International women's day 8th March.

It is a day to accept and make people aware of women's rights and gender equality, parity, and call to action for accelerating women's equality. International Women's Day is a global day celebrating the social, economic, cultural, and political achievements of women.

Celebrated on March 8 every year, International Women's Day is a day dedicated to honoring the achievements of women throughout history and all across the globe. In many countries, tradition holds that men honor their mothers, wives, girlfriends, and colleagues with flowers and small presents. This year due to the pandemic most of the countries celebrating it through social media. The European Parliament is underlining the crucial role of women during the Covid pandemic crisis to mark this year’s International Women’s Day on 8 March.

To protect our self we need courage. Try to be a heroine of your life, not a victim. Life is tough now a day but we have to overcome it with our courage and ability. If somebody made you cry, show them how to smile.

Do not think or care what others saying about you, then life is not yours. If you have, knowledge let pass it to others. As a woman, we have lot of ability, which we are not utilizing because you are very shy to do it. Be firm we have to come forward as we have the strength it like men. If you are a woman with a voice, you are a strong woman. Because you have confidence in yourself.

Talking about feminism is not about making us strong. We are already strong. However, it is about changing the way of making others recognizing our strength. A number of inspirational women rose up past society's standards of female behavior and social position and made their name written in history. The challenges and sufferings that women have experienced throughout history and even in modern times.

Today, remembering some of the Famous Women In History who fight for equality. We are all aware of the efforts this generation of women made in the past. Marie Curie (celebrity scientist), Ada Lovelace (first computer programmer), Mary Wollstonecraft (feminist philosopher), Virginia Woolf (writer), Queen Victoria (UK’s most iconic monarchs), Diana, Princess of Wales (rebel princess of the royal family), Bessie Coleman (first American woman to earn an international pilot’s license), Amelia Earhart (the first person to fly across from the Red Sea to India), Josephine Butler (English feminist and a social reformer in the Victorian era), Mother Teresa (Roman Catholic nun who devoted her whole life to caring for the sick and poor), Wangari Maathai (African woman to receive the Nobel Peace Prize for her contribution to sustainable development, peace, and democracy), Indira Gandhi (the first female Prime Minister of India), Sarojini Naidu (Nightingale of India. She was an Indian independence activist and poet.)

Thus, women in history were not victims but heroes who began the revolution for women’s rights. The current generation may feel that the battle for equality is tough but history showing us that it’s not tough to have it.

A big salute to all these courageous women (there are more) who inspired me.

To conclude, Gloria Steinem, world-renowned feminist, journalist, and activist once explained: “The story of women’s struggle for equality belongs to no single feminist nor any one organization but to the collective efforts of all who care about human rights.”

Wishing you a very happy Women's Day

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