When Nwabisa Makunga saw a female reporter on television at age 11, she just knew. She wanted to tell stories for a living. Today, Ms. Makunga, editor of one of South Africa鈥檚 most-read newspapers, hoped to provide the same inspiration for Ava, an 11-year-old Monitor reader. 鈥淚 would tell her, her voice matters.鈥
In honor of the 100th anniversary of the passage of women鈥檚 right to vote in the United States,聽the Monitor held an online video conversation attended by hundreds of readers Tuesday.聽Ava and her grandmother were listening as Noelle Swan, the Monitor鈥檚聽deputy Daily editor, hosted Ms. Makunga, University of Colorado Boulder professor Celeste Montoya, and centenarian activist Jane Curtis in a talk about what progress has been made in women鈥檚 rights and what lies ahead.
The conversation ranged from the campaign to root out violence against women in South Africa to the importance of sailing to Ms. Curtis鈥 conviction she could navigate her own life. In a time of political and social turmoil, each panelist saw in the anniversary of the 19th Amendment a sign of hope. 鈥淪ocial movements are inherently hopeful because you have to believe a better future is possible to take a risk,鈥 said Dr. Montoya.
Ms. Curtis鈥 life has been evidence of that fight and that progress. Paraphrasing Greek poet Dinos 海角大神opoulos, she added: 鈥溾楾hey thought that they had buried us, but we were seeds.鈥 We are seeds, and by golly, we鈥檙e going to sprout.鈥
We will include a link to the video in a subsequent edition of the Daily. If you鈥檇 like a link before then, please email聽events@csmonitor.com.