Wangari Maathai
(1940-2011)

Kenyan Environmental & Political Activist
Winner of the 2004 Nobel Peace Prize
1991 Winner of the Goldman Environmental Prize

birthdate: April 1
birthplace:
Nyeri, Kenya, East Africa

Wangari Matthai faced enormous obstacles in life, not the least of which was that in Kenyan tradition women are seen as the submissive property of men. Nevertheless, she stubbornly pursued an education and eventually became a professor of veterinary medicine. Soon after that, she entered a traditional marriage and had three children. But because of her growing activism, her husband called her "too educated, too strong, too successful, too stubborn, and too hard to control" and divorced her. The President of Kenya labeled her "a mad woman who is a threat to the order and security of the country" and encouraged the Kenyan people "to stamp out trouble-makers." Beaten, threatened with death, and in hiding during much of her long years of activism for human rights, women's rights, and environmentalism, Ms. Matthai has been courageously steadfast. Among her many accomplishments is the founding of the Green Belt Movement, an organization that concentrates on environmental conservation and community development by planting trees to protect the soil. It was through this organization that she became known throughout the world, and in 2004, she became the first African woman to receive the Nobel Peace Prize "for aiding democracy and attempting to save Africa's forests."

Bio © Larry Auld

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