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With self-belief, women can change the world

By Judy Cannon - posted Wednesday, 10 March 2010


Until women and girls were liberated from poverty and injustice, “all our goals - peace, security, sustainable development - stand in jeopardy,” United Nations Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon said this week as the United Nations marked International Women’s Day, usually observed on March 8.

There were signs of progress, he said, but as a son, husband, father and grandfather to girls, for him women’s empowerment was a priority. Injustice and discrimination against women persisted around the world, sometimes violently. “We sometimes hear it said that such practices are a matter of culture,” he said, “they are not”.

In contrast, three stories of inspiring women whose efforts have made a big difference to women in situations of great disadvantage were related by businesswoman Therese Rein. Ms Rein is the wife of Australian Prime Minister Kevin Rudd.

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Therese Rein first praised the work of Australian Dr Catherine Hamlin, obstetrician and gynaecologist, and co-founder of the Addis Ababa Fistula Hospital in Ethiopia, which she and her late husband, Dr Reginald Hamlin founded in 1974. Dr Hamlin, now in her 90s, continues her work there. Fistula problems make women outcasts because families and communities will not put up with the odour they exude until they receive treatment. The hospital now handles 9,000 cases a year and the number waiting for treatment was triple that number, she said.

The Ethiopian hospital is the world's only medical centre dedicated exclusively to providing free fistula repair surgery to poor women suffering from childbirth injuries. Dr Hamlin has been recognised by the UN Fund for Population Activities as a pioneer in fistula surgery for her development of techniques and procedures for obstetric fistula treatment.

Therese Rein also spoke of the achievements of another Australian woman, Gemma Sisia, from a New South Wales sheep farming family, who in northern Tanzania has set up St Jude’s School which educates the brightest child of a poor family. Gemma Sisia’s ambition is to encourage as many children as possible to go on to university, with the possibility of them becoming future leaders.

As a youngster she wanted to work as a volunteer in Africa, so she trained as a teacher and taught for two years in Uganda as a volunteer, the Australian Women’s History Forum states. There she met her future husband, Richard Sisia, a Tanzanian safari driver. Richard Sisia’s father, chairman of a village near Arusha City, offered her some land on which to build a school. After seeking donations of pens, paper and books and money for bricks and cement to build her school, she organised a succession of volunteer teams from Australia to come and construct the first two school blocks. St Jude's (named after the patron saint of hopeless causes) opened in 2002, with an 18-year-old volunteer teacher from Sydney and three pupils. The school now has over 1,000 students and has one of the best academic records in the country.

Gemma Sisia’s slogan is simple but effective: “Fight poverty through education”. Her school is for the very poorest children, the ones whose families cannot afford clothes or books or even pencils, and who otherwise would remain trapped by poor education, illiteracy and poverty.

Therese Rein also praised the work of a woman doctor, Dr Kiran Martin, in New Delhi, India, who originally went Delhi’s slums to help fight a major cholera outbreak. She began treating patients on a borrowed table, standing among rubbish and sewage, after negotiating permission to treat them with the slum landlord. Later she was able to persuade local politicians to put in wells and community toilets.

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Indian newspaper LOK News reports that ASHA is an organisation founded by Dr Martin, who graduated in Delhi in 1985, with a post graduate degree in paediatrics. Asha for Education says it is “a secular organisation dedicated to change in India by focusing on basic education in the belief that education is a critical requisite for socio-economic change”.

The cholera outbreak convinced Kiran Martin to continue to volunteer her services to help treat people in the slums. Since then she has created a community health and development society that has transformed the lives of more than 300,000 slum dwellers. In 2002, the president of India presented Dr Martin with the Padma Shri - India's second highest civilian award - in recognition of her remarkable achievements in the field of social work.

“What these women have in common, I think, is that they saw a need; they asked themselves ‘What can I do?’ They took responsibility, they took action: women inspiring and enabling and empowering other women out of poverty through education, through maternal health, through employment, through advocacy,” Therese Rein said.

“They demonstrate that, as we all know, women can be a potent force for change. They demonstrate that women have courage; they demonstrate that women have determination and persistence to see things through year after year; they demonstrate that women are practical and compassionate, and that women can inspire other women - they inspired me when I met them. I think they also show that if we do a powerful amount of believing in ourselves and in each other, we can change the world.”

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About the Author

Judy Cannon is a journalist and writer, and occasional contributor to On Line Opinion. Her family biography, The Tytherleigh Tribe 1150-2014 and Its Remarkable In-Laws, was published in 2014 by Ryelands Publishing, Somerset, UK. Recently her first e-book, Time Traveller Woldy’s Diary 1200-2000, went up on Amazon Books website. Woldy, a time traveller, returns to the West Country in England from the 12th century to catch up with Tytherleigh descendants over the centuries, and searches for relatives in Australia, Canada, America and Africa.

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