Social activist Zakeya el-Nahas was among the protesters who helped  break years of political silence for Egyptian women. She says something  changed when those protesters took to the streets on January 25. 
"I  couldn't resist except going every day," said el-Nahas. "You know I  have to go every day. I mean the spirit was quite different. There was a  bond between all the people there."
Women experienced a new  level of freedom and equality during the 18 days of protests, as they  demonstrated beside men and celebrated their success in bringing down  the Mubarak government.
But Human Rights Watch researcher Nadya  Khalife says that as the jubilation subsides and the reality of  rebuilding the government takes hold, women are facing exclusion from  the political process.
"There have been several groups who are  opposing women's presence in politics," noted Khalife.  "They are  opposing women's presence, who are demonstrating for equality. So I  think it's not going to be an easy transition. But I think Egyptian  women are adamant that they be included in these political processes."
She  says no positions were given to women on the transitional council,  known as the Committee of Wise Men, responsible for drafting amendments  to the constitution.  And Article 75 of the constitution was written to  imply that the head of state will be a man.
On International  Women's Day, March 8, a mob of men attacked women who were demonstrating  for equal rights in Tahrir Square, the epicenter of last month's  anti-government protests. 
Although women in Egypt's upper  classes achieve professional and academic success, Human Rights Watch  says family law discriminates against them in marriage, divorce,  guardianship, custody and inheritance.
Valentine Moghadam, an  expert on social change in the Middle East and North Africa, says  cultural understandings limit many lower class women from getting jobs.   She says professional and technical jobs, held by middle and upper  class women, are deemed more appropriate for women in Egypt.  But she  says politics are not considered appropriate for women of any class.
"The  world values survey and other kind of opinion polls do suggest a large  proportion of the populations regard women's participation in politics  and as political leaders as inappropriate, and that men make better  leaders than women do," noted Moghadam.
Egyptian teacher Samah Khamis agrees.
"You  can call most of the Egyptian women as politically illiterate," said  Khamis.  "Two things were actually confined to men: sports and  politics."
Moghadam, a sociology professor at Purdue University,  says women have not had many influential allies in the government in the  past, and it seems unlikely for the future.
 
"I don't think that  it will be substantially different," noted Moghadam.  "The indicators  and the signs at present do not lead me to be hopeful about any  substantial presence on the part of women or representatives of women's  groups."
Egypt's new prime minister, Essam Sharaf, has appointed  only one woman Cabinet member, although he said he will create a  committee for women to take part in rebuilding the country.
Egypt  became the first Arab nation to elect a woman to parliament in 1957.  But nearly 50 years later, in 2005, the 782-seat bicameral parliament  only had four women members.  In 2009, 64 seats were designated for  women in the lower house of parliament.
Moghadam says women are  at a disadvantage for September's parliamentary elections.  She says  women do not have enough time to mobilize and be heard against political  movements such as the Muslim Brotherhood and groups associated with the  former government.
But some Egyptian women feel now is the time  to focus on creating a democratic state. Khalife describes the opinion  of one woman whom she approached in Tahrir Square on International  Women's Day.
"She basically said that this is not the time for  women to be demonstrating. It's time for the institutions to be built in  the country, and then women's rights will come later," added Khalife.
Khamis,  who was raised in a well-educated Egyptian family, believes it is  critical for women to take part in government. But she says women have  been excluded from politics for so long that they need to be educated  about politics before they get involved.
"They first need to  learn more about politics," said Khamis.  "They should first work again  at a slower pace, slowly but surely to understand more about the society  and how things are. Because we have been deprived of that for a very  long time. You have to grow some kind of credibility first. I am not  against the idea or concept, I am against the timing."
Khamis and  social activist el-Nahas both acknowledge that Egyptian women and  minorities have a long battle for equality ahead, but they are hopeful  for change.
U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton reiterated  Monday that women should be included in "every aspect of political and  institutional reform" across North Africa and the Middle East. She says  no government can succeed if it excludes half its population and does  not respect the human rights of all its citizens.
Several women  U.S. lawmakers introduced a resolution this week, calling on leaders in  the Middle East and North Africa to include women in constitutional and  political reforms.
Egyptian women chant slogans as they attend a demonstration in Tahrir Square in Cairo, Egypt, April 1, 2011