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  1. Shifting the Narrative
  2. 16 Days of Activism
  3. Meet Fadia Thabet, Yemen/United States

Meet Fadia Thabet, Yemen/United States

"Yemeni women take a lot of bullets from men. They take on a lot of responsibilities and play a key role in reintegrating kids recruited by extremists and militants. Protecting our kids and reintegrating is the way we are going to heal our communities."

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Meet Fadia Thabet, Yemen/United States

Fadia Thabet is a Yemeni peace activist. After completing a degree in computer science, Fadia switched gears to humanitarian work. As a child protection officer for the Danish Refugee Council, Fadia reported violations against children during the conflict in Southern Yemen—and pushed for the protection and reintegration of children recruited to fight in the war. Fadia was recognized with the Secretary of State's International Women of Courage Award in 2017 for her work as a child protection officer in Yemen. She is currently pursuing post graduate studies in the United States, but one day hopes to return to the field to amplify the voices of local women.

How did you begin your work as a child protection worker?

It’s a funny story. Having graduated with a degree in computer science, I happened to start work with a local organization that was helping refugees arriving from Ethiopia and Somalia. While there, I began to get exposure to and slowly change my perspective on humanitarian work. I interacted with so many refugees. Eventually, I was invited to a training session on refugees, internally displaced persons, and the application of international humanitarian law. That training changed everything. I became interested in how we can use these treaties and conventions to bring refugees a decent life with dignity, and that prompted me to apply to work in child protection.

Could you elaborate on your role as a child protection officer?

My work was to document violations in accordance with UN Security Council resolution 1612 on children and armed conflict. We worked to reintegrate those kids who were ex-combatants back into their communities. And that was a long process. We provided medical and psychosocial support. We also partnered with and trained other community-based organizations and local non-governmental organizations on the ground.

What is the role that women are playing during the peacemaking process in Yemen?

Women are not at the table of peace negotiations yet. Even with a quota system in place, where women’s representation is supposed to be around thirty percent, we have only one or two women participants.

But what we have been doing so far, as civil society and human rights activists, has been remarkable. I am a part of the Women Solidarity Network in Yemen, which was founded by an incredible woman peacebuilder, Rasha Jarhum. This network, composed of more than 250 women and women-led organizations in Yemen and diaspora, has been a tool to both maintain women’s solidarity and coordinate efforts for peace on the ground. Recently, there have been a lot of women arrested, abducted, or even assassinated. The network has been releasing statements on their behalf. Within the chaos that’s occurring in Yemen, women’s solidarity is spreading everywhere.

What is the reality on the ground for Yemeni women peacemakers?

Yemeni women take a lot of bullets from men. They take on a lot of responsibilities and play a key role in reintegrating kids recruited by extremists and militants. Protecting our kids and reintegrating is the way we are going to heal our communities.

When I was working with other community-based organizations in Yemen, I found that women were often in roles of leadership. I remember working with so many women in the field—ordinary women—who work in agriculture, who bring water to their families after walking for hours. These women deserve recognition. They’re not in the spotlight, but they are the ones that have sacrificed a lot to bring communities together.

What do you plan on doing after graduation? Will you be back in the field?

After I graduate, I’d either like to go back to working in the field or at a humanitarian agency’s headquarters. If that doesn’t happen, I want to be back out there, possibly working in war zones. We don't have a lot of women working in war zones, besides those in the medical field. I want to be there to bridge that gap, ensure that women’s voices are heard. I know that this work might end my life one day, but I will be happy to go on this path because this is what I'm most passionate about.

LEARN MORE

Watch Fadia discuss significance of her International Women of Courage award win.

Read the Women Solidarity Network's Five Point Initiative to Protect Civilians in Hodeidah.

Read founder of the Peace Track Initiative and founding member of the Women Solidarity Network, Rasha Jarhum's, statement to the United Nations Security Council last month.

Learn more about the importance of women's participation in the Yemeni peace process.

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16 Days of Activism

November 25, 2022

Afrah Nassar: "Believe that you are worth listening to."

November 25, 2022

Jamila Afghani: “We should extend hands of support to each other."

November 25, 2022

Mèaza Gidey Gebremedhin: “I always need to fight for myself, for my place in this world, and to help others.”

November 25, 2022

A Q&A with democracy activist Khin Ohmar: "I feel at peace knowing there is a young generation fighting for their rights."

November 25, 2022

Amira Osman Hamed: "Don't let them terrify you."

November 25, 2022

Lubna Alkanawati: "What's really helped me to survive is the women's network around me."

November 25, 2022

Nina Potarska, Anna Chernova and Oksana Senyk: "Family peace is a small piece of peacebuilding."

November 25, 2022

Nadia Murad: "We don't get anywhere by pacifying with politeness."

December 10, 2021

Manal Shqair: I’m always fighting every day for my existence as a woman (Palestine)

December 9, 2021

Ounaysa Arabi: Knowledge is power and we have a good inheritance from feminists around the world (Sudan)

December 9, 2021

Ilaf Nasreldin: We as women deserve to live a better life (Sudan)

December 8, 2021

Musu Diamond Kamara: When one woman is affronted, all of us are affronted (Liberia)

More — 16 Days of Activism

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