show for you all. You can go to financialfeministpodcast.com for more. We always do extended research on our guests and the guest topics. So if you want to dive deeper, great place to go. You can also follow us on Instagram at financialfeministpodcast. If you're wondering where to get started with your financial journey, you can go to herfirst100k.com slash quiz for personalized resources depending on your financial situation. As always, we're so thankful for you and we'll see you back next week. Thank you for listening to Financial Feminist, a Her First 100K podcast. Financial Feminist is hosted by me, Tori Dunlap, produced by Kristen Fields, marketing and administration by Karina Patel, Sharice Wade, Alina Helzer, Paulina Isaac, Sophia Cohen,
Starting point is 00:58:06 Valerie Oresko, Jack Koning, Khalil Dumas, Elizabeth McCumber, Beth Bowen, and Amanda LaFue. Research by Arielle Johnson, audio engineering by Austin Fields, promotional graphics by Mary Stratton, photography by Sarah Wolf, and theme music by Jonah Cohen Sound.
Starting point is 00:58:22 A huge thanks to the entire Her First 100K team and community for supporting the show. For more information about financial feminist, her first hundred K our guests and episode show notes, visit financial feminist podcast.com or follow us on Instagram at financial feminist podcast.

There aren't comments yet for this episode. Click on any sentence in the transcript to leave a comment.