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Recognizing trafficking is still going on today is necessary to fight this evil.
11/13/2025

Recognizing trafficking is still going on today is necessary to fight this evil.

Susana Trimarco disguised herself as a madam and walked into brothels across northern Argentina, searching for her missing daughter among women trapped in s*xual slavery -- and in the process, she sparked a movement that would free over 3,000 s*x trafficking victims. It began in April 2002, when her 23-year-old daughter, María de los Ángeles Verón, left for a doctor's appointment in their city of San Miguel de Tucumán and never returned home. Frustrated by a police investigation she believed was deliberately sabotaged by corruption, Trimarco obtained the names of known pimps and s*x traffickers from police files and launched her own search.

She posed as a buyer interested in purchasing the captive women and girls -- some as young as 14, who could be traded for about $800. One r**e victim told her she had seen María drugged, with swollen eyes, in a trafficker's home that doubled as a holding place for newly abducted women. But by the time Trimarco could follow the lead, her daughter had been moved. Though María was never found, Trimarco's relentless pursuit transformed her into one of Argentina's most powerful human rights activists and forced s*x trafficking onto the national agenda. "The desperation of a mother blinds you," she says. "It makes you fearless."

Through this dangerous work, Trimarco discovered the full scope of s*x trafficking and the corruption within the police and judiciary that kept women trapped in forced prostitution. "The police would hand [the trafficked women] back to the criminals," she recalls. "They used to say: 'Don't leave me. Take me with you.'" Trimarco ended up becoming the personal guardian to 129 survivors of s*x trafficking, sheltering them in her home and helping them reunite with their families.

Trimarco's relentless advocacy forced change at the highest levels. Her work helped lead to the first law, passed in 2008, making human trafficking a federal crime; the subsequent reforms have led to thousands of people being rescued from s*x traffickers. These successes, however, have come with a high personal cost to Trimarco: she has suffered many reprisals over the years including countless death threats, having her house set on fire, and several attempts to run her over in the street.

As more trafficking survivors and families of trafficking victims reached out to her for help, Trimarco says, "It came to a point where I just did not have the capacity to help them all. That is when I decided to open a foundation." In 2007, she founded Fundación María de los Ángeles, a non-governmental organization focused on helping people escape from trafficking and lobbying for legislation to prevent it. Her efforts focused on her daughter's disappearance eventually resulted in trials for 13 people, including several police officers, in 2012; all 13 were acquitted, a ruling that prompted outrage by many and led to impeachment proceedings against three judges.

In December 2013, the Tucumán Supreme Court reversed the acquittals and convicted ten of the defendants, who received sentences ranging from 10 to 22 years in April 2014. But despite it all, Trimarco still hasn't found out what she wants to know most: what happened to her daughter. Some witnesses say she was murdered -- although her body has never been found -- and others say she was taken overseas.

Twenty-three years later, Trimarco's work continues in her daughter's name and for all survivors. Her foundation remains at the forefront of the country's fight against human trafficking, recently helping to dismantle trafficking rings in 2024 and 2025. In recent years, the foundation has expanded its role as a legal plaintiff in trafficking cases, ensuring survivors have representation throughout the judicial process. Now in her seventies, Trimarco remains internationally recognized for her work, though her search for answers about María's fate has never ceased. "Every woman I help somehow helps María," she reflects. "They represent hope in this new life of mine."

To learn more about her foundation, Fundación María de los Ángeles, visit https://fundacionmariadelosangeles.net/

For a new memoir by a victim of the Epstein s*x trafficking ring, we highly recommend "Nobody’s Girl: A Memoir of Surviving Abuse and Fighting for Justice," visit https://amzn.to/4nZbSAZ (Amazon) and https://bookshop.org/a/8011/9780593493120 (Bookshop)

For an eye-opening book about an American teen girl who becomes trapped in the underworld of human trafficking, we highly recommend "The Life I'm In" for ages 14 and up at https://www.amightygirl.com/the-life-i-m-in

For a moving memoir by a woman dedicated to ending the trafficking of girls in the U.S. as the founder of Girls Are Not For Sale, who herself is a survivor, check out “Girls Like Us: Fighting for a World Where Girls Are Not for Sale” at https://www.amightygirl.com/girls-like-us-for-sale

For an excellent though challenging novel about one Nepalese girl's experience being trafficked into prostitution, we recommend "Sold" for readers 14 and up at https://www.amightygirl.com/sold

For a powerful book for teen readers about how girls and women are fighting against child marriage, s*x trafficking, and gender discrimination around the world, we highly recommend "Girl Rising: Changing the World One Girl at a Time," for ages 13 and up, visit https://www.amightygirl.com/girl-rising-book

For two inspiring books for young readers filled with practical advice on how to make change on issues they care about, we recommend "Start Now! You Can Make a Difference!" for ages 7 to 11 (https://www.amightygirl.com/start-now) and "It's Your World! Get Informed, Get Inspired, & Get Going!" for ages 10 and up (https://www.amightygirl.com/it-s-your-world)

Another instance where someone took credit for an amazing ladies work. Stand your ground women and accept you are intell...
11/13/2025

Another instance where someone took credit for an amazing ladies work. Stand your ground women and accept you are intelligent, driven and have purpose.

11/10/2025
Meet Dr. Mary Elizabeth Walker. The second woman to graduate from medical school and the only woman to ever receive to m...
11/07/2025

Meet Dr. Mary Elizabeth Walker. The second woman to graduate from medical school and the only woman to ever receive to medal of honor. Her life story is amazing!

As part of Whitman-Walker’s 40th anniversary, officially January 13, 2018, we’re sharing 40 stories to help tell the narrative of Whitman-Walker in community. We wanted to start by telling you […]

This is the story of an amazing woman that built an empire by listening and taking advantage of information. She worked ...
11/04/2025

This is the story of an amazing woman that built an empire by listening and taking advantage of information. She worked with the underground railroad and fought for deaegregation in San Francisco. Definitely a woman you should know about.

https://www.facebook.com/share/p/1DXd4xddvW/

She poured their tea. She swept their floors. And she listened to every word.
San Francisco, 1850s. The Gold Rush had transformed a sleepy port into a city drunk on sudden wealth. In the grand mansions on Nob Hill, fortunes were made and lost over brandy and ci**rs.
And in the corner of those rooms, refilling glasses and clearing plates, was a Black woman named Mary Ellen Pleasant.
To the wealthy men talking business, she was furniture. Invisible. Forgettable.

They had no idea she was taking notes.
As they debated which banks were solid, which properties would boom, which ventures were worth risk—Pleasant absorbed everything. She understood something they didn't: information is power. And she'd been handed it for free.

She started small. A laundry here. A boarding house there. While other women scrubbed floors to survive, Pleasant was building an empire.

She bought restaurants and dairies. She acquired shares in the very banks those wealthy men discussed. When racial barriers blocked her path—and they constantly did—she partnered strategically with Thomas Bell, a white banker who held investments in her name while she made the decisions.

The invisible servant was becoming one of San Francisco's wealthiest entrepreneurs.
But Pleasant wasn't building wealth just to have it. She was building it to wield it.

While running her businesses by day, she was funding freedom by night. She supported the Underground Railroad, helping enslaved people escape to freedom. She financed civil rights cases. And when she faced discrimination herself—thrown off a San Francisco streetcar because of her race—she didn't just complain.

She sued.

In 1868, she won a landmark case that desegregated San Francisco's public transportation. Not through protests or petitions, but through the legal system—funded by the fortune she'd built from overheard conversations.

Her power made people deeply uncomfortable.
How dare this Black woman have money? Influence? The audacity to fight back?

The newspapers turned on her. They called her a "voodoo queen." They invented sinister stories. They tried to paint her power as dark magic rather than acknowledge her brilliant mind and business acumen.

Pleasant faced it all with steel in her spine.
"I'd rather be a co**se than a coward," she said.
And she meant it.

She never apologized for her wealth. Never backed down from her activism. Never pretended to be less than she was to make others comfortable.

Mary Ellen Pleasant understood something profound: real power isn't just having money. It's knowing when to be invisible and when to be impossible to ignore.

She spent years listening in silence, building her fortune in shadows. Then she used every dollar of it to fight for a world where people like her wouldn't have to hide.

You won't find her in most history textbooks. For generations, her story was deliberately erased—too complicated, too powerful, too inconvenient to the narratives people wanted to tell about who built America and who deserves credit.

But history has a way of surfacing truth.
Mary Ellen Pleasant turned silence into strategy, invisibility into influence, and overheard whispers into a fortune she used to change the world.

She swept their floors. She poured their tea.
And she built an empire they never saw coming.

Ms. Magazine — Feminist news and information in print and online - Ms. Magazine
08/26/2025

Ms. Magazine — Feminist news and information in print and online - Ms. Magazine

More Than a Magazine, a Movement!

07/08/2025
07/08/2025

Iranian mathematician Maryam Mirzakhani was the first woman to win the Fields Medal -- often referred to as the "Nobel Prize of Mathematics" -- since the award was established in 1936. Dr. Mirzakhani was awarded the prestigious honor for her contributions to the fields of geometry and dynamical systems. Christiane Rousseau, vice president of the International Mathematics Union, said that Mirzakhani's award, which she received as part of the latest group of Fields Medal honorees, was "an extraordinary moment." She further observed, "Marie-Curie had Nobel prizes in physics and chemistry at the beginning of the 20th century, but in mathematics this is the first time we have a woman winning the most prestigious prize there is. This is a celebration for women."

After attending college in Iran, Mirzakhani went on to graduate school at Harvard University where she became fascinated by hyperbolic geometry. This interest inspired much of her early work which, according to Stanford News, involved "solving the decades-old problem of calculating the volumes of moduli spaces of curves on objects known as Riemann surfaces." Mirzakhani was a Stanford University mathematics professor before she died in 2017 at the age of 40 after a four-year battle with breast cancer.

After she received the Fields Medal, which is awarded every four years to recognize the world's most innovative mathematicians, Mirzakhani told Stanford News, "This is a great honor. I will be happy if it encourages young female scientists and mathematicians." And, she expressed her belief that there will be many more women honored in the future because “there are really many great female mathematicians doing great things."

Maryam Mirzakhani's inspiring story is told in the picture book "Maryam’s Magic: The Story of Mathematician Maryam Mirzakhani" for ages 5 to 9 at https://www.amightygirl.com/maryam-s-magic

Mirzakhani is one of 20 trailblazing women of science and math featured in the illustrated biography "Born Curious" for ages 6 to 10 at https://www.amightygirl.com/born-curious

For several Mighty Girl stories to encourage kids' excitement for math, we recommend "Ten Magic Butterflies" for ages 3 to 6 (https://www.amightygirl.com/ten-magic-butterflies), “Zero” for ages 3 to 8 (https://www.amightygirl.com/zero), "Infinity and Me" for ages 5 to 8 (https://www.amightygirl.com/infinity-and-me), and "The Math Curse" for ages 6 to 10 (https://www.amightygirl.com/the-math-curse)

For toys and games to inspire the next generation of Mighty Girl mathematicians, check out our blog post, “Add It Up! Top 35 Math Toys for Mighty Girls,” at https://www.amightygirl.com/blog?p=12180

07/08/2025

Enough said 👆

07/08/2025

Sandra Day O’Connor became the first woman nominated to the U.S. Supreme Court on this day in 1981. O'Connor -- who famously said "I think the important thing about my appointment is not that I will decide cases as a woman, but that I am a woman who will get to decide cases" -- was confirmed by the U.S. Senate by a vote of 99-0. When she retired in 2005, the Washington Post wrote that O'Connor was the “decisive swing vote” on “virtually all the major legal issues of our time." She also captivated the public -- in her first year on the Court she received over 60,000 letters from the public, more than any other justice in history.

Born in El Paso, Texas in 1930, the self-proclaimed FWOTSC (First Woman on the Supreme Court) kept her rulings narrow and conservative until around 1994, when she began making deciding swing votes as the makeup of the court grew more conservative. Law Professor Steven Green observed in an interview, "She was a moderating voice on the court and was very hesitant to expand the law in either direction." O’Connor is remembered for her case-by-case approach and open mind, especially when it came to cases involving women’s rights and children.

For a new picture book telling her story, we recommend "No One Told Sandra Day O'Connor What to Do" for ages 6 and up at https://bookshop.org/a/8011/9781534113268 (Bookshop) and https://amzn.to/3TrG0rq (Amazon)

For an excellent biography for adult readers about this trailblazer, we also recommend "First: Sandra Day O'Connor" at https://www.amightygirl.com/first-sandra-day-o-connor

She has also written a memoir about her early life and journey to adulthood, "Lazy B: Growing up on a Cattle Ranch in the American Southwest" at https://www.amightygirl.com/lazy-b

For a fascinating book that explores the impact of both Sandra Day O'Connor and Ruth Bader Ginsburg on the Supreme Court, check out "Sisters in Law" at https://www.amightygirl.com/sisters-in-law

For books for tweens and teens about girls living under real-life authoritarian regimes throughout history that will help them appreciate how precious democracy truly is, visit our blog post "The Fragility of Freedom: Mighty Girl Books About Life Under Authoritarianism" at https://www.amightygirl.com/blog?p=32426

To inspire the Mighty Girls in your life with more true stories of pioneering girls and women from around the world, visit our "Role Models" biography section at https://www.amightygirl.com/books/history-biography/biography

Thanks to Miss Representation for sharing this image!

07/08/2025

Blaise Metreweli is a tech visionary, trailblazer, and now the 18th chief of MI6. Unlike its sister UK spy agencies, MI6 has never had a female head since it was founded in 1909. Metreweli, a 25-year veteran of British intelligence and current head of tech and innovation, will become the first woman to lead the UK’s foreign intelligence service in its 116-year history. She’s not just decoding global threats, she’s redefining what leadership looks like.

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