Meet Afghanistan’s Only Female Tour Guide
Imagine breaking through barriers in a country with some of the least visitors in the world, historically plagued by war and where women’s rights, literacy rates and employment opportunities are some of the lowest in the world. With International Women’s Day approaching, meet the woman at the vanguard of change for female tour guides across the world.
Fatima is Afghanistan’s first and only female tour guide, who in 2020, despite the added pressures of COVID-19, led her first group of tourists in Herat for Adventure tour operator Untamed Borders. One of seven siblings, she is the only one in her family to be educated, her two sisters were married before the age of 15. She broke the mould and wanted to work, not “babysit a husband”. “I thought Afghanistan was not a safe place for a woman to be a tour guide,” explains Fatima, “but I realised that I have to be the one to create this safe place for other women.”
In an industry where only 3% of accredited international mountain guides are women, female adventure tour guides are few and far between. Fatima represents the sharp end of a trend, fighting for women’s rights in adventure travel. From narrow education opportunities to cultural expectations, in many regions of the world, women (who make up 60% of the tourism workforce) do not have the same opportunities as their male counterparts, often employed in lower paid cleaning and clerical roles. But things are slowly changing.
In fact, many other companies in the adventure travel sector including, Intrepid, Responsible Travel and GAdventures are also committing to employing and training more female guides. Not all jobs in tourism empower women – but being a tour guide with access to language, leadership and business skills does.
Untamed Borders founder James Willcox, who for the last 13 years has been at the forefront of developing social projects that empower women in the countries Untamed Borders visit, explains that “at Untamed Borders we are usually one of the only travel companies working in a region so we have a special responsibility to set the right tone for tourism. Part of that means trying to ensure money from our guests goes as evenly as possible to a diverse range of people”. With travellers becoming more socially conscious and looking to support social initiatives in the countries they visit, Willcox continues that “it’s expected from us as a company, to be responsible and to offer opportunity.”
“I am the first female tour guide in Afghanistan,” Fatima explains, “but I do not want to be the last.”
For more information, images or access to an extensive interview with Fatima, please contact elise@untamedborders.com. Please note, for security reasons Fatima’s surname has not been used.
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Fatima’s Story
Born in one of the least developed areas of Afghanistan, Lal Sar Jan-gal District in Ghor province, Fatima was working as a shepherd by the age of eight. Although it was a tough job, she believes it was this experience, running in the hills after animals, that first got her interested in guiding and the outdoors. One of seven children, Fatima’s sisters were married at age thirteen, but she refused, and forced her parents to send her to school, where most girls were forbidden to attend.
Fatima learnt basic reading, which meant that when her family moved to Herat due to Taliban attacks on Ghor province, and were too poor to send her to school, she could teach herself at home. She went on to successfully graduate from Herat University with a degree in Journalism and Mass Communication, a challenging and often dangerous job for women in Afghanistan. Despite all the challenges, Fatima started a successful online travel blog, which is how she was introduced to Untamed Borders in 2020, becoming their first female tour guide in Afghanistan.
When she is not guiding, Fatima runs her own radio show and volunteers teaching female refugees to read and write. Her plan is to continue guiding and become a professional journalist, writing for travel magazines, and she hopes to establish an organisation that trains female tour guides in Afghanistan. She is currently Afghanistan’s only female tour guide, but she is determined not to be the last.