Saleh was a prominent figure in the radical student movement of the early 1970s, which arose in response to the defeat of Egypt in the
Arab-Israeli War of 1967 and opposition to
al-Sadat's regime. An earlier wave of radical student politics in Egypt broke out in 1968, demanding harsher punishment for those responsible for the defeat in the Arab-Israeli war. Many leaders of this wave were co-opted by the regime or successfully intimidated and arrested. This wave of student activism facilitated the mobilization and recruitment of more students in political life. In late 1971 and early 1972, a new wave of demonstrations and strikes led by students erupted, with popular support.
Anwar al-Sadat's cuts to public spending and suppression of
freedom of speech provoked anger and fear, and the stalemate with Israel meant that many students spent a prolonged period in mandatory military service with no hope of entering the job market. Student movements, as a result, became more organized and militant—they circulated leaflets, pamphlets and organized meetings criticizing the regime. Students occupied campuses for weeks, employing the machines and print supplies of the official Cairo University Press to print their statements. Arwa Saleh and Siham Sabri led sit-in strikes in
Cairo University, and alongside many others, composed essays for wall posters, slogans, read poetry and performed plays. When the police stormed the campus on 29 December 1972, both student leaders were arrested and spent time in jail. In late December 1972 and early January 1973, students occupied
Tahrir Square in Cairo (a scene remembered and replicated in January 2011). Despite state repression and the lack of an independent press, the students gained support from the public who joined the call to liberate
Sinai from
Israel and end authoritarianism. Saleh's deep engagement and involvement in these protests would inform her later work.
al-Mubtasarun [The Stillborn] would reflect on the legacy of the 1960s student leaders—who she termed as 'the melancholy generation'—and the frustrated hopes of the student movement of the 1970s who failed to translate mass nationalist support into support for an agenda tackling class inequity, wealth redistribution and other social issues—as such, to her this generation is 'premature'. Salih became a member of the central committee of the Egyptian Communist Workers Party, a large organization that grew out of the student movement of 1972 and was also involved in the 1977 uprisings against Sadat's
economic liberalization policies. But many Marxist and other leftist organizations were small circles of intellectuals, with a limited base among workers, and riven with minor theoretical differences. Many activists and intellectuals in these circles drifted away from the movement in the 1980s—they quit political activism and joined non-governmental organizations, international humanitarian agencies, or Islamist movements. == Later life and published writing ==