In the heart of Toronto, far from their homeland, a group of Afghan girls gathered to raise the silent cries of girls deprived of education in Afghanistan, marching with firm steps and red pashmina scarves.
This march was part of the national Red Pashmina Walk movement in Canada, initiated by the organization Right to Learn Afghanistan in collaboration with five branches across different cities.
Participants walked from the Firefighter’s Memorial to the Ontario Legislature Building, chanting slogans such as “Education is a right” and “Don’t erase girls.”
Margot Mayer, the coordinator of the Toronto branch of the organization, described the event as “a symbol of global and human solidarity for educational justice.”
In this video, you will hear:
– The voices of girls who want to break the silence
– Messages from the heart of migration for those left behind closed school doors
– Stories of hope, resistance, and human responsibility
Since the Taliban took power in 2021, Afghan girls have been deprived of secondary and higher education. Now, after more than 1,300 days of exclusion, this movement in Toronto is a reminder that the world has not forgotten them.
Watch the video, share it, and be a voice for justice.
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