One of my many roles in my 25 year career as an academic librarian, was being chosen as the United Nations Librarian at both the University of Utah and University of Colorado at Boulder at the beginning of my career. I enjoyed this role because I was raised by parents who wholeheartedly believed that girls need a good education to impact the world in any meaningful way, and the United Nations has always supported that goal financially. As a UN librarian I learned that education was the best predictor of whether women could advance in less developed countries.
Ask the famous freedom fighter Malala Yousafzai. As a young girl, Ms.Yousafzai defied the Taliban in Pakistan and demanded that girls be allowed to receive an education. She was shot in the head by a Taliban gunman in 2012 for her non-traditional behavior, but survived and went on to receive the Nobel Peace Prize:
“One child, one teacher, one book, one pen can change the world.”
Little did I know then that I was also talking about some rural pockets of poverty and ignorance in our own country.
This week I read a POWERFUL memoir of a woman who advanced from no early schooling until age 17, to a PhD from Cambridge University in the UK. By writing EDUCATED: A Memoir, about her extreme battle to educate herself and in that way find her true Self, Tara Westover is educating the rest of us in how hard some girls and women must fight to simply NOT follow in their mother’s footsteps.
Tara learned from a very early age that she would have to fight for everything she would ever have, first with her father and then with her older brother. Growing up in a violent and severe fundamentalist Mormon family in rural Idaho she eventually discovered:
“Not knowing for certain, but refusing to give way to those who claim certainty, was a privilege. My life was narrated for me by others. Their voices were forceful, emphatic, absolute. It had never occurred to me that my voice might be as strong as theirs.” pg. 197
Wow. Thanks for bringing this book to my attention. Added to my list . . .
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Great Shari! It can be hard to take at times because her family situation is so harsh, but I learned so much about resilience and the power of innate intelligence from this book.
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Read this last month…definitely a inspiring story. I kept wondering where the responsible adults were. I am a teacher and my husband is a therapist. We are mandatory reporters of child abuse. How did Tara fall through the cracks for so long? There were people who saw what was happening and did nothing. I found that so frustrating.
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One of the reasons she fell through the cracks is that we all assume on some level that her parents wouldn’t allow her to be so ignored and mistreated by those who supposedly loved her. Her Dad was a total nut job and her Mom wasn’t strong enough to protect her children from him. I wonder how often this happens today…
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That was my thought. I wonder how many children are living like that right now.
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I have already heard so much about this book (all positive) including a positive review from Bill Gates – it is on my “to read” list more than ever.
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I ache for all the abused children (and women) in the world. And the ignorant and usually under-educated people that force them back.
What a world this would be if everyone were allowed to receive an education!
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