Women's Rights

Wangari Maathai on the women of the Green Belt Movement
“I placed my faith in the rural women of Kenya from the very beginning, and they have been key to the success of the Green Belt Movement. Through this very hands-on method of growing and planting trees, women have seen that they have real choices about whether they are going to sustain and restore the environment or destroy it. In the process of education that takes place when someone joins the Green Belt Movement, women have become aware that planting trees or fighting to save forests from being chopped down is part of a larger mission to create a society that respects democracy, decency, adherence to the rule of law, human rights, and the rights of women. Women also take on leadership roles, running nurseries, working with foresters, planning and implementing community-based projects for water harvesting and food security. All of these experiences contribute to their developing more confidence in themselves and more power over the direction of their lives.”

Wangari Maathai on Women's Rights:

Guardian, November 11, 2004
Speak Truth to Power, May 4, 2000
United Nations, New York CIty, March 8, 2005
House of Sarah Kovner, New York City, March 4, 2005
ABC Carpet, New York City, December 19, 2004
School of International and Public Affairs
School of International and Public Affairs, New York City, May 4, 2004

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