Alaa Murabit
Alaa Murabit | |
---|---|
Born | Alaa Mohamed Murabit October 26, 1989 |
Nationality | Canadian, Libyan |
Alma mater | University of Zawia London School of Economics and Political Science King's College London |
Occupation(s) | Medical Doctor Peace Expert Women's rights activist |
Known for | Sustainable Development Goal Global Advocate United Nations High Level Commissioner MIT Director's Fellow Forbes 30 Under 30 International Alert Trustee Keeping Children Safe Trustee Ashoka: Innovators for the Public Fellow The Voice of Libyan Women |
Awards | New York Times TrustWomen Hero Award Forbes 30 Under 30 Harvard Law Woman Inspiring Change Safe Global Hero BBC Top 100 Marisa Bellisario International Humanitarian Award Aspen Institute Global Spotlight Scholar |
Alaa Murabit (born October 26, 1989) is a Canadian physician and leading international advocate for inclusive peace processes. Nicknamed “Doogie Howser” by Jon Stewart, Alaa Murabit is an UN High-Level Commissioner on Health Employment and Economic Growth and one of only 17 Sustainable Development Goal Global Advocates appointed by the UN Secretary General.
She is now the Executive Director of Phase Minus 1. The Phase Minus 1 team provides thought leadership in conflict resolution, national security, security cooperation and defense technology.
Murabit’s TED Talk, released in July 2015, “What my religion really says about women” was selected as the TED Talk of the Day and one of four moving TED Talks you should watch right now by The New York Times.[1]
Recognized as a Forbes 30 Under 30, Aspen Institute Health Spotlight Scholar and Bay Street Bull Canada 30x30 for her efficacy in security, health policy and sustainability. Her leadership in global policy and in elevating the role of women, particularly young, minority women, on global platforms was recognized by Harvard Law who named her the youngest 2017 "Woman Inspiring Change".
An MIT Media Lab Director’s Fellow and International Deliver For Good Influencer, Alaa serves as a trustee for The Malala Fund, International Alert, Malaria No More and Keeping Children Safe.
At the age of 15 Alaa completed high school and moved from Saskatoon, Canada to Zawiya, Libya. It was there that she enrolled in medical school and founded The Voice of Libyan Women at the age of 21. With a strong focus on challenging societal and cultural norms and utilizing traditional and historical role models Murabit champions women’s participation in peace processes and conflict mediation. An international expert in Sustainable Development, peacebuilding, International Security, leadership, global health policy and negotiation her policies and programs are replicated internationally.
Murabit is an Ashoka fellow, and the youngest recipient of the Marisa Bellisario International Humanitarian Award by the Italian Government, named the “International TrustWomen Hero 2014” by The New York Times, “One of 25 women under 25 to watch” by Newsweek, a “100 Top Woman” by the BBC and the SAFE Global Hero.
Murabit received her Medical Doctorate in from the University of Zawiya in 2013. She went on to receive a Masters in International Strategy and Diplomacy with Distinction from the LSE in 2016 where her research focused on securitization processes, with a dissertation titled "White Man’s Burden: Disease, Security and the Stigmatisation of the Periphery".
Early life
Murabit was born and raised in Saskatoon, Saskatchewan, Canada, the sixth of eleven children in her family. Her father was a doctor.[2] She has stated that, although she initially had no plans on advocating women's rights, her parents' equal treatment of her and her brothers played an extremely important role in the way she viewed the world, "I know that I have a duty to every child to recognize and cultivate their own sense of leadership, because had it not been for my mother, I would not have recognized or claimed my own space to lead."[3] Murabit has stated her greatest role models are members of her family, including her eldest sister, Amera Murabit who is a world renowned plastic surgeon and volunteers her time in conflict zones and humanitarian disasters.[4]
After completing high school at age fifteen, she moved with members of her family to Zawiya, Libya in 2005 where she studied medicine at the University of Zawiya.
Career
Murabit founded The Voice of Libyan Women in August 2011 and acted as president until 2015. She has explained that VLW “was founded following the 2011 Libyan Revolution. I was in my final year of medical school at the time, and found out that there was a window of opportunity for women in Libya. I, and others, felt that we had to take that window of opportunity to ensure that women were able to truly advocate and demand their rights. It happened almost accidentally, [but also] out of necessity.”[5]
VLW “pushes for inclusive peace processes and conflict mediation by shifting the paradigm around the role of women in society at both the grassroots and policy level.” It “is best known for researching women's security, advocating against gender violence and training women to participate in government and speak out for their rights to be recognized in national policies.”
VLW's Noor Campaign “focuses on redirecting the conversation about women’s rights when it comes to the misrepresentation and misuse of religion to negate those rights.” The Noor Campaign is based on community leaders and "brought together over 600 local community leaders, including those who had never worked in civil society before". Working with a network of hundreds of community organizations throughout Libya, including Ayadina Charity in Benghazi, Mothers for Martyrs and The Southern Women's Forum, the campaign reached over 35 cities and communities, as far south as Ghat, Libya on the southern Libyan border, Tobruk and Bayda on the Eastern border and Nalut and Ghadames in the west. The campaign and methodology have since been replicated internationally.
She has maintained that peace is achievable through communities, "The only real solution, the only way to get that grenade or gun put down safely is the very spirit of this Forum. It is by filling his hands and head with something else. A pencil, a pay check, a diploma, a dream – by building up people, by creating institutions we break down wars. By strengthening local peace builders we give them the tools to change their communities from within."[6]
In 2013, she spoke at the Women in the World summit. “During the revolution, I saw phenomenally brave women taking a leading role,” Murabit told Lesley Stahl. She said that one important way of “empowering Libyan women...is to educate women on the teachings of their own religion” by using “verses from the Quran and other Muslim scriptures” to challenge violence against women that is committed in the name of Islam. “Often when violence happens, people excuse it with religion,” Murabit said. “Young girls need to know that they can fight fire with fire and say, ‘No, my religion is not why you are doing this.’”[2] She appeared at the Oslo Freedom Forum in May 2015[7] and spoke about "Arming Women for Peace".[8]
In July 2014 Murabit was appointed a member of the United Nations 1325 Advisory Board, which monitors the implementation of Security Council Resolution 1325 on women, peace, and security. She has been an Ashoka Fellow since September 2014, and has been an Advisor to UN Women's Global Civil Society Advisory Group since October 2014.[9] She is also a founding coalition member of Harvard University’s “Everywoman, Everywhere” initiative.[7]
In May 2015 she also addressed an official TEDWomen audience, where she received a standing ovation for her talk, released in July 2015 as an official "Ted Talk of the Day".[10] The New York Times selected it as one of '4 moving TED Talks you should watch right now', "Alaa Murabit, founder of The Voice of Libyan Women, explores Islam and its impact on laws and cultural and societal structures involving gender. During her speech, Murabit asks: “Why if we are equal in the eyes of God are we not equal in the eyes of men?” It’s a question she pondered as a young 15-year-old Muslim girl, the middle child of 11, who moved from Libya to Canada in the early 1980s. As she explores her answer, Murabit highlights ways her childhood emphasized the importance of women’s leadership and participation and shares why a similar structure can challenge the “distorted religious messaging” plaguing so many religions when it comes their attitudes toward women."[11]
In October 2015 Murabit was selected as the Civil Society Speaker for the 15th Anniversary Open Debate of United Nations Security Council Resolution 1325.[12]
In January 2016 Dr. Alaa Murabit became the youngest appointee of 17 UN Global Sustainable Development Goal Advocates [13] and in March 2016 Dr. Murabit was named a UN High-Level Commissioner on Health Employment and Economic Growth.[14]
In early 2017 Murabit was named the Executive Director of Phase Minus 1 and an International Deliver for Good Influencer. She is a board member of International Alert, Keeping Children Safe, Malaria No More and The Malala Fund
She has spoken at leading international conferences including World Economic Forum, WIRED, Munich Security Conference and Hilton Foundation Symposium.
Honors and awards
Murabit was named a 2017 Forbes 30 Under 30 for her work in Healthcare in 2017. In the same year she was awarded by Harvard Law as a "Woman Inspiring Change" and by the Aspen Institute as a Aspen Scholar, and was elected a member of the Helena Group.[15]
In July 2016 she was selected as an MIT Media Lab Director's Fellow.
In January 2016 she became the youngest appointee of 17 UN Global Sustainable Development Goal Advocates [13] and in March 2016 Dr. Murabit was named a UN High-Level Commissioner on Health Employment and Economic Growth.[14]
Safe Magazine named her a “Global Hero” and cover person in November 2014.[16] She was named a “TrustWomen Hero” in December 2013 by The International New York Times and the Thomson Reuters Foundation. “Alaa is a natural leader, and her organization has achieved tremendous tangible impact for women both in politics and society,” said HM Queen Noor, Founder and Chair of the Noor Al Hussein and the King Hussein Foundations and Trust Women Advisory Board Member, who presented her with the Trust Women Award. “Alaa’s bold thinking and fearless attitude are an inspiration for all women to be the architects of their own future.”
She was elected to the Ashoka Fellowship in 2014.[17]
Her previous awards include Marisa Bellisario International Humanitarian Award from the President of the Italian Republic in 2013.[18] In April 2013, Newsweek selected her as “One of 25 women under 25 to watch in 2013.” She was a finalist for the “TrustWomen Hero Award” by Thomson Reuters and the International Herald Tribune in December 2012.
Publications
Murabit has written articles for The Carter Center,[19] NewAmerica,[20] Chime for Change,[21] Huffington Post,[22] and The Christian Science Monitor[23]
Education
She studied at the College of Medicine at the University of Zawiya in Libya from 2006 to 2013, and worked at Zawiya Teaching Hospital and at various makeshift clinics during the 2011 civil war.[5][9] When the war began, her father became involved almost immediately with the rebels, providing medical care for rebel soldiers, appearing in SkyNews footage with Alex Crawford under the name "Dr. M", creating insecurity for her family.[24]
Murabit received her Medical Doctorate in from the University of Zawiya in 2013. She went on to receive a Masters in International Strategy and Diplomacy with Distinction from the LSE in 2016. Her research focused on securitization processes and her dissertation was titled "White Man’s Burden: Disease, Security and the Stigmatisation of the Periphery"
See also
References
- ^ https://www.ted.com/talks/alaa_murabit_what_my_religion_really_says_about_women?language=en
- ^ a b Dickson, Caitlin (April 5, 2013). "Alaa Murabit on Fighting for Women in Libya". The Daily Beast.
- ^ http://www.globalmomschallenge.org/2016/05/mother-created-space-lead/
- ^ https://vimeo.com/166921462
- ^ a b "Giving a Voice to Women in Libya: Five Minutes with Alaa Murabit". Georgetown Journal of International Affairs. August 6, 2014.
- ^ https://oslofreedomforum.com/talks/arming-women-for-peace-in-libya
- ^ a b "Alaa Murabit". Oslo Freedom Forum.
- ^ "Alaa Murabit". Arming Women For Peace.
- ^ a b "Alaa Murabit". Linkdein.
- ^ "Alaa Murabit". What My Religion Really Says.
- ^ "New York Times". 4 Moving talks.
- ^ "UN Live". Security Council Open Debate.
- ^ a b "Sustainable Development Goals Advocates".
- ^ a b "UN Secretary-General appoints High-Level Commission on Health Employment and Economic Growth".
- ^ "Helena Group Members". Helena Group Foundation. 2017.
- ^ "Global Hero". SAFE Magazine – New Issue. November 19, 2014.
- ^ "Ashoka Fellow". Ashoka. 2014. Archived from the original on July 10, 2015.
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- ^ "Reclaiming Faith". Carter Center Forum on Women. February 5, 2015.
- ^ "THE POWER OF LIBYA'S FEMALE ARMS DEALERS". NewAmerica. December 18, 2014. Archived from the original on May 21, 2015.
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- ^ "The Key to Countering Violent Extremism". Huffington Post. November 10, 2014.
- ^ "In Libya, Islam – and a purple hijab – help spurn domestic violence against women". Christian Science Monitor. March 14, 2013.
- ^ Crawford, Alex (March 9, 2011). "Special Report: Rebel-Held Town Under Siege". SkyNews. Archived from the original on July 25, 2015.
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