Women throughout history have been inventing, leading, organizing, creating and making the world a better place despite gender injustice. If women knew about these inspiring stories that have been kept from them, would they be bolder and have more willingness to persevere?
Throughout Women’s History Month, discover untold stories of incredible women—made possible by nonprofit Look What SHE Did! Since incorporating as a in 2015, Look What SHE Did! has produced 150+ three- to four-minute films of women telling the stories of the trailblazing women who inspire them.
This week: Patsy Mink, the first woman of color elected to Congress; Merata Mita, filmmaker, teacher and activist; and Grace Lee Boggs, civil rights activist.
(And don’t miss previous installments on Latina trailblazers, women who dissent and Black women leaders!)
Patsy Mink
Patsy Takemoto Mink, a 5’3″ dynamo from Hawaii, was a brilliant and determined attorney-politician dedicated to social justice who led a lifetime of firsts (the first woman of color elected to Congress, for one!). Mink’s greatest legacy was the Title IX Amendment of the Higher Education Act, prohibiting gender discrimination. Countless girls and women have benefited from this law, gaining access to classes, programs, sports teams and more, proving over and over that given a level playing field—women compete and win.
In her inimitable style, actor-activist Kate Rigg thrills us with the story of this tiny firebrand, informing us why we are all indebted to the amazing Patsy Mink.
There was no NO. There was always YES AND.
Kate Rigg
Merata Mita
Merata Mita—filmmaker, teacher, activist, storyteller, wife, mother of six—did it all. And in doing so, she changed the lens through which her people were seen. Born in New Zealand, raised in the traditional teachings of the Indigenous Polynesian people known as the Māori, Mita used film and video to reach her high school students, most of whom were Māori…
Read the full article here