Isabel Allende
For fans of Isabel Allende and her novels. Discuss Isabel Allende literature.
News from Isabel Allende's 3 powerful women
Wangari Maathai
(find her at 4:09 in Allende's talk) is
the first African woman to win
the Nobel Peace Prize. As Allende says, Maathai "planted 30 million trees,
and by doing so she has changed the soil, the weather in some places in
Africa -- and, of course, the economic conditions in many villages.”
Writing in a recent Harvard International Review, Maathai discusses the reasoning behind her crusade -- her belief that the best way to achieve sustainable development is to empower local communities. Last week, Maathai was named co-chair of the Congo Basin Forest Fund, recipient of a £58 million grant from the British government for satellite monitoring of the Congo rainforest.
Somaly Mam
(find her at 4:24)
is “a Cambodian activist who fights passionately
against child prostitution. ... She told us of little girls raped by
men who believed that having sex with a very young virgin will cure
them of AIDS.” Somaly Mam’s grandfather sold her to a brothel when she
was 15 years old; 11 years later, she established AFESIP, an NGO that has since rescued more than 4,000 young women from sexual slavery. Named Glamour’s 2006 Woman of the Year -- and the subject of an astonishing profile by Marianne Pearl -- Mam battles human trafficking by raising global awareness through the Somaly Mam Foundation. Her autobiography, The Road of Lost Innocence, will be published in the US in September 2008.
Rose Mapendo
(find her at 7:31)
Mapendo, whose name in Swahili means “Great Love,”
protected her nine children through 16 months in a Congo concentration
camp. Allende tells the story: “When the soldiers break into
[Mapendo’s] cell to rape her oldest daughter, she grabs onto her and
refuses to let go, even when they hold a gun to her head.” Now settled
in Phoenix, Arizona, Mapendo is the ambassador for Mapendo International,
which evacuates and rehabilitates African refugees. Her efforts earned
her the 2007 Grand Award from Volvo for Life, and last week she spoke at the White House to honor World Refugee Day. But Mapendo’s latest achievement may be the most personal; on Thursday, her organization tells TED, her parents will finally resettle in the US. Watch a trailer for the upcoming documentary about Mapendo's struggle to reunite her family. -- Karl Kong
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