can bring their children so that they do not end up quitting their careers. “It is the right of every working woman to demand a space if she wants to bring her child. Instead of asking women to quit, we should be more flexible towards them,” she said.
Aga Khan Educational Service’s Dilshad, who works on gender issues with academic centres, shared her experience of starting work as a teacher in northern Pakistan and then moving to Karachi for higher education at a time when she was expecting a child.
“I still vividly remember that I was asked to sign a form which stated that if I underperform in my studies for three months, I would be asked to leave. This shows that even before a woman steps into the field, many hurdles await her,” she said. Dilshad added that she kept working hard despite all odds and not only proved herself but has now been helping other women find opportunities to acquire education and skills.
Journalist Farzana Ali had a lot to say about the struggles of being a woman, working in the field of journalism. Although now she is one of only two female news channel bureau chiefs in the country, Farzana said she has faced constant harassment at work from the time she stepped into the field and began to make a space for herself covering hard-hitting stories.
“I think the real troubles start once a woman breaks the glass ceiling. In order to hold us back, people resort to character assassination, but, thanks to the support of my close ones, I was able to progress [in my career],” she said.
Referring to last week’s terrorist attack at Agricultural Training Institute in Peshawar, she said that despite being at a senior position, she was in the field reporting without any protective gear as bullets flew all over the area.
Commenting on the notion that only a “pretty” face must make it to the television screens, Farzana said that once a bureaucrat had remarked that she was intelligent but wasn’t “hot enough”. “I told this man that I was a human, not a cup of tea,” she said.