Shabnam Hashmi (born 1957[1]) is an Indian social activist and human rights campaigner. She is the sister of Safdar Hashmi and Sohail Hashmi. Safdar Hashmi was a communist playwright and director, best known for his work with street theatre in India.

Shabnam Hashmi
NationalityIndian
Occupation(s)Indian social activist and human rights campaigner
Known forDraft Committee member of the infamous "Communal Violence Bill"
Relatives

Early life

edit

She started her social activism campaigning about adult literacy in 1981. Since 1989 she has spent most of her time in combating communal and fundamentalist forces in India. After the Gujarat riots of 2002, Hashmi changed her focus to grass roots work and has spent a considerable amount of time in Gujarat. In 2003 she was one of the founders of ANHAD (Act Now for Harmony and Democracy),[2] which she administers.[3] Their FCRA license was cancelled based on for working against right-wing violence.[4] She also works in Kashmir, Bihar and Mewat area of Haryana.

She has campaigned against communalism and violation of human rights in the name of fighting terrorism.

Shabnam Hashmi was amongst ninety-one women from India who figured in the list of 1,000 women who have been nominated globally for the Nobel Peace Prize-2005.

Hashmi has focused on issues of women's political participation, adoption,[5] gender justice, democracy and secularism.

She was awarded the Association for Communal Harmony in Asia (ACHA) Star Award for Communal Harmony in 2005, Aamil Smriti Samman in 2005 and the National Minority Rights Award 2008 by the National Minority Commission.[6]

See also

edit

References

edit
  1. ^ "Shabnam Hashmi (India)".
  2. ^ Ahuja, Rajesh (December 16, 2016). "MHA clips wings of NGO run by Shabnam Hashmi". Hindustan Times.
  3. ^ "Shabnam Hashmi challenges Gujarat's claim of being a model State", The Hindu, 4 August 2013, retrieved 8 December 2016
  4. ^ "Now, Shabnam Hashmi's ANHAD, 3 other NGOs lose FCRA licence". theweek.in. Retrieved 2018-09-23.
  5. ^ Sidharth Pandey (21 February 2014), When it comes to adoption, religion no bar: Supreme Court, NDTV, retrieved 8 December 2016
  6. ^ "A CONVERSATION OF PEACE AND HARMONY". thedailyeye.info. Retrieved 2024-07-08.