Types of women worth idolizing... Her name is Theresa Kachindamoto, and she is a senior chief - political leader of a region with a population of about 900,000 people. She didn’t run for election; she was appointed, without her knowledge, while she was living and working in a completely different part of the country. She just received a call one day telling her to come back to her childhood home, because she was in charge now. So she did; and when she arrived, she discovered widespread sexual abuse of children. She browbeat 50 uncooperative local leaders into accepting her decision to annul all the marriages. She then fired four of them when they continued to allow children to be married off in their areas. She still faces widespread opposition from parents who consider it their right to sexually abuse their daughters if they want to; but Kachindamoto very evidently does not give a fuck, and is continuing to use political and legal means to protect children in the region. She’s not just an anonymous do-gooder; she’s an effective political leader despite incredibly difficult circumstances. As of today, Kachindamoto is still in office, and last year (2024) she received honorary doctorates from 2 universities and was given the African Genius Award. Via: Al Jazeera
About us
A place for women to just....be. Words of Women is more than a highly successful Instagram account and website, it's completely niche in its approach as a haven of comfort and support for Women around the world. -Weekly Newsletter -Weekly Horoscope -Interview Series
- Website
-
http://www.wordsofwomen.com
External link for Words of Women
- Industry
- Writing and Editing
- Company size
- 1 employee
- Headquarters
- Brooklyn, New York
- Type
- Self-Owned
- Founded
- 2016
- Specialties
- Empowerment and women
Locations
-
Primary
Get directions
76 N 4th St
Brooklyn, New York, US
Employees at Words of Women
Updates
-
My husband helps. My husband is a progressive man. It’s 50/50….but why doesn’t it feel like it? Why do I feel like he’s annoyed about it? Why do I feel resentment towards him even when he helps? These are the questions. Am I crazy or is this just PART OF IT? I got the answers from six women and a couple’s therapist. Listen to PART OF IT https://lnkd.in/euuBaNTi
-
“I think if Hasbro was serious about women’s empowerment, they could start by admitting that a woman invented the game,” - Mary Pilon "Monopoly’s invention is often credited to Charles Darrow, who sold the game to Parker Brothers in 1935, Monopoly’s origins begin not with Darrow 80 years ago, but decades before with a bold, progressive woman named Elizabeth Magie, who until recently has largely been lost to history, and in some cases deliberately written out of it. Magie lived a highly unusual life. Unlike most women of her era, she supported herself and didn’t marry until the advanced age of 44. In addition to working as a stenographer and a secretary, she wrote poetry and short stories and did comedic routines onstage. She also spent her leisure time creating a board game that was an expression of her strongly held political beliefs. Magie filed a legal claim for her Landlord’s Game in 1903, more than three decades before Parker Brothers began manufacturing Monopoly. She actually designed the game as a protest against the big monopolists of her time — people like Andrew Carnegie and John D. Rockefeller. She created two sets of rules for her game: an anti-monopolist set in which all were rewarded when wealth was created, and a monopolist set in which the goal was to create monopolies and crush opponents. Her dualistic approach was a teaching tool meant to demonstrate that the first set of rules was morally superior.* And yet it was the monopolist version of the game that caught on, with Darrow claiming a version of it as his own and selling it to Parker Brothers. While Darrow made millions and struck an agreement that ensured he would receive royalties, Magie’s income for her creation was reported to be a mere $500.* Amid the press surrounding Darrow and the nationwide Monopoly craze, Magie lashed out. In 1936 interviews with The Washington Post and The Evening Star she expressed anger at Darrow’s appropriation of her idea. Then elderly, her gray hair tied back in a bun, she hoisted her own game boards before a photographer’s lens to prove that she was the game’s true creator.* In 1948, Magie died in relative obscurity, a widow without children. Neither her headstone nor her obituary mentions her role in the creation of Monopoly." Read the full story: https://lnkd.in/ebKXTsxc
-