Speech on International Women’s Day
at
Dubai
Women's College
March 8, 2004

Bismillah Ir Rahman Nir Raheem.
Dear sisters, ladies and gentlemen,
I am delighted to join you this morning
on international women’s day.
This is a day where across continents
and countries, women of different races, religions, cultures and
histories meet together to demonstrate solidarity.
It is a special day for me as a woman,
one I share with all my sisters.
It was in 1910, that a woman from
Germany moved a motion at a conference to declare march 8 as
international woman’s day.
How many mocked that one woman. How
small she seemed against the sea of people who believed woman to be
less than a man.
Yet in less than one hundred years that
small woman who spoke up with one voice triumphed because she was
speaking for a truth and a right:
The truth that men and women are born equal and must be treated
equally.
This proves the old saying that each
long journey begins with one small step.
My message to you is to always have the
courage to make that step when you know in your heart that it is the
right step to take.
That one woman was not afraid to speak
up. She was not afraid that she would be mocked or shamed. She
believed in her thoughts and fought for her rights. She began a
campaign to collect signatures. Soon there were I million signatures
for observing women’s day.
Now nearly every country in the world
celebrates woman’s day and celebrates the power of what one woman
can do.
Remember in life we women have nothing
to fear but fear itself.
Reject fear and the fear of failure,
you will climb the sweetest heights of success.
For me women’s day is a special day,
a day of remembrance, a day of rededication to my sisters to stand
with them.
Women have come a long way since 1910
and we still have to go a long way.
Our holy prophet, peace be upon him,
condemned the practice of killing the girl child practiced in pagan
times.
The killing of the girl child
symbolised violence against woman when she was but a helpless infant.
Yet violence against women continues in
different ways. Violence against women is wrong, it is immoral and we
must stand up against this.
In observing women’s day, I salute all those men who believe in gender
equality. Women’s rights are human rights. Human rights are
indivisible. Therefore, men and women have a role to play in advancing
the cause of women.
Sometimes it is a man who is an
oppressor. Sometimes it is a woman who is an oppressor. An oppressor
does not know gender.
In my case, I learnt about women’s
rights from a very special man-my father.
He was the one who said one day to my
mother, I do not want my daughter to wear the veil although I want her
to dress modestly.
It was my father who insisted that I
have a university education even though his sisters said, "don't
do that because no man will marry an educated woman".
My success came because my father was a
special man.
In my eyes president of UAE, his
highness Shaikh Zayed is a special man and the ruler of Dubai, Shaikh
Maktoum is a special man. They built these schools and universities so
that the daughters of UAE and Dubai could get the best education the
world could offer.
Education is the first step to success,
to independence and to a satisfying life where the full creative and
intellectual powers of a person are used to lead a stimulating,
interesting and instructive life.
I am often asked how I became prime
minister of a Muslim country. My reply is that I derived inspiration
from the historical fact that the holy prophet of Islam, peace be upon
him, married a working woman.
Yet through the mists of time, some of
us, under colonialism, or tribalism or feudalism, lost touch with the
roots of our religion.
Now once again, with the stress on
education, on health facilities for women and on work opportunities
for women, Muslim countries are beginning to awaken the creative force
of their woman power.
My life is not the simple life I dreamt
of when I was studying at Harvard university and at oxford.
I have lost my father when he was fifty
years old. I lost two of my brothers.
Many thought that as a woman, I would
break.
I did not because I believe that
leadership is born of a passion. It is a commitment and it becomes
life’s mission.
Women often have to make difficult
choices. Sometimes choices that men do not have to make. Yet we make
them because we must.
I grew up at a time of war. War in
Vietnam. War between India and Pakistan.
The more I read about war, the more I
wanted to work for peace and the peaceful resolutions of conflicts.
While I was at Oxford University, a
British politician was threatening to throw all Asians into the sea.
In hearing him I learnt about racial discrimination. I was determined
to work for a world free of discrimination.
While I was at oxford, the British
conservative party nominated Margaret Thatcher as their prime
ministerial candidate.
I thought: if in England, then surely
in Pakistan.
At oxford, I was the first female
foreigner to win the presidency of the prestigious oxford debating
society.
I had been told that as a foreigner I
could not win and should not run.
I had been told that as a woman I could
not win and should not run.
But I did run and I did win and in so
doing I overcame my fear of losing.
I learnt to take risks.
Later I was told that because I was a
woman I could not win the prime ministership of Pakistan.
Putting my faith in Allah and my trust
in the love of the people of my country, I refused to take no for an
answer.
I won because I refused to take no for
an answer and because I believed that one individual, one woman, could
make a difference.
So my message to all of you today is:
don't take no for an answer.
Be ready to take risks for what you
believe in, what in your heart you know is right.
On this international women’s day, I
urge women around the world not to accept no for an answer, not to
accept restraints and constraints.
Remember Islam came as a message of
emancipation putting an end to the humiliation of women.
This new century of ours must, for once
and for all, be a century that values the girl child, that respects
the woman, and protects its daughters, mothers and sisters in peace
and in war, that honours and dignifies its women with economic freedom
and allows us to be judged by our individual achievements.
My dear sisters and distinguished
guests:
I wonder how many know that every hour
one thousand children starve to death in the world.
As long as such violations of human
rights exist, none of us, regardless of where we live, regardless of
how comfortable our lifestyles, none of us are free.
I hope that your generation will
succeed where mine failed.
I pray that you will succeed in
building a better world, a world of peace, a world free of hunger, of
pain and of suffering.
You are the leaders of tomorrow.
Remember leaders do what is moral,
they do what is right, they do what is necessary to build a better
world.
And they don't take no for an answer
because they know one individual, one woman, can make a difference.
Thank You.
Go Back