All Thinkers

Fatima Ahmed Ibrahim

Fatima Ahmed Ibrahim was a Sudanese feminist, socialist, writer, and political leader. She was the first woman elected to the Sudanese parliament and, according to several sources, the first woman elected to any African parliament. She led the Sudanese Women's Union, one of the largest women's organisations on the African continent, for much of the second half of the twentieth century. She was born in Khartoum in 1933 (some sources give 1928 or 1932) and died in London on 12 August 2017 at age 84. Her funeral in Khartoum a few days later drew large crowds. She came from an educated Sudanese family. Her grandfather had been headmaster of the first Sudanese school for boys and an imam. Her father was a teacher who graduated from Gordon Memorial College and was expelled from a government school for refusing to teach in English. Her mother was among the first generation of Sudanese girls to receive formal schooling. Fatima attended Omdurman Girls' Secondary School, where she founded a wall newspaper called al-Ra'ida (The Pioneer) and led the first women's strike in Sudan, against the school's decision to replace science classes with 'home economics'. The strike won. The pattern of organising and winning began early. In 1947 she founded the Intellectual Women's Association. In 1952 she helped found the Sudanese Women's Union (al-Ittihad al-Nisa'i al-Sudani, SWU). She joined the Sudanese Communist Party in 1954 and served on its Central Committee. In 1965, after Sudanese women won the vote, she was elected to parliament. She campaigned successfully for equal pay, maternity leave, women's suffrage, and other reforms. Multiple Sudanese regimes banned the SWU. She was held under house arrest under Nimeiri. After Bashir's 1989 coup she went into exile in London, leading the SWU from abroad. She returned to Sudan in 2005 and served briefly in parliament again. She received the UN Human Rights Award in 1993 and the Ibn Rushd Prize for Freedom of Thought in 2006.

Origin
Sudan
Lifespan
c. 1933-2017
Era
20th-21st century
Subjects
Sudanese Feminism Women's Rights Socialism Anti Colonialism African Political History
Why They Matter

Fatima Ahmed Ibrahim matters for three reasons. First, she was a foundational figure in African women's political organising. The Sudanese Women's Union she helped lead reached 15,000 members at its peak, making it one of the largest women's organisations on the African continent. Under her leadership, the SWU helped Sudanese women win the right to vote (1964), the right to equal pay, maternity leave, the right to enter all professions, and improvements to family law. These were real material gains that improved the lives of millions of Sudanese women. They were also a model for women's organising elsewhere on the continent.

Second, she developed a distinctively Sudanese feminism that refused both Western liberal individualism and the conservative reading of Islam used to justify patriarchy. She insisted that women's emancipation in Sudan did not mean 'becoming another copy of the Western woman'. Her socialism gave the framework: women's liberation was inseparable from class liberation and from anti-colonial struggle. Her engagement with Islamic tradition was strategic and substantive: she and her colleagues studied the Quran specifically to refute the religious arguments used against women's equality. The combination of socialist economics, anti-colonial politics, and serious engagement with Islamic tradition produced one of the most coherent African feminisms of the twentieth century.

Third, she sustained organising through six decades of repeated regime changes, bans, exile, and repression. The SWU was banned in 1971 by Nimeiri, dissolved formally by Bashir in 1989, but kept operating clandestinely. She herself was held under house arrest for two years, forced into exile from 1990 to 2005, and continued political work from London until her health failed. Few women's movement leaders anywhere in the twentieth century sustained such commitment over such a long period of difficult conditions. She is one of the most important African political figures of her century, even if international recognition has been less than her work deserves.

Key Ideas
1
The First Woman in Parliament
2
Founding the Sudanese Women's Union
3
Forty Years of Repression and Persistence
Key Quotations
"We did not want to become another copy of the Western woman. We wanted to be free as Sudanese women, with our own history."
— Fatima Ahmed Ibrahim, paraphrased from interviews including L'Humanité (1994) and other sources
Variations of this thought run through Ibrahim's interviews and writings over decades. The wording above is a paraphrase. She was clear throughout her career that Sudanese women's emancipation did not require imitating Western women. The point was practical, political, and personal. Practical, because Western-style feminism was culturally alien and politically vulnerable in Sudan. Political, because she was a socialist who saw Western liberal feminism as too tied to capitalism and individualism. Personal, because she was a Sudanese woman who valued her own culture and tradition and saw no contradiction between cultural belonging and gender equality. The line is a useful introduction to the basic insight that there are many feminisms, not one. Different cultures and political traditions have produced different versions. Sudanese feminism, as Ibrahim built it, was one of them.
"Our first demand was political rights, because everything else arises from there."
— Fatima Ahmed Ibrahim, interview with L'Humanité, 1994
This statement to the French newspaper L'Humanité in 1994 captures Ibrahim's basic political strategy. The Sudanese Women's Union, founded in 1952, prioritised women's right to vote and to stand for election from its earliest years. The reasoning was simple: without political rights, women could not change other laws that affected their lives. Equal pay, maternity leave, family law reform, the right to enter professions, all required legislative action, which required votes and voices in parliament. So winning political rights came first. The strategy worked. Sudanese women won the vote in 1964 in the wake of the October Revolution. Ibrahim was elected to parliament in 1965. Other reforms followed. For students, the line is a useful introduction to political strategy. Different priorities make sense in different contexts. In societies where formal political rights are missing, winning them first opens up the path to other rights. Ibrahim's strategy is one of the cleaner cases of this approach succeeding.
Using This Thinker in the Classroom
Cultural Heritage and Identity When introducing students to African feminist organising
How to introduce
Tell students that Fatima Ahmed Ibrahim led the Sudanese Women's Union, one of the largest women's organisations on the African continent at its peak in the 1960s. She was the first woman elected to the Sudanese parliament, in 1965, and according to several sources the first woman elected to any African parliament. Discuss with students: women's political organising in Africa has a much longer and richer history than international media coverage suggests. The SWU is one major example. Other major African women's movements existed in Egypt, Nigeria, Kenya, South Africa, and elsewhere. Reading about Ibrahim is part of taking the full picture of twentieth-century feminism seriously, beyond the Western and Indian focal points that dominate most international accounts.
Critical Thinking When teaching students about strategic priorities in social change
How to introduce
Tell students about Ibrahim's strategic priority on political rights. The SWU's first demand was women's right to vote and stand for election. The reasoning was that without political rights, women could not change the other laws that affected their lives. The strategy worked: Sudanese women won the vote in 1964; Ibrahim was elected in 1965; other reforms followed. Discuss with students: when working for change, what should come first? Different orders are possible. Some movements have prioritised changing culture before changing law. Some have prioritised economic changes before political ones. Some, like Ibrahim, have prioritised formal political rights as the foundation for other changes. There is no single right answer. The exercise of thinking carefully about strategic priorities, rather than just goals, is good practice for serious political thinking.
Ethical Thinking When teaching students about persistence under repression
How to introduce
Tell students about Ibrahim's forty years of organising under repeated repression. The SWU was banned in 1971, dissolved in 1989, and operated clandestinely for decades. She was held under house arrest, then forced into exile for fifteen years. She continued political work throughout. Discuss with students: what does it take to keep working for change when the regime keeps shutting down your organisations? Some activists are crushed. Some give up. Some flee and stay away. Some, like Ibrahim, find ways to keep working through changing conditions. Her persistence is part of why the SWU survived as an organisation and why women's rights gains in Sudan were not fully erased by repeated authoritarian regimes. The exercise of taking long-term persistence seriously, not just dramatic moments, is good practice for understanding how political change actually happens.
Further Reading

For a first introduction in English, the Wikipedia and Encyclopedia.com entries on Fatima Ahmed Ibrahim and the Sudanese Women's Union give solid free overviews. Her chapter 'Arrow at Rest' in Mahnaz Afkhami's edited volume Women in Exile (University Press of Virginia, 1994) is the most accessible English-language primary source. The PeaceWomen Across the Globe project includes biographical material. The L'Orient Today profile by Ali Saghir (2022) is a useful recent journalistic introduction.

Key Ideas
1
Sudanese Feminism, Not Western Feminism
2
Studying Islam to Argue with Patriarchy
3
What She Actually Won
Key Quotations
"Our demand was rejected in the name of the Quran. So we decided to learn about Islam to show that this religion does not involve exploiting women."
— Fatima Ahmed Ibrahim, interview with L'Humanité, 1994
This statement captures one of Ibrahim's most consistent strategies over decades. When religious arguments were used to deny women's rights, she did not respond with secular dismissal of religion. She responded with religious counter-arguments. SWU women studied the Quran and Islamic tradition seriously, in dialogue with reformist Islamic scholarship, to develop their own theological positions. The strategy was different from both secular dismissal and religious conservatism. It met religious arguments with religious counter-arguments, on Islamic ground. The strategy connects Ibrahim with reformers like Mahmoud Mohamed Taha, though she worked through a secular socialist framework rather than a religious one. For intermediate students, the line is a useful corrective to the assumption that religion is always the enemy of women's rights. In Sudan and many other contexts, religion has been both the source of arguments against women's rights and the source of arguments women have used to fight back. Ibrahim showed how to do the second.
"Women have been carrying half the sky in this country for centuries. We were not asking for special treatment. We were asking for what we had earned."
— Fatima Ahmed Ibrahim, paraphrased from her speeches and writings on women's rights, 1960s onwards
Variations of this thought run through Ibrahim's speeches and writings over many decades. The wording above is a paraphrase. Sudanese women had always done substantial work: agricultural labour, domestic production, market trading, child-rearing, community organisation. The work was rarely recognised in formal economic accounts or in political rights. Ibrahim's argument was that Sudanese women had already earned their political and economic rights through generations of labour. They were not asking for charity or for the West's invention. They were asking for what was already theirs by the actual structure of Sudanese society. The argument was strategically powerful. It rejected the framing of women's rights as foreign imposition. It rooted them instead in the actual labour history of Sudanese women. For intermediate students, the line is useful for thinking about how political claims can be grounded. Some claims are grounded in abstract universal rights. Others, like Ibrahim's, are grounded in the lived contributions of the people making the claim. Both can be powerful; the second is sometimes harder to refute.
Using This Thinker in the Classroom
Cultural Heritage and Identity When teaching students about non-Western feminisms
How to introduce
Discuss with students Ibrahim's insistence that Sudanese women's emancipation did not mean becoming Western women. Her feminism was Sudanese, socialist, and engaged with Islamic tradition rather than rejecting it. Discuss with students: what is feminism, exactly? Many international debates assume Western liberal feminism is the standard form, with other feminisms being incomplete or compromised versions of it. The assumption is wrong. African, Arab, Latin American, South Asian, and East Asian feminisms have developed distinct frameworks shaped by their own contexts. Ibrahim's Sudanese feminism is one of them. Reading her seriously is part of correcting the Western-default picture of feminism that still dominates many international discussions.
Critical Thinking When teaching students about engaging religion in political work
How to introduce
Tell students about Ibrahim's strategy when religious arguments were used against women's rights. She did not respond with secular dismissal. She and her colleagues studied the Quran and Islamic tradition carefully so they could respond with religious counter-arguments. Discuss with students: in many contexts, religion is both the source of arguments against rights and the source of arguments for rights. Treating religion as monolithically opposed to rights is often strategically wrong and often substantively wrong. Engaging religion seriously, on its own ground, can be more effective than dismissing it. The strategy is not unique to Ibrahim. Liberation theologians in Latin America, Islamic feminists across many countries, and Buddhist activists in Southeast Asia have used similar approaches. The exercise of thinking carefully about how to engage religion in political work is good practice in many contexts.
Further Reading

For deeper reading, Sondra Hale's Gender Politics in Sudan: Islamism, Socialism, and the State (Westview Press, 1996) provides essential context for Ibrahim and the SWU. Marjorie Hall and Bakhita Amin Ismail's Sisters under the Sun: The Story of Sudanese Women (Longman, 1981) gives historical background. Carolyn Fluehr-Lobban's writings on Sudanese women include important earlier work. For Ibrahim's own writings, several Arabic-language collections published by the Sudanese Women's Union Press are available, though most have not been translated.

Key Ideas
1
Strategic Engagement with Authoritarian Regimes
2
Sudanese Communism and Pan-Africanism
3
Why She Is Less Well Known Internationally
Key Quotations
"I am a Communist, a feminist, and a Muslim. The three are not in conflict in my life. They are how I have lived."
— Fatima Ahmed Ibrahim, paraphrased from interviews and lectures, 1990s-2000s
Variations of this self-description run through Ibrahim's later interviews and lectures. The wording above is a paraphrase. The combination is unusual in international perception. Western Cold War commentators tended to assume Communism and Islam were incompatible. Conservative Muslims tended to assume Communism and Islam were incompatible. Western feminists often assumed Islam and feminism were incompatible. Ibrahim rejected all three assumptions. She lived as all three at once. Her communism gave her the framework for understanding women's economic oppression as part of class oppression. Her feminism gave her the specific commitment to women's rights as women, not just as workers. Her Islam gave her cultural belonging, ethical grounding, and the resources to argue for women's rights from inside Sudanese tradition rather than imposing them from outside. For advanced students, the combination is a useful study in how political and religious identities can be held together in ways that international categorisations often cannot accommodate. Ibrahim was not a contradiction. She was a coherent person whom the standard categories failed to capture.
"The struggle is long. Some of us will not see the end of it. That does not mean we should not begin."
— Fatima Ahmed Ibrahim, paraphrased from her late writings and speeches, 2000s-2010s
Variations of this thought appear in Ibrahim's later writings and speeches as she reflected on more than sixty years of organising. The wording above is a paraphrase. By her last decades, she had seen Sudanese women win major rights, then lose some of them under successive military regimes, then have to fight to win them back again. The pattern was discouraging. She refused to be discouraged by it. Some struggles are generational. The work of one generation is not necessarily completed in the lifetime of those who began it. The work matters anyway. Beginning a struggle one will not see end is not foolish; it is simply how long-term political work happens. For advanced students, the line is a useful corrective to the modern emphasis on quick results. Many of the most important political changes have taken multiple generations. Ibrahim's view, that beginning is what one's generation owes the future, is one of the more sustaining perspectives on long political work that anyone has articulated.
Using This Thinker in the Classroom
Problem Solving When teaching students about working within imperfect systems
How to introduce
Discuss with students Ibrahim's complicated relationship with successive Sudanese regimes. She supported the 1969 Nimeiri coup initially, broke with him after his 1971 turn against the left, was held under house arrest, returned to parliamentary politics after later openings, went into exile under Bashir, returned again in 2005. The pattern was not principled rejection of all power but strategic engagement: cooperate when cooperation produced gains, oppose when opposition was needed. Discuss with students: how should activists navigate imperfect political systems? Pure outsider rejection has costs. Pure insider cooperation has costs. Strategic engagement requires constant judgement about which approach fits which moment. Ibrahim's choices produced real gains for Sudanese women and real costs in personal freedom and political credibility. The exercise of thinking carefully about when to engage and when to oppose is one of the most important in serious political ethics.
Creative Expression When teaching students about how movement publications shape consciousness
How to introduce
Tell students about Sawt al-Mar'a (Woman's Voice), the SWU's monthly publication during its peak years. The magazine combined political articles, essays on women's rights, literature, and practical advice. It reached women across Sudan who would never have attended SWU meetings directly. Discuss with students: movement publications have been important across many feminist and political movements: Ms. Magazine in the United States, Spare Rib in Britain, La Voz de la Mujer in Latin America, Sawt al-Mar'a in Sudan. The publications shape consciousness, build community, and provide material that lasts beyond particular events. Ibrahim's use of publication, beginning with her teenage wall newspaper al-Ra'ida and continuing through her decades of SWU leadership, is a useful example of the role of media in serious political work.
Common Misconceptions
Common misconception

She was primarily a Communist who used women's rights as cover for socialist organising.

What to teach instead

She was a committed Communist and a committed feminist; the two were inseparable in her thought and work. Her communism gave her the framework for understanding women's oppression as connected to class oppression. Her feminism gave her the specific commitment to women's rights as women. The Sudanese Women's Union, while affiliated with the Sudanese Communist Party, worked to remain organisationally independent and to admit women across political and class backgrounds. The SWU's gains, women's suffrage, equal pay, maternity leave, expanded professional access, were genuinely women's rights gains, not socialist organising in disguise. Reading her as covertly using feminism for communist purposes underestimates the sincerity of both commitments. She was both, fully.

Common misconception

Her work was primarily symbolic; she did not produce real changes.

What to teach instead

She produced specific material changes in the lives of millions of Sudanese women. Under SWU campaigning and her parliamentary work, Sudanese women won the vote in 1964, equal pay for equal work, maternity leave, the right to enter all professional fields, and improvements in family law. By the late 1960s women's labour-force participation, female literacy, and women in universities had all grown substantially. Many of these gains were rolled back under later authoritarian regimes, especially under Nimeiri's 1983 Sharia laws and Bashir's regime. They were not fully erased. The gains were real and the rollbacks were real. Reading her career as symbolic only erases the substantive achievements that were her actual work.

Common misconception

Her opposition to Western feminism meant she was conservative on women's rights.

What to teach instead

She was not conservative. She fought for what would have been considered radical women's rights in Sudan in the 1950s and 1960s: full political participation, equal pay, professional access, divorce rights, family law reform. Her rejection of 'becoming another copy of the Western woman' was about political framework, not about scope of rights. She wanted Sudanese women to have full equal rights, but rooted in Sudanese culture, history, and political traditions rather than imported wholesale from Europe or America. The position is closer to many contemporary postcolonial feminisms than to any conservative position. Reading her as a conservative who opposed feminism gets the picture entirely wrong. She was a radical feminist whose radicalism took Sudanese forms.

Common misconception

She is best understood as one figure in a Cold War story.

What to teach instead

Cold War politics shaped her career, but reducing her to a Cold War figure misses the local Sudanese stakes that mattered most to her. She was working primarily for Sudanese women in Sudan. Her Communist Party affiliation was politically meaningful in Sudan in ways that did not always map onto international Cold War alignments. Her engagement with Islam, with Sudanese cultural traditions, with the specific challenges of building women's organisations in colonial and postcolonial Sudan, was the substance of her work. The international communist networks were context, not content. International coverage that filed her under 'Cold War-era African Communist' missed what made her most important to Sudanese history. Recovering the local picture is part of taking her work seriously.

Intellectual Connections
Complements
Mahmoud Mohamed Taha
Taha and Ibrahim were Sudanese contemporaries who pursued related goals through different frameworks. Taha argued for Islamic reform from inside religious tradition; Ibrahim worked through a secular socialist framework as leader of the Sudanese Women's Union. Both fought for women's equality in Sudan. Both faced repression from successive Sudanese regimes. Ibrahim was held under house arrest by Nimeiri in the years before Taha was executed by him in 1985. Both received international human rights recognition (Taha posthumously through Arab Human Rights Day, Ibrahim through her UN award and the Ibn Rushd Prize). Reading them together gives students a sense of how women's rights and progressive politics in Sudan were pursued through both Islamic reformist and secular socialist channels, often in parallel and sometimes overlapping.
Complements
Wangari Maathai
Maathai (Kenya, 1940-2011) and Ibrahim (Sudan, c.1933-2017) were near contemporaries who built major African women's organisations and faced repeated harassment from authoritarian regimes. Maathai's Green Belt Movement focused on environmental and women's empowerment work; Ibrahim's Sudanese Women's Union focused on women's political and economic rights. Both insisted on African frameworks for African women's organising rather than imposed Western models. Both received international recognition (Maathai the Nobel Peace Prize, Ibrahim the UN Human Rights Award). Both were imprisoned or harassed by their governments. Reading them together gives students two of the most important African women political leaders of the late twentieth century, working in different countries and on different specific issues but with related commitments.
In Dialogue With
Karl Marx
Ibrahim was a member of the Sudanese Communist Party from 1954 and built her feminism on a Marxist framework. She drew on Marx's analysis of capitalism and class struggle to understand women's economic oppression as connected to broader exploitation. She did not import Marxist categories uncritically; she adapted them to Sudanese conditions, including the specific patterns of women's labour in colonial and postcolonial Sudan. Her engagement with Marx was selective and political: she used the framework that helped her work and modified what did not. Reading them together gives students a useful case of how Marxist analysis has been adapted by African and Arab thinkers to local conditions, in ways that purist Western Marxism would not always recognise but that have produced real political results.
Complements
bell hooks
bell hooks and Fatima Ahmed Ibrahim were contemporary feminists working in different countries (United States and Sudan) on related concerns: the relationship between gender, race, class, and political organising. Both rejected versions of feminism that focused only on white middle-class women's issues. Both insisted on grounding feminist politics in the lived experience of women in their own communities. Both were teachers and movement-builders as well as writers. The differences are substantial: hooks worked through academic writing, Ibrahim through political organising. Reading them together gives students a useful comparative view of how late-twentieth-century feminisms outside Western liberal models developed in dialogue with their own communities and traditions.
Complements
Patrice Lumumba
Ibrahim and the SWU organised solidarity actions against the 1961 assassination of Patrice Lumumba in Congo. The connection is direct and historical, not just thematic. The pan-Africanist framework of the SWU treated Lumumba's murder as relevant to Sudanese women's politics: the same colonial powers that had killed Lumumba had also shaped the conditions Sudanese women were organising against. Both figures stood for African self-determination against colonial and neocolonial pressure. Both faced authoritarian opposition: Lumumba was killed, Ibrahim was repeatedly imprisoned and exiled. Reading them together gives students a sense of how mid-twentieth-century African political and women's movements understood themselves as connected, not isolated, struggles.
Anticipates
Kimberlé Crenshaw
Crenshaw developed the concept of intersectionality in the 1980s and 1990s to describe how race, gender, and class oppression interact rather than operating as separate hierarchies. Ibrahim's earlier work, from the 1950s onwards, anticipated some of these insights in practice. She insisted that Sudanese women's oppression involved gender, class, colonial and postcolonial subordination, and the specific religious and cultural conditions of Sudanese society together. The combination could not be addressed by tackling any single dimension alone. Ibrahim did not theorise this in Crenshaw's specific terms, but her organising practice reflected something like the same insight decades earlier. Reading them together gives students a sense of how key feminist insights have appeared in different forms across different decades and contexts, sometimes in formal theory and sometimes in lived organising practice.
Further Reading

For research-level engagement, Magdi El-Gizouli's blog StillSudan and his obituary essay on Ibrahim (August 2017) provide rigorous commentary. Asma Abdel Halim's writings on Sudanese women's movements are scholarly references. The journals Northeast African Studies and Hawwa: Journal of Women of the Middle East and the Islamic World regularly publish relevant work. For Ibrahim's specific theoretical contributions to socialist feminism, the connections with the Women's International Democratic Federation she led from 1991 are documented in WIDF archives. Recent Sudanese feminist scholarship, particularly emerging during and after the 2018-2019 Sudanese Revolution, has revisited Ibrahim's legacy in important new ways.