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Wangari maathai: kenya’s nobel peace prize winner

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The poor girl who became Kenya’s first female professor (The legacy of Wangari)

Despite the conversations around feminism and women’s empowerment starting in the late 1950s, women all over Africa have been able to rise above their conditions and leave a mark in one way or the other.

Today, many more women can take up the mantle on many issues or situations they find themselves because of the inspiration from similar women in history.

The story and success of Kenya’s Wangari Maathai who rose above all odds and became the most sought-after professor in Kenya and Nobel Prize winner are worth highlighting to add to the discussion on women’s empowerment.

Wangari was born on April 1 1940, in a small village in Kenya. Her parents who came from a village called Ihithe were a struggling couple who often moved from place to place to find work as a means of survival.

Her father worked on a farm that belonged to a white man. He preferred the job because it gave him a stable income to support his family despite being away from home.

Wangari lived with her father on the farm for five years until 1947 when he decided that she gets an education. They moved back to Ihithe where her mother and brothers were.

She was one of the few lucky girls whose fathers felt it necessary for a female child to gain an education at the time.

Wangari sailed through school with ease despite financial constraint. When it was time for her to go to the university, her parents were not able to afford the fees. Luckily for her, through the efforts of Thomas Mboya who had managed to gain funds through John F Kennedy and his JFK Foundation, Wangari was one of the lucky Kenyan students who benefited from the scholarship scheme to study in the USA.

She attended Mount St. Scholastica College and graduated with a Bachelor of Science in 1964. Her outstanding performance again helped her secure funding from African American Institute for her master’s programme in Biology at the University of Pittsburg.

Immediately after graduating, Wangari was appointed as a research assistant at the University College of Nairobi and had to return to Kenya. It was during her stay in the University College of Nairobi that she opened a shop and met Mwangi Mathai who she married in 1969 after gaining her doctorate in Germany on another scholarship. They later divorced in 1979.

While working as a research assistant, Wangari developed an interest in environmental issues and started to speak on the subject matter. She quickly rose above the educational ranks and became an assistant lecturer, lecturer and a senior lecturer in 1975, becoming the first woman in Kenya to hold such a position.

By 1977 she was appointed the chair of the Department of Veterinary Anatomy and became Associate professor becoming the first woman in Kenya to hold that position as well.

Wangari is celebrated for starting the Green Belt Movement back in 1974 by setting up an organisation that saw to the planting of trees for environmental conservation. The project was acknowledged by the National Council of Women in Kenya (Ncwk).

On June 5 1977, World Environment Day, the council supported her to run a tree growing campaign which started that day by planting seven trees. The campaign was to empower women to do more for the next generation of women.

She faced challenges in her attempt to win a parliamentary seat in 1982 when she was disqualified after resigning from her teaching position for the role.

Believing that it was because she was a woman, Wangari took the case to court, but sadly lost on account that she could not provide evidence that she was a registered voter. The Kenyan Government also worked against her Green Belt Movement.

Wangari spent some time in prison after her husband accused her of adultery during their divorce settlements. She was again imprisoned and released in 1992, the year she was accused of being a mad woman working against the government.

Despite the setbacks, she still went ahead with her environmentalist campaigns and was recognised for her outstanding work. She received several awards, including the Nobel Peace Prize in 2004 for her exceptional contribution to sustainable development, democracy and peace and many other international awards for her environmentalist campaigns.

Wangari wrote several books on environmental issues which included her Green Belt Movement and a book on democracy. Her most popular books are The State of the World’s Minorities and Unbowed; a memoir she wrote in 2003.

She served as the first president of the African Union’s Economic, Social and Cultural Council in 2005 and then helped protect the Congo Basin.

After decades of a fulfilling life, Wangari passed away on September 25 2011 in Kenya after battling with Ovarian Cancer.

Today, the Green Belt Movement lives on, with board members from across Europe, Africa and the United States of America.

Padmini Ramangani in the American Association for the Advancement of Science (Aaas), in his tribute for Wangari wrote: “Dr. Maathai’s life’s work was focused on empowering women and eradicating poverty from the grassroots level.

“She was synonymous with the struggle for democracy and human rights. Indeed, she became the first environmentalist and African woman to win the Nobel Peace Prize in 2004.”

A tribute to Wangari published by The World Bank by Obiageri Ezekwesiri reads; “we are proud to have interacted extensively with Professor Maathai. We pay tribute to her for her selfless and tireless efforts to protect the natural environment, both to ensure sustainable development and to promote world peace.

We remember how passionately she campaigned for a better understanding of the multiple ways that we can and should protect our fragile natural environment, as well as for the preservation of Uhuru Park and the Karura Forest, two of the most important green spaces in Kenya’s capital city, Nairobi.

True to Wangari’ words: “We cannot tire or give up, we owe it to the present and future generations of all species to rise up and walk! The tree lady’s legacy as she is famously known in other circles lives on and will live on for generations to come.” —Face2FaceAfrica.com

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