American journalist Gloria Steinem once said, 鈥淭he story of women鈥檚 struggle for equality belongs to no single feminist, nor to any one organization, but to the collective efforts of all who care about human rights.鈥
That statement aligns wonderfully with the theme of this year鈥檚 International Women鈥檚 Day, celebrated annually on March 8. The theme, Choose to Challenge, reminds participants that a challenged world is an alert world, and from challenge comes change.
As 帝王会所 celebrates International Women鈥檚 Day, and Women鈥檚 History Month this March, we ask members of our University community to consider how they will help forge a gender-equal world. This month and every day forward, we encourage our community to celebrate women鈥檚 achievements, raise questions against bias and take action for equality.
OHIO recognizes the diversity of women鈥檚 experiences and their invaluable contributions to our community, and as such, we wanted to highlight four women who inspire us: Graduate student Habiba Abdelaal; undergraduate student Elizabeth Elrod; staff member Tia Jameson; and alumna Becky Clark.
It鈥檚 important to note that these are snapshots of these women鈥檚 lives, and these do not necessarily reflect the experiences of others even with similar identities.
Habiba Abdelaal
Habiba Abdelaal, a graduate assistant in OHIO鈥檚 Women鈥檚 Center and a Master of Public Administration candidate in the Voinovich School, was born in Cairo, Egypt, and lived with her father and two sisters. At age 19, Abdelaal found herself without a mother and emotionally supporting her sisters and herself.
鈥淚t happened at the same time the revolution started,鈥 she explained. 鈥淭hat鈥檚 when I started my social activism work. That part of my life shaped who I am now and helped me develop my resilience and strong personality as a woman and the leader I am now. My passion for community development and advocating for women鈥檚 rights stems from recognizing that equitable opportunities are necessary for social change and gender equity.鈥
Abdelaal has lent her voice to social justice movements here in Athens, speaking previously at Take Back the Night about her involvement in sexual violence prevention during, and following, the Tahrir Square protests. She recently authored an article for The Tahrir Institute for Middle East Policy documenting the anti-sexual violence movement in Egypt in the 10 years since the Egyptian Revolution.
Abdelaal, who is also a graduate of OHIO鈥檚 Center for International Studies communication and development master鈥檚 program, is proud to be a resilient woman. She鈥檚 faced a lot of hardships at such a young age, including losing her best friend Marwa in 2016.
Abdelaal published a photography project about her mental illness and journey through her post-traumatic stress disorder after losing Marwa. That project was, and still is, close to her heart.
鈥淗er death took away my hope as she was my support system and the one that used to push me through my hard times,鈥 Abdelaal noted. 鈥淎fter Marwa鈥檚 death, I started treatment, and I started a recovery journey from anxiety, severe depression, and PTSD. I documented my story because I believe mental illnesses should not be shameful or something that we should hide. I believe that we put more pressure on ourselves to show the good, strong side all that time, and that affects our mental health.鈥
This International Women鈥檚 Day, Abdelaal encourages women to be advocates for each other, and to speak up for the women whose voices may be silenced.
鈥淲e must speak kind words to each other and encourage one another when we can,鈥 she added. 鈥淲e must support each other in our homes and offices, acting as advisors, mentors and friends. Women need to realize that meaningful progress will not be made unless we advocate for each other and support one another.鈥
Elizabeth Elrod
Elizabeth Elrod, an undergraduate studying music therapy, grew up in a Baptist, Appalachian household. She was assigned male at birth and grew up living with her mom, dad and brother. Although her father was often absent due to his employment with the U.S. Air Force reserves, their family tried to spend as much time together as possible.
They played board games, watched movies, and went on vacations and getaways, often spending much of their time outside hiking or visiting the beach. Things changed when her family realized she and her brother were queer, and their family relationship became very strained. Elrod said her mother was emotionally manipulative and her father was inattentive and distant.
Elrod鈥檚 life experiences led her to become particularly passionate about the wellbeing of LGBTQ+ people of all ages. She co-spearheaded the Portsmouth, 帝王会所, LGBTQ+ Pride Festival, and she started an LGBTQ+ Adult Support Group through the Portsmouth Welcoming Community. The OHIO student has several other accomplishments to be proud of.
鈥淚'm proud of my recovery from meth addiction, for which I celebrated my third year clean at the end of January this year,鈥 she noted. 鈥淢y goal with this music therapy degree is to help recovering addicts in Appalachia. I'm proud of the work that I have not yet accomplished but will hopefully someday realize through the saving of lives of the addicted and the forgotten in the hollers of Appalachia.鈥
Elrod is also proud of the work she鈥檚 done breaking down binary gender barriers in OHIO鈥檚 School of Music through the discourse she鈥檚 had with faculty members about creating welcoming communities and ensembles that celebrate people of all genders.
This International Women鈥檚 Day, Elrod believes people should reflect on who the celebration includes.
鈥淚nternational Women's Day is often a focus about the people in the forefront: cisgender women. This is what International Women's Day is to me currently,鈥 she explained. 鈥淚nternational Women's Day should take femininity and celebrate it in all individuals 鈥 even those who are masculine. We should work to listen to nonbinary femmes who aren't heard in celebrations such as this. We should listen to the butch lesbians who are forgotten and distrusted because of their masculine attributes. Having a trans* woman such as me as a part of this celebration is a start. I'm Appalachian and proud. I'm a former sex worker and proud. I'm a recovering addict and proud. But we need to shine our light on the dark recesses that no one dares to look. I've been in those dark recesses. There's much work that needs to be done.鈥
Becky Clark
Becky Clark and her family live for adventure. They鈥檙e avid hikers, bikers, trail runners, campers and travelers. They also garden and cook, and she and her partner, Chris, recently bought an old ambulance and have been working to convert it into a camper van.
Clark is the owner-operator of local businesses Pork & Pickles and Totes Local, executive chef of Little Fish Brewing Company, and a member of Hocking College Agroecology Program Advisory Board. She鈥檚 also a proud Bobcat alumna, having graduated in 2009 with a degree in geography.
The OHIO alumna lives in Athens with her partner and their three fur babies, dogs Porter and Woody and cat Bernie. Her parents, grandparents, and brother鈥檚 family all live in the area and they鈥檙e extremely close.
No two days are similar for Clark, but they all start out with some coffee and a walk with Porter and Woody. Between calls with her mom and FaceTime chats with her nieces during the week, Clark explores at Sells Park with her dogs, helps her family with errands and projects, catches up on some office work, before going into Pork & Pickles鈥 production room in Nelsonville or the kitchen at Little Fish Brewing.
鈥淚 am extremely proud of the journey I have been on for the past five years since starting Pork & Pickles,鈥 Clark explained. 鈥淚 have grown as a leader, as a chef, as a partner, daughter, and friend. I am proud that I have chosen the harder, but more fulfilling path in life. I am also extremely proud that I have finally learned how to strike a work-life balance, and I am now working to live rather than living to work. No matter how much you love your job, you can't let it completely consume your life. I am proud I have learned that lesson.鈥
Clark loves her job not only for the freedom it brings, but also because she鈥檚 able to mentor her staff. Her young employees inspire her.
鈥淭his next generation of young women are heading into their careers with conviction, motivation, and a take-no-nonsense attitude,鈥 she said. 鈥淭hese women will lead our world sooner than we know, and I am inspired by them every day. I am in constant awe of this next generation's flexibility and acceptance of all people, and I believe they will make the world a better and more just place to live.鈥
For Clark, International Women鈥檚 Day is a reminder of how far our world has come, and how much work there is still left to do.
Tia Jameson
Tia Jameson鈥檚 family is her rock, her foundation, and her why. Everything she does, she has her family in mind. It鈥檚 possible she picked this trait up from her mother.
After Jameson鈥檚 father passed away when she was 10 years old, she watched her own mother work tirelessly for 48 years at the same job. She witnessed her mother sit by her kids鈥 hospital beds countless nights, take care of their home, be a rock for her siblings and her mother, support her children through college, be the best grandmother, and their family鈥檚 number one supporter.
鈥淪he never complained,鈥 said Jameson, director of operations for OHIO鈥檚 Women鈥檚 Basketball team. 鈥淢y mother is awe-inspiring; a true SHERO (she-hero), watching her unwavering strength and endurance grips my emotions. She is pure magic and grace.鈥
Jameson, a two-time OHIO graduate, has been with the Women鈥檚 Basketball team for six years. Her family loves going to games and cheering on the Bobcats, and the rambunctious group enjoys every minute of it.
鈥淚t鈥檚 important to expose my nieces and nephews to the collegiate experience so they can see obtainable goals for themselves,鈥 Jameson explained. 鈥淲henever we are together, there are gut-busting laughs in the air. My younger nephews are into sports right now, so we always find ourselves in a basketball gym proudly cheering them on.鈥
If it鈥檚 not sports, Jameson鈥檚 family 鈥 her mother, siblings, aunts, grandmother, and cousins 鈥 are together celebrating birthdays and every holiday. If she鈥檚 not with her family, working or courtside, and it鈥檚 a bright, beautiful day, you鈥檒l probably see her driving around, soaking up some sun and jamming to her favorite tunes.
At OHIO, Jameson is a member of Bobcats Lead Change, and she鈥檚 on the Diversity and Inclusion Advisory Board, The Martin Luther King Jr. and Juneteenth Celebration Board, and the Real Talk About Big Questions Programming Board. Though the objectives for each of these groups differ, Jameson is honored to be a part of each, because of their dedication to impacting lives and cultivating growth.
鈥淚鈥檓 so proud of my continued commitment to help others. My goal has always been to assist others to cultivate into their finest self and exceed past what they thought they were capable of,鈥 she explained. 鈥淚 say 鈥榗ontinued鈥 because we don鈥檛 always get the 鈥榯hank you鈥 we deserve, or the pat on the back we worked for 鈥 but simply knowing that someone tried harder and trusted you to help is reward enough.鈥
This International Women鈥檚 Day, Jameson encourages everyone to honor the beauty in difference, embrace diversity and uplift each other when sometimes the world doesn鈥檛 allow those things to occur.
鈥淭hrough International Women鈥檚 Day we can strive to normalize the beauty in global shades, unfamiliar backgrounds, uncomfortable conversations, and truly appreciate the meaning of blood, sweat, and tears in unity,鈥 she noted. 鈥淚t is beautiful to see women empowering women. I encourage us all to aspire to carry this mentality of caring, unity, and empowerment with us in our daily lives.鈥