I’m a big believer in proclaiming “Women of the Year.” I believe in identifying positive role models to give us
all something to aspire to.
It also helps to give us hope when some of our goals….such as electing a woman to the White House… seem, at times, to recede before us, like those refracted heat waves that appear to form shapes, then vanish in the desert, leaving us wondering where is our palm lined pool of shimmering water? Nothing but miles and miles of dry, hot desert when it comes to women’s presidential aspirations. But, better to light a candle than curse the darkness. The candles women have lit and carried in the past year, or a bit over in one case, include some of the following outstanding women:
The New York Daily News named their New Yorker of the Year saying: “Hillary Clinton proved a woman of resolve and class.”
We couldn’t agree more. And she did a lot more than that. She made it more feasible for a woman to run for President of the United States, and she upped the ante for contenders to 18 million votes. But Clinton’s skills as a campaigner, we predict, will be overshadowed by her skills as a serious decision maker and global negotiator. I, for one, am heartened and relieved that , at least, the second phone call which comes in at 3am will be to Secretary of State, Hillary Clinton.
I don’t believe in “book-ending” Governor Sarah Palin with Clinton, but neither do I believe in ignoring her plucky candidacy. She was called on and she took up the challenge, energizing her party and becoming a celebrity in the process. Common wisdom has it that she made Tina Fey a bigger celebrity in the process as well with her Saturday Night caricatures of Palin. I don’t deny those caricatures were fun, of a type, but I will find them a lot funnier when we actually do have a woman in the White House.
I think we should give Queen Elizabeth of England some appreciation if, for nothing else, endurance. She fills that classic
requirement: 50% of winning is “just showing up for the job”. Queen Elizabeth has shown up for over 50 years, if you only count the years since her coronation. ( She also, for example, presided over public events and, during the war, trained as a driver and mechanic, and drove a military truck making her the first, and so far only, female member of the Royal Family to actively serve in the armed forces.)
I met Benazir Bhutto in San Francisco in 2001, I believe. Although there was some controversy surrounding her I always admired her and found her speaking inspiring. “Bhutto was the first woman elected to lead a Muslim state,[5] having twice been Prime Minister of Pakistan (1988–1990; 1993–1996). She was Pakistan‘s first and to date only female prime minister. She went into self-imposed exile in Dubai in 1998.
Bhutto returned to Pakistan on 18 October 2007, and was assassinated on 27 December 2007, after departing a PPP rally in the Pakistani city of Rawalpindi, two weeks before the scheduled Pakistani general election of 2008 where she was a leading opposition candidate. The following year she was named one of seven winners of the United Nations Prize in the Field of Human Rights.
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I think Bhutto provides another example of a woman persisting in her beliefs and showing up in the face of personal danger. Although she died a few days before 2008, it is now time to mark the anniversary of her violent death. I salute her and say farewell.
I know there are many, many more women who should be saluted and honored in 2008.
I would nominate all the women who worked so hard for their candidates in 2008.
I would nominate all the mothers and daughters and wives who worked to maintain their families and those who lost loved ones in national service in conflicts abroad.
I would nominate all of us who have persevered, despite an unlevel playing field and personal challenges.
I suspect that might be all of us.
If you have women you think should be named women of the year, please do write and share with us who they are.
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