Our common ground will be achieved when gender does not prevent education.
In early American history, a woman’s x on the page meant that her life would
be controlled by her father or husband. When women became literate, doors
could open for them. This still resonates today. Wangari Maathai was the
first
female in her Kenyan family to be educated. When 600 Kenyan students were
offered a college education in the United
States in 1960, she was one of them who came to see a "whole new world."
On
returning to Africa, she wanted to use her education to find a solution
to deforestation, devegetation and the unsustainable agriculture she found.
Maathai came up with a plan and fostered community groups to plant trees,
eventually 30 million of them. The United Nations’ Voluntary Fund for Women
supported her work, mainly done by local women. Civic and environmental
education
seminars became part of her Green Belt Movement.
Maathai was recognized
with the 2004 Nobel Peace Prize.