Can you remember how old you were when you rode your first bike?
Remember that exhilarating feeling you experienced as a kid – both jitters and determination – getting on that seat, finding a balance and pedalling?
What if you had fear – real life threatening fear – for not only learning to ride a bike, but for every time you straddled the seat and pushed the pedals.
The women that change the world.
For the ladies riding in Afghanistan this is their reality. Every time they ride they face ridicule, threats and judgement.
In 2006, after several visits to Afghanistan, ex American athlete, Shannon Galpin founded a non-profit organisation called Mountain2Mountain – an organisation that aims to promote women’s rights globally.
Galpin decided to use bike riding as a tool for female empowerment in a country where heading out on two wheels is considered an ‘immoral’ action for women.
After her eleventh visit to Afghanistan, Galpin discovered a group of women who had formed their own national cycling team. Fully clothed, headscarves tucked in under their helmets, the group had started a new kind of revolution.
Women’s rights in Afghanistan are backsliding.
“I couldn’t believe it,” Galpin told the New York Times. “I’d been in the most liberal areas of the country, and I’d never even seen a little girl on a bike, let alone a grown woman.”
Women’s cycling is considered taboo in Afghanistan, defying the predominantly conservative cultural norms, with Human Rights Watch Afghanistan researcher Heather Barr describing women riding bicycles as being generally considered ‘immoral’ in the Middle Eastern country. It adds to the list of other behaviours considered ‘inappropriate’ in Afghanistan.