National Geographic USA - 11.2019

(Ron) #1

Women recruits, familiar with society’s stereotype of “the weaker sex,”


often arrive doubting whether they’re equal to the task. Posey won’t hear of


it: “Women learn weakness. We can also unlearn it.” By the end of training,


Posey says, most female marines are confident in their abilities “and know


that they’re just as capable of contributing” as men.


Josephine Muhawenimana, a Rwandan mother of two, became a police


officer because she admires “the way they are strong and ... inspire others.”


Now she’s a chief sergeant in a UN peacekeeping force in South Sudan,


a nation bloodied by civil and ethnic conflicts. “I remember what hap-


pened,” Muhawenimana says of the 1994 Rwandan genocide she escaped;


she hopes peacekeepers can help prevent such a bloodbath in South


Sudan. That country’s women seem proud of the job she’s doing, she says;


mothers have thanked her for showing their daughters an alternative to


getting married when they’re barely past puberty.


In Colombia a fighter known as Comandante Yesenia has spent two


decades with the ELN, a left-wing guerrilla group fighting the nation’s gov-


ernment. She gave birth to a daughter in the forest and carried the nursing


baby along with her for months. Yesenia says she’s fighting for equality


for poor people, indigenous people, and women. “Every person brings her


grain of salt,” she says. “From different spaces, we all fight.”


In the Syrian desert, as the captured ISIS fighters wait to be taken to


detention camp, a YPJ fighter named Nuda Zagros is imagining the future.


“Wherever there is oppression against women, we would like to go there,”


she says. “We want to fight for equality. We don’t want to be superior, and


we don’t want to have superiors. We are all the same.” j


united states


USMC recruit Dannelle


Kallmes, 19, awaits her


next orders in the


grueling Parris Island


training finale. Each


recruit knows that if


she makes it to the


closing ceremony, she’ll


be handed her eagle,


globe, and anchor


emblem—and will be


addressed, for the


first time, as “Marine.”


Lynsey Addario has


covered most major


conflicts and humani-


tarian crises in the past


15 years, including


those in Afghanistan,


Iraq, Libya, Syria,


Lebanon, Somalia, and


South Sudan. She’s


the author of the New


York Times best-selling


memoir It’s What I Do:


A Photographer’s Life


of Love and War.


140 NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC

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