Liberia’s Leymah Gbowee Talks Maternal Health through Peace
Gbowee said, “You can’t talk about maternal mortality without looking at the implications of peace and conflict.”
Gbowee said, “You can’t talk about maternal mortality without looking at the implications of peace and conflict.”
Our children are the future. They are affected by the food they eat, the air they breathe, the land they live on, and the cities they inhabit.
Dr. Nawal El Saadawi told the rapt crowd proudly, “I was a feminist when I was a child.”
The American Lung Association conducted a bipartisan poll which showed that the public trusts the EPA to protect their health.
Steinem recounted demonstrating outside the Museum with the rallying cry, “MoMA is a female impersonator.”
She sported a bold necklace on her lined neck and rings on her hands—which clearly showed the wear and tear of time and a life lived.
Dr. Rhodes understood that for women with dense breast tissue, “the mammogram doesn’t work well at all.”
Benazir Bhutto was born in 1953. Nobody came to visit her mother for three days; they were in mourning that she hadn’t given birth to a son.
On the buying of sex, Sakow said, “Where there’s men, there’s trafficking. It has nothing to do with religion.”
Embracing forgiveness on a personal level, as well as a national and community level, is integral to Sebarenzi’s philosophy.