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Al-Badawi's first involvement in politics came as a leader in various women's groups of the 1950s and the 1960s. She represented Sudan at several international gatherings, including the 1952 Arab Women's
Conference and the 1957 Soviet Women's Conference. Al-Badawi's initial involvement was with the
148:, and Omdurman. She completed her secondary education with the support of her father, who had liberal views towards girl's education despite the prevailing societal attitude at the time. Al-Badawi went on to complete a Bachelor of Arts (B.A.) at the
176:, and served as the college's dean for a period, as well as editing the college magazine. Returning to Sudan, al-Badawi completed a doctorate in Arabic at the University of Khartoum in 1974, and in 1980 was made an associate professor in Arabic at
232:, an Islamist party, and one source has called her "the most visible Islamist woman activist" in Sudan at the time. At an international forum in 1996, al-Badawi spoke of Islam and feminism as mutually exclusive, and rejected the idea of "
152:
in 1956, as one of the first four women to graduate from the
Faculty of Arts. She worked as a high school teacher for a period, and then went to England for further study. In 1961, she graduated from the
184:, she returned to OIU in 1983 to become dean of the women's college, becoming the first woman to hold the position. In the early 1990s, al-Badawi spent a sabbatical as a postdoctoral fellow at the
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and after independence in 1956. Because of her father's work, al-Badawi lived in a number of different cities as a child, spending periods in Al-Ubayyid,
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lasted less than a year, but the magazine was re-established in 1964 and was said to have had some influence on female voters in the
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Hale, Sondra (2013). "Sudanese Women in
National Service, Militias & the Home". In Doumato, Eleanor; Posusney, Marsha (eds.).
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After returning from
England, al-Badawi was appointed head of the history department at a teacher's college. She later worked in
69:(1 January 1932 – 23 December 2022) was a Sudanese academic, politician, and journalist. She was known both for her advocacy of
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258:. The following year, she led a delegation of female Sudanese journalists to France and the United Kingdom. The initial run of
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228:. For a period in the mid-1980s, al-Badawi was one of only two female legislators in Sudan. She was a member of the
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as an inspector for the
Ministry of Education. In 1969, al-Badawi moved to Saudi Arabia to work as a consultant for
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201:, but she and several others left that group due to ideological conflicts. She subsequently helped establish an
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in 1980. Her association with
Islamism began in the 1950s, when she was one of the first female members of the
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women's group, the
National Women's Front, having earlier been one of the first female members of the
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says the organisation was only founded in 1952 and that al-Badawi was still a member as late as 1957.
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Sources contradict each other as to when exactly al-Badawi left the
Sudanese Women's Union. The
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172:. She was involved in the establishment of the Girls' College of Education in
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Women and
Globalization in the Arab Middle East: Gender, Economy, and Society
100:, and beginning in the 1980s represented the party for several terms in the
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254:("The Beacon"), a weekly magazine published by the women's bureau of the
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In 1981, al-Badawi became a member of the
National People's Council, the
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Kramer, Robert; Lobban, Richard; Fluehr-Lobban, Carolyn (2013).
124:. Her paternal grandfather was a prominent Islamic scholar in
180:(OIU). After a brief spell as a deputy vice-chancellor at
16:
Sudanese academic, politician and journalist (1932–2022)
341:
Akyeampong, Emmanuel Kwaku; Gates, Henry Louis (2012).
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Al-Badawi died on 23 December 2022, at the age of 90.
439:"الموت يغيب القيادية الإسلامية البارزة سعاد الفاتح"
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224:from 1996 to 2005, and in 2004 was elected to the
551:Academic staff of United Arab Emirates University
511:Sudanese expatriates in the United Arab Emirates
486:Members of the Pan-African Parliament from Sudan
88:in London, and became a professor of Arabic at
381:. Rowman & Littlefield. pp. 305–306.
250:In 1956, al-Badawi became the first editor of
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586:Women members of the Pan-African Parliament
516:Sudanese expatriates in the United Kingdom
496:National Islamic Front (Sudan) politicians
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344:Dictionary of African Biography, Volume 6
347:. Oxford University Press. p. 339.
161:with a Master of Arts (M.A.) in Arabic.
601:20th-century Sudanese women politicians
566:21st-century Sudanese women politicians
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155:School of Oriental and African Studies
86:School of Oriental and African Studies
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306:states she left in 1951, whereas the
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526:Sudanese Muslim Brotherhood members
476:Alumni of SOAS University of London
417:. Lynne Rienner. pp. 207–209.
378:Historical Dictionary of the Sudan
304:Historical Dictionary of the Sudan
14:
606:20th-century Sudanese politicians
571:21st-century Sudanese politicians
561:Sudanese women's rights activists
491:Female Muslim Brotherhood members
441:. Sudan Tribune. 23 December 2022
67:Su'ad al-Fatih Mohammed al-Badawi
23:Su'ad al-Fatih Mohammed al-Badawi
80:Al-Badawi held degrees from the
308:Dictionary of African Biography
182:United Arab Emirates University
112:Early life and academic career
35:Al-Ubayyid, Kurdufan Province.
1:
581:21st-century Sudanese writers
576:20th-century Sudanese writers
556:University of Khartoum alumni
401:Akyeampong and Gates, p. 340.
96:. Al-Badawi later joined the
132:, in office during both the
178:Omdurman Islamic University
90:Omdurman Islamic University
52:University of Khartoum 1956
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596:21st-century women writers
591:20th-century women writers
546:Sudanese women journalists
501:People from North Kurdufan
481:Female critics of feminism
284:Gender inequality in Sudan
220:. She later served in the
134:Anglo-Egyptian condominium
128:, while her father was a
104:. She also served in the
531:Sudanese women academics
270:Personal life and death
236:" as incompatible with
186:University of Edinburgh
73:and for her support of
536:Sudanese women writers
230:National Islamic Front
226:Pan-African Parliament
199:Sudanese Women's Union
150:University of Khartoum
116:Al-Badawi was born in
106:Pan-African Parliament
98:National Islamic Front
82:University of Khartoum
264:1965 general election
130:district commissioner
541:Sudanese journalists
214:legislature of Sudan
159:University of London
102:National Legislature
521:Sudanese Islamists
256:Muslim Brotherhood
207:Muslim Brotherhood
94:Muslim Brotherhood
222:National Assembly
122:Kurdufan Province
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443:. Retrieved
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471:2022 deaths
466:1932 births
445:23 December
60:Academician
41:Nationality
460:Categories
318:References
246:Journalism
118:Al-Ubayyid
57:Occupation
32:1932/01/01
242:(piety).
49:Education
278:See also
260:Al-Manar
252:Al-Manar
203:Islamist
192:Politics
166:Khartoum
146:Khartoum
126:Omdurman
84:and the
75:Islamism
157:at the
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385:
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174:Riyadh
170:UNESCO
142:Atbara
138:Berber
290:Notes
239:taqwa
44:Sudan
447:2022
419:ISBN
383:ISBN
349:ISBN
29:Born
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363:^
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