Mario Prof

Mario Prof

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Photos from Mario Prof's post 05/27/2026

Le cancer fait de plus en plus de ravages.
Aidez la recherche svp.

https://fundraisemyway.cancer.ca/campaign/Je-patine-pour-la-vie-/?language=fr

05/27/2026
05/27/2026
I recently came across Nawal El Sadawi’s interviews. Her journey of unlearning social norms and patriarchy is inspiring. She was an Egyptian physician, writer, and feminist activist who became one of the most influential voices for women’s rights in the Arab world. She challenged patriarchy, religious conservatism, and political repression through her books, public activism, and organizing work.

Her politics were strongly anti-patriarchal, anti-colonial, and anti-imperialist, and she tied women’s liberation to wider social change. She described herself as a socialist-feminist, arguing that feminist struggle could not truly succeed under capitalism. She also criticized religious fundamentalism and opposed forces such as the Muslim Brotherhood, seeing them as harmful to democracy and women’s freedom.

She wrote 50 books. Her writing openly addressed female ge***al mutilation, honor violence, sexual oppression, and the links between gender inequality and social class. She was also a public health physician and psychiatrist, and she used her medical experience to argue that women’s oppression was social and political, not biological.

El Saadawi mattered because she turned feminism into a broad social critique, not just a literary or academic position. She paid a personal price for her views, including censorship, dismissal from government work, prison, and repeated conflict with authorities. Her legacy is that of a fearless advocate who helped make women’s rights a central political question in the Arab world.

Her dream was a world without religion’s oppressive forms, with one standard for all, ending patriarchy and capitalism for real equality. She said “There is not a revolution that succeeded in a few months. It takes years, even decades, to fulfill its goals.” She held a confident belief that the young people who led the revolution will win and that feminism succeeds when power is taken collectively, not gifted.

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Feminism religion politics socialism democracy capitalism activism feminist movement feminist pseudo feminist resilience resistance revolution social impact social awareness youth power youth empowerment 05/25/2026

https://www.instagram.com/reel/DWgqF_KDLXM/?igsh=MW5lbDRzOWhuZnFxaA==

I recently came across Nawal El Sadawi’s interviews. Her journey of unlearning social norms and patriarchy is inspiring. She was an Egyptian physician, writer, and feminist activist who became one of the most influential voices for women’s rights in the Arab world. She challenged patriarchy, religious conservatism, and political repression through her books, public activism, and organizing work. Her politics were strongly anti-patriarchal, anti-colonial, and anti-imperialist, and she tied women’s liberation to wider social change. She described herself as a socialist-feminist, arguing that feminist struggle could not truly succeed under capitalism. She also criticized religious fundamentalism and opposed forces such as the Muslim Brotherhood, seeing them as harmful to democracy and women’s freedom. She wrote 50 books. Her writing openly addressed female ge***al mutilation, honor violence, sexual oppression, and the links between gender inequality and social class. She was also a public health physician and psychiatrist, and she used her medical experience to argue that women’s oppression was social and political, not biological. El Saadawi mattered because she turned feminism into a broad social critique, not just a literary or academic position. She paid a personal price for her views, including censorship, dismissal from government work, prison, and repeated conflict with authorities. Her legacy is that of a fearless advocate who helped make women’s rights a central political question in the Arab world. Her dream was a world without religion’s oppressive forms, with one standard for all, ending patriarchy and capitalism for real equality. She said “There is not a revolution that succeeded in a few months. It takes years, even decades, to fulfill its goals.” She held a confident belief that the young people who led the revolution will win and that feminism succeeds when power is taken collectively, not gifted. ____________________________________________ Feminism religion politics socialism democracy capitalism activism feminist movement feminist pseudo feminist resilience resistance revolution social impact social awareness youth power youth empowerment

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