Marie Claire Australia - 01.05.2018

(Ben Green) #1
86 marieclaire.com.au

PHOTOGRAPHY COURTESY OF AMNESTY INTERNATIONAL; COURTESY OF JADE HAMEISTER. EDITED BY ALLEY PASCOE. *ORGANISATION FOR ECONOMIC CO-OPERATION AND DEVELOPMENT, 2017

theBUZZ
INSPIRATION FROM GAME-CHANGING WOMEN

MOTIVATION
On January 10, Jade Hameister became the youngest
person to trek unassisted from the Antarctic Coast to
the South Pole, after a gruelling 37-day expedition
pulling a 100-kilogram sled in howling −50° winds.
If that wasn’t enough, the 16-year-old explorer
returned to the pole the next day to take a photo of
herself holding a ham and cheese sandwich – a way
to mock the male online trolls who told her she
should stay in the kitchen. “Initially I just wanted to
do it for a laugh,” she says of the photo she posted on
her Instagram account. “I really didn’t think any of
the men who wrote those messages would ever see
my post. Instead, it was a message for the young
women who follow me – I wanted to show them
how to use bullies as motivation.”

WOMEN AT WORK
IN NUMBERS

Average weekly
hours worked by women
over the age of 15*

Korea


40.6


Spain


34.74


Australia


31.08


Netherlands


24.83


UK


31.88


PREACH IT
“Success begins at that magical
moment when you declare to
yourself, your friends and the
universe that you believe you can
4?C?=5D89>749K5B5>DS


  • Natalie Massenet, founder of Net-a-Porter


Jade Hameister is the only
Australian woman – and the
youngest woman ever – to have
trekked from the Antarctic coast
to the South Pole unassisted.

W

ON

DER^ WOM
AN
WW

OONN

DDEERRWWOOMM
AANN

HER START
When Tirana Hassan sees
injustice, she has to do
something about it. This
compulsion to right wrongs
drove her to become a social
worker in Adelaide and,
eventually, the director of crisis
response for Amnesty
International, documenting
human rights violations in war
zones around the world. “I’ve
been deployed to the most
complicated crises imaginable in
places like Sierra Leone, Iraq and
the Philippines,” she says.

HER CAREER
“It’s my job to investigate war
crimes. We get the facts so we
can ensure action is taken to
stop the violations happening,”
explains Hassan, who is
passionate about holding
perpetrators to account. In order
for justice to be served, Hassan
must ask victims to recount the
trauma they’ve suffered.
“It’s difficult to ask a woman
about the rape that has just
occurred. But each time, I’m
taken aback by the power
and courage of people.”

HER DRIVE
Seeing the darkest side
of humanity isn’t the most
challenging part of her job, says
Hassan. “The most difficult thing
is trying to get the people in
power to take the right action.”
What keeps her fighting
is knowing she’s making a
difference. “These fights can
take a long time, but they’re
worth it – for the mothers whose
sons and daughters were killed.”

TIRANA


HASSAN
Amnesty International’s
global crisis response
director

@WORK

Free download pdf