The Power Within
My Story
Bertha Lutz, who was born on August 2, 1894, was a Brazilian scientist, feminist, and activist who made waves in the fight for the rights of women, not just in Brazil, but around the globe as well. She was characterized throughout her life by traits such as scientific ambition, a sense of social responsibility, and above all, a love of justice. Born in a family that loved learning and achievement, Lutz’s character and aspirations were influenced as well. Her father, Adolf Lutz, happens to have been a scientist and a doctor. Yet even a time when marrying and bearing children was the better option-Ms. Berta was influenced by her father's scientific pursuits to take up such occupations. With sorbonne University being quite kazva that women pursued, she subsequently majored in biology at the institution. Surrounded by science curriculum from young age set herself apart from other female activists. In addition, being a female scientist made her reinforce that women are entitled to pursue any field of endeavor and not be stymied by their gender. When Lutz returned to Brazil, where she found that being a woman in Brazil was difficult, particularly because society was male-dominated at the time. Thus, Lutz immediately became active in the women’s suffrage movement in Brazil. She was also responsible for the formation of the Brazilian Women’s Progressive Union in 1919, which was committed to the promotion of women’s rights as well as social reform. With this union created, Lutz managed to organize numerous activities; give speeches, mobilized a lot of the young generations’ contributions in numerous political campaigns wherein he was repeated disapproved time and again by many puzzled young women but after her tireless work, it all resulted in granting women their voting rights in Brazil in 1932. This was an important development, which not only concerned Brazil but also further enabled the advancement of women worldwide. She later represented the country at the UN as a post-war international women’s rights activist.
In typical fashion, in memories of Lutz, her contributions to women’s rights, in the late 20th−early 21st century, were but two roses in a bouquet of thorns. She became a biologist at the National Museum of Brazil where she specialized in amphibians and authored a number of scientific works Russia. She did not just have academic qualifications, she had earned the painstaking career accumulations that literally made a mockery of all skeptics. She fought discrimination on every front combating in equal measures her naysayers and champions of that era’s structural prejudice. In modern Lutz’s historical narrations we see the voice of activist and struggle for women’s rights but also the voice of science and international relations. Her biography becomes the quintessence of difficulty and willpower for many generations to come, especially young girls who grow up full of potential to allow the world to beautify them.

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