Before 2011, (the award began in 1901) only "40 of the total 776 Peace Prize winners have been women in the past, and no three women have ever won the prize together"(1).
So who were these newest 3 to join the select group of Nobel Laureate Ladies?
Ellen Johnson Sirleaf - "the first and only democratically elected female head of state in Africa. She founded the Truth and Reconciliation Commission in 2006, which investigated 20 years of civil war and human rights violations in Liberia" (1)
Leymah Gbowee - "also active in achieving peace in Liberia. As the founder of the Women of Liberia Mass Action for Peace, she became a non-violent force against civil war" (1)
Tawakkul Karman - "a human rights activist and politician in Yemen, a country currently experiencing a large-scale popular movement against the government. Karman organized student rallies in the capital of Sanaa, after which she was arrested. When she was released, she immediately went back to protesting." (1)
They were awarded the 1.5 million dollars to support their efforts towards peace because of "their non-violent struggle for the safety of women and for women's rights to full participation in peace-building work" (2).
But women (and men) can win the Nobel Prize for efforts in science and literature as well as working towards peace.
Here's info on the other 40 women who came before these 3 ladies.
Hopefully that number will grow in the future to be a bit more balanced with the boys but, until then, keep your eye on Sirleaf, Gbowee and Karman in their efforts to elevate peace and women throughout the world...
Well said Sarah! Very cool to get a glimpse of some of the amazing people who are working to improve the planet. I had no idea that Ellen Johnson Sirleaf was a nobel prize laureate! I had the pleasure of being in Liberia during the election, and even got to meet her when she came in for a tour of the ship. She is an amazing women, who will hopefully make progress in restoring peace to that war-torn country.
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