What a delightful informative look at the gutsy women of the world. I did not know:
• On her third trip to the south to rescue her husband, Harriet Tubman found that he had remarried, so she decided that “if he could do without her, she could do without him.” She went on to bring hundreds of slaves to freedom.
• Helen Keller confounded the ACLU.
• When “Sesame Street” aired on PBS in 1969, a Mississippi state commission voted to ban the show. Public outcry forced its reinstatement.” I had the good fortune of attending the 25th year celebration of Sesame Street, which has now reached a 50 year milestone.
• Mary McLeod Bethune was the first black woman to serve as president of an HSBC.
There are too many Nobel Prize winners to list, but almost all were the first woman or first black to receive this honor.
• in fact, Marie Curie was the first person ever to win a Nobel in two disciplines — physics and chemistry. And, her daughter also won one in chemistry.
Numerous women who faced gender and racial prejudice still managed to achieve incredible success in the fields of medicine, the environment, sports, dance, science, comedy, politics, space and business. These women all accomplished so much, while fighting racism, xenophobia, gun violence, Islamophobia and stupidity. They did this in (to name a few) South Africa, Yemen, Colombia, Iraq, Ireland, Nigeria, Australia, and the United States: Florida, Arizona, Oklahoma, Sandy Hook, NYC, Washington DC, Chicago....
These stories/tributes not only detail accomplishments, but also discuss family dynamics, physical trials and circumstances that led to their activism.
“They all made the world better.”
I applaud Hilary and Chelsea for their in-depth stories of famous and not-so-famous women who have had a positive influence on the world.