In celebration of International Women’s Day, we screened ‘The Noble Guardian’, an eye-opening film directed by award-winning journalist Anna Coren on the life of girls and women in Afghanistan—and the tenacity of one woman in trying to alleviate their plight
On March 14, Tatler Gen.T and Tatler Front and Female co-hosted a private screening of The Noble Guardian, a documentary film on the work of Mahbouba Seraj, an Afghan women’s activist and speaker at the inaugural Tatler Gen.T Summit last year.
Nearly 80 guests showed up for the screening, which was held at Pavilion Hotel Kuala Lumpur and supported by skincare brand Cuura and fashion label Larney. A smaller-scale screening also took place in Singapore the week before, on March 7.
Read more: Nobel Peace Prize nominee Mahbouba Seraj on standing up against the Taliban
The film showed the plight of girls and women in war-torn Afghanistan, particularly how their lives changed under the rule of the Taliban, the extremist group that overthrew the country’s government in August 2021. While most tried to flee the country during this time, 75-year-old Seraj stood her ground and stayed to continue running her non-profit organisation, the Afghan Women Skills Development Centre, which supports abused women and children.
But as the film revealed, her courage and defiance to concede to patriarchal power were met with numerous roadblocks and challenges, including the denial of some local women of her efforts to help them.
After the screening, guests were also treated to a moving question-and-answer session with Seraj. These were the key takeaways from that conversation.
On the moment that triggered everything
Seraj shared that when she was living in Santa Fe, New Mexico, she saw the news of the Taliban executing an Afghan woman in a stadium on television. That moment ignited a fire in her that she would harness to advocate for change.
“Even though I never saw her face or knew her, it felt like she was calling out to me, telling me about the plight of women in Afghanistan,” she said. “This ignited a deep desire in me to speak up, ask questions, stand with these women and amplify their voices.”
She added, “The world must hear their stories and understand their struggles. I want to be the conduit for their voices to be heard.”