Women for Afghan Women

Women for Afghan Women WAW is a grassroots organization protecting & promoting the rights of Afghan women & girls in the U.S. & Afghanistan.

We advocate for gender equality, justice, & freedom, ensuring Afghan women & girls can prosper through education, legal aid, & support. Women for Afghan Women (WAW) was founded in New York in April 2001 in response to the brutal conditions Afghan women and girls were suffering under Taliban rule. After the September 2011 attacks in the United States and the ousting of the Taliban in Afghanistan, t

he organization evolved from a small network of volunteers assisting 10 Afghan refugee women in New York into an over 700-member team that today serves hundreds of thousands of clients through extensive, direct services and programming in 32 facilities and across 14 provinces in Afghanistan, a community center in New York, and an advocacy office in Washington, DC. Women for Afghan Women (WAW) is committed to the leadership and agency of Afghan women and girls in the struggle for their rights. Our work is community-based and takes place within the religious and cultural context of the women of Afghanistan. The organization and the breadth of our services are strengthened by our commitment to diversity, with our board and staff including men and women, and a diverse representation of age, religion, ethnicity and sexual orientation. Over the past 16 years, Women for Afghan Women has become the largest organization for Afghan women and children globally, and the largest women’s organization in Afghanistan. Today, WAW provides life-saving and life-changing advocacy, education, and direct services for women and children across Afghanistan and New York who have endured human rights violations, including forced and underage marriage, attempted “honor” killings, domestic violence, ba’ad (custom of females exchanged in compensation for a crime), r**e, forced prostitution, unlawful imprisonment, and barred access to education and employment. WAW’s services have become an important stopgap in the fight to eradicate gender-based violence against Afghan women and girls. Proudly, today, we are the largest women’s organization in Afghanistan providing mediation, protection, and life-saving services to women, girls, children, and their families. To ensure our impact propagates, we are constantly evolving, adapting, and improving the scope of our programs to meet the changing needs of Afghan society and communities. Today, our needs-based programs have also expanded to meet the urgent requirements of refugees in the U.S. and Afghanistan, in addition to conflict-induced internally-displaced persons (IDPs) in Afghanistan. In Afghanistan, Women for Afghan Women (WAW) operates 32 centers and offers services and programs to beneficiaries across 14 provinces providing pro bono mediation, protection, and life-saving services to women, girls, children, and their families. Increasingly, WAW is serving IDPs and the recent influx of refugee returnees, particularly from the European Union, Pakistan, and Iran through its new Protection and Monitoring Project, in addition to WAW’s other longer-standing programs such as Family Guidance, Women’s Protection, and Children’s Support Centers. Our life-saving and life-changing services impact hundreds of thousands of women, children, family members, and Afghan community leaders and public officials each year. In the United States, WAW’s New York Community Center (NYCC) has become a lifeline and second home to the Afghan immigrant, refugee, and Afghan-American community. Supported by our advocacy efforts in Washington, D.C, we serve the direct needs of thousands of individuals and families from this under-served population in the United States, each year, by providing culturally sensitive, holistic, and immediate support.

Play helps children learn, connect, imagine, and heal.For children navigating uncertainty, trauma, displacement, or fami...
06/11/2026

Play helps children learn, connect, imagine, and heal.

For children navigating uncertainty, trauma, displacement, or family hardship, opportunities to play can be especially important for emotional wellbeing and healthy development.

On International Day of Play, we’re celebrating the importance of safe spaces where children can learn, grow, and simply be children.

Every child deserves moments of happiness — your donation is the missing puzzle piece to an Afghan girl’s joy.

Too often, Afghan women are reduced to headlines, stereotypes, or a single narrative.But Afghan women are not one story....
06/10/2026

Too often, Afghan women are reduced to headlines, stereotypes, or a single narrative.

But Afghan women are not one story. They are millions of stories—filled with creativity, intelligence, leadership, humor, ambition, love, and resilience.

Afghan women should be seen in their full humanity: not only for the challenges they face, but for the lives they build, the communities they strengthen, and the futures they continue to imagine.

For 25 years, we’ve worked alongside Afghan women and families to help expand access to education, community support, opportunity, and resources.

Because every woman deserves the chance to define her own story.

🔗 Support our work through the link in our bio.

This World Immigrant Heritage Month, we celebrate the Afghan women who have carried languages, traditions, stories, skil...
06/08/2026

This World Immigrant Heritage Month, we celebrate the Afghan women who have carried languages, traditions, stories, skills, and communities across borders and generations.

Immigrant stories are often told through sacrifice. But they are also stories of creativity, leadership, entrepreneurship, family, culture, and belonging.

Across the United States and around the world, Afghan women continue to shape the communities they call home while preserving the rich histories and traditions that connect them to where they came from.

Their contributions can be found in classrooms, businesses, community organizations, hospitals, art studios, government offices, and homes.

This month, we honor the many ways Afghan women continue to build, create, lead, and inspire.

How has an immigrant Afghan woman shaped your life?

For 25 years, Women for Afghan Women have believed education can transform lives, communities, and futures.The Bradley O...
06/05/2026

For 25 years, Women for Afghan Women have believed education can transform lives, communities, and futures.

The Bradley O. Jordan Scholarship was created to support Muslim immigrant and refugee women and girls in New York City as they pursue higher education and continue their academic journeys.

Whether you’re just beginning college or continuing your studies, this scholarship exists to recognize your ambition, hard work, and commitment to building a future for yourself and your community.

Applications open June 1 and submissions close June 30. Awardees will be announced in August.

Please share this opportunity with someone who should see it.

Learn more and apply through the link in our bio.

Do Afghan girls deserve the right to learn, grow, dream, and shape their own futures?For 25 years, Women for Afghan Wome...
06/03/2026

Do Afghan girls deserve the right to learn, grow, dream, and shape their own futures?

For 25 years, Women for Afghan Women has worked to support Afghan women and girls through community-based programs including education support, literacy programs, vocational training, mental health services, legal support, and safe community spaces for women and families.

At a time when millions of Afghan girls continue to face barriers to education, these spaces matter more than ever.

Your donations make that possible.

Head to the link in our bio to support Afghan women and girls and help keep education, community, and opportunity accessible for the next generation.

Afghan women have always been beautiful, complex, creative, intelligent, stylish, powerful, soft, political, artistic, a...
06/01/2026

Afghan women have always been beautiful, complex, creative, intelligent, stylish, powerful, soft, political, artistic, and entirely their own.

These photographs span decades of Afghan life — together, they tell a story far bigger than the flattened narratives so often imposed on Afghan women.

Afghan women are not a symbol. They are people. And like all people, they deserve the freedom to choose who they are, how they live, and how they present themselves to the world.

At WAW, we believe Afghan women and girls deserve to be seen in the fullness of their humanity — across every generation, every identity, and every path they choose for themselves.

Your donation helps Afghan women and families access community support, education, legal services, mental health resources, and safe spaces.

Head to the link in our bio to support Afghan women today.

Mental health support can change lives.Many Afghan women and families face the emotional impact of conflict, displacemen...
05/31/2026

Mental health support can change lives.

Many Afghan women and families face the emotional impact of conflict, displacement, family separation, and isolation. Access to counseling, safe spaces, educational support, and community care can help women and children heal and rebuild their futures.

Women for Afghan Women continues to provide culturally responsive support services that help vulnerable families access care, stability, and hope during difficult times.

You can help support Afghan women and families by donating through the link in our bio.

After enduring violence, imprisonment, and devastating loss, Amina struggled deeply with grief and isolation. Through WA...
05/29/2026

After enduring violence, imprisonment, and devastating loss, Amina struggled deeply with grief and isolation. Through WAW’s psychosocial support services, Amina and her children were able to access emotional care, counseling, education, and a safer path forward.

Stories like Amina’s remind us how life-changing community support can be. Head to the link in our bio to help Afghan women and families access critical care and resources.

Eid is a celebration of faith, family, generosity, and community — and Afghan women have long been at the center of thes...
05/25/2026

Eid is a celebration of faith, family, generosity, and community — and Afghan women have long been at the center of these traditions.

From preparing meals and gathering loved ones to preserving cultural traditions across generations, Afghan women continue to carry joy, care, and connection through every celebration. 🌙

This Eid, your support can help Afghan women and families access the resources, community support, and opportunities they deserve.

Head to the link in our bio to donate and support Afghan women today.

This Mental Health Awareness Month, we’re reminded that healing often begins with safety, community, and being seen.Afte...
05/22/2026

This Mental Health Awareness Month, we’re reminded that healing often begins with safety, community, and being seen.

After her mother was imprisoned, Zohra found support, stability, and care through WAW’s Children Support Center — a space where children navigating trauma are met with compassion, resources, and hope.

Mental health support is not a luxury. For communities impacted by conflict, displacement, and family separation, it is essential.

Every child deserves support. Every child deserves care. Every child deserves the chance to heal. Head to the link in our bio to help children like Zohra today.

Address

71-19 162nd Street
Queens, NY
11367

Opening Hours

Monday 9am - 6pm
Tuesday 9am - 5pm
Wednesday 9am - 6pm
Thursday 9am - 6pm
Friday 9am - 6pm

Alerts

Be the first to know and let us send you an email when Women for Afghan Women posts news and promotions. Your email address will not be used for any other purpose, and you can unsubscribe at any time.

Contact The Organization

Send a message to Women for Afghan Women:

Share