Girls' lives have changed a lot over
time. In some countries, girls used to
have few rights and now they have many.
In the United States and Europe, girls
of the past couldn't go to college, get
many jobs, or vote. In other countries,
girls had more rights in past times than
they do now, like in some Middle Eastern
countries where girls can't go to school
and women can't work anymore.
Often the situation depends on the girl's
social class; princesses usually have
more rights than peasants, and wealthy
girls are much more likely to get an education.
Or girls may officially have rights, but
still face sexism or death. In China,
hundreds of girl babies are still abandoned
or killed because their culture prefers
males. But there have always been times
when an inspiring woman shines, no matter
what her culture expects.
c. 2300 BC East Sumeria (now Iran)-Enheduanna
was the world's first known writer. She
was the also the first High Priestess-the
highest religious office of all. Some
Sumerian girls had the prestigious job
of helping in the temples, but most learned
sewing and weaving cloth. Enheduanna and
others developed a lunar calendar, which
we still use to calculate the dates of
Easter and Passover.
c. 1120 BC Israel-Deborah, a Jewish prophet
and judge, led the Israelites to victory
against the Canaanites. Most girls, though,
were under the strict rule of their fathers
until they married and became the property
of their husbands. Girls learned Jewish
traditions, but couldn't study the Torah
as boys could.
c. 40 BC Vietnam-Two sisters, Trung Trac
and Trung Nhi, masterminded a revolt against
the oppressive Chinese rule, leading 80,000
men and women, including 36 women generals,
to triumph, after which they ruled as
co-queens. Females at that time were supposed
to obey males, but they did have the chance
to become traders, judges, and political
leaders.
c. 1370 AD Denmark-Married at age 10,
Queen Margarethe ruled after all her brothers
died. She united Denmark, Sweden, and
Norway and brought prosperity and peace.
Royal girls often married early because
at birth or in childhood their fathers
picked husbands for them who would increase
the country's wealth and power. The life
of a peasant girl was freer. They usually
married around 20 and had more choice
in picking mates. Peasant women could
manage land themselves if their husband
died. However, wife-beating for "disobedient"
women was lawful and encouraged.
c. 1680 Mexico-At age 3, Sor Juana could
read and learned everything she could.
She begged to be sent to school at age
7, but her parents refused. At 18, she
joined a convent-the only place where
girls could study-and went on to become
one of Mexico's greatest poets, writers,
and intellectuals.
c. 1800 France-Marie Lachapelle became
one of the most important medical researchers
of the century. She stopped the use of
painful tools for births, created important
procedures to help with childbirth, and
trained midwives. Not many girls of the
day would become scientists. Instead,
they worked as dressmakers, laundresses,
and shopkeepers or helped with their husbands'
occupations.
1893 New Zealand-Kate Sheppard helped
get voting rights for women in New Zealand-27
years before women in the U.S. could vote.
She was also a pioneer bicyclist. Even
though girls worked as hard as their brothers
on New Zealand's farms, many people believed
that girls and women should avoid riding
bikes because it could ruin their "delicate"
reproductive organs.
1967 India-At age 12, Indira Gandhi began
the children's Monkey Brigade, which worked
undercover to overthrow British rule.
She went on to become India's first female
prime minister, fighting illiteracy and
widespread famine, improving relations
with the Soviet Union, and sending India's
first satellite into orbit. Girls not
born into influential families were in
arranged marriages by their early teens.
The practice of sati, burning a widow
along with her deceased husband, still
takes place today in some villages.
1972 United States-Angry about the inequalities
that African Americans and women faced,
Shirley Chisholm became the first Black
woman in Congress in 1968. When a student
asked her why there were only White male
presidents, she ran for president in 1972.
Girls at that time who wanted to be Congresswomen
had only 16 women role models. Today,
out of 541 Congress members, only 75 are
women.
2002 Nigeria-In a country where less
than half the females can read, Eka Esu-Williams
found a way to study immune diseases.
In 1988, she founded the Society for Women
Against AIDS because 80% of the world's
women with AIDS live in Africa. Her group
also teaches girls not to be submissive.
Many women still don't feel they can stop
their husbands from having many wives,
so lots of women become ill and die when
their husbands pass the AIDS virus to
them.
One thing is consistent-throughout all
of time, throughout all places-things
change. Whether for good or not, everything
is constantly changing, and I hope that,
at some point in all countries, girls
will have every right that boys do.