Oppressed Peoples Online Word...The Voice Of The Voiceless
Dedicated to disseminating news & information not found in mainstream media....
When Ayisha Siddiqa talks about poetry, her face lights up. For the 24-year-old Pakistani human rights and climate
defender, poetry represents hope—a way to bring humanity back into the staid, high-level conversations that increasingly occupy her time. At the annual U.N. Climate Conference in Egypt in November, she shared an original poem titled “So much about your sustainability, my people are dying” as an unvarnished rebuke of leaders’ failure to act on climate change.
Siddiqa felt the effects of this lack of action viscerally last year as she witnessed from afar the life-altering impacts of Pakistan’s floods, likely made more extreme by global warming. She channeled those feelings into poetry as a form of protest. “It’s an effort to preserve what I have left, while I still have the time, in written form,” she says. “Art makes life worth living, and in my opinion, it’s what makes humans worth the fight. Like all of the things that we leave behind, all the creations, wouldn’t it be so unfortunate if there’s nobody on the other side to witness and observe them?”
Full article: Ayisha Siddiqa on Climate Change, Human Rights, and Activism | TIME
Kofi Bilal Mahmud
Executive Director
Oppressed Peoples Online Word
Support OPOW: OPOW Needs Your Support - Oppressed Peoples Online Word...The Voice...
The Voice Of The Voiceless... A People Without A Voice Can Not Be Heard...
Paypal: jabal51@hotmail.com
Or Cashapp: $bilal1370
Zelle: jabal51@hotmail.com
Mail: Little Deep Creek LLC
P.O. Box 1241
Conley, Ga. 30288
Thank you from all of us here at OPOW
Ayisha Siddiqa, a human rights and environmental justice activist and a youth fellow with the Law School’s Climate Litigation Accelerator (CLX), was named one of Time magazine’s 2023 Women of the Year on March 2.
The award was given to twelve women who are “using their voices to fight for a more equal world,” says Time.
Siddiqa, who is 24 years old, is a co-founder of Polluters Out, a global youth climate advocacy group, as well as a climate activism training course called Fossil Free University. She is the inaugural youth fellow for CLX, a global hub of lawyers and advocates seeking to catalyze legal change to produce action against climate change. CLX is run jointly by the Earth Rights Advocacy Clinic, directed by Professor of Clinical Law César Rodríguez-Garavito, and the Center for Human Rights and Global Justice, which Rodríguez-Garavito chairs.
The youth fellowship program began in 2022 to support and mentor promising young climate leaders who, like Siddiqa, are interested in pursuing a legal degree in the future. It also provides legal training in areas such as international negotiation and litigation.
“We see intergenerational collaboration as key to making progress against climate inaction,” says Rodríguez-Garavito, who says that Siddiqa has contributed to CLX’s communication strategies since joining in 2022. “Working with Ayisha’s generation as well as with young lawyers–many of whom are NYU Law alumni and are now full-time CLX staff members–we have seen a potency in that kind of collaboration,” he says. “We have learned as much from the youth movement as they have learned from us.”
Siddiqa, who was born in Pakistan, recounted to Time that as a teenager she began to see the impact that unsafe environments have on communities after witnessing the illness and death of her grandparents due to unsafe drinking water. Eventually, she said, she came to see the deep connections between climate change and human rights. In a video on Time’s website, announcing Siddiqa’s selection, she notes the importance of working collectively and globally to reverse the effects of climate change. “We cannot be individualistic anymore. It will not work,” she said. Siddiqa will continue on as a fellow with CLX until 2024, when she plans to start her legal studies.
Posted March 8, 2023.: NYU Law Fellow Ayisha Siddiqa named one of Time magazine’s Women of...
Comment
Posted by Bilal Mahmud المكافح المخلص on January 11, 2025 at 1:23pm — 1 Comment
Posted by Bilal Mahmud المكافح المخلص on January 11, 2025 at 2:00am — 3 Comments
Posted by Bilal Mahmud المكافح المخلص on January 2, 2025 at 10:29pm — 4 Comments
Posted by Bilal Mahmud المكافح المخلص on January 2, 2025 at 9:30pm — 1 Comment
Posted by Bilal Mahmud المكافح المخلص on January 2, 2025 at 9:00pm — 1 Comment
Posted by Bilal Mahmud المكافح المخلص on January 2, 2025 at 8:00am — 6 Comments
Posted by AbdudDharr MK Abdullah on January 1, 2025 at 8:19pm — 1 Comment
Posted by Bilal Mahmud المكافح المخلص on December 31, 2024 at 7:00pm — 8 Comments
Posted by Bilal Mahmud المكافح المخلص on December 31, 2024 at 6:00pm — 2 Comments
Posted by Bilal Mahmud المكافح المخلص on December 29, 2024 at 5:13pm — 1 Comment
Allah completed the religion through him and the proof is His saying, He, the Most High: «This day, I have completed your religion for you, perfected My blessings upon you, and am pleased…Continue
Started by karriem el-amin shabazz in Sample Title Sep 8, 2022.
Allah says: “Nay! I swear by this city. This city wherein you have been rendered violable, and I swear by the parent and his offspring” (90Al-Balad:1-3) To begin a conversation, in Arabic with Nay,…Continue
Started by karriem el-amin shabazz in Sample Title Jul 29, 2022.
After Tauhid the other question about which a dispute was raging between the Prophet (pbuh) and the disbelievers was the question of the Hereafter. Here, before giving the arguments, the Hereafter…Continue
Started by karriem el-amin shabazz in Sample Title Jun 18, 2022.
Allah says: “Tell them, (O Prophet): “Did you consider (what would be your end) if this Qur'an were indeed from Allah and yet you rejected it? And this, even though a witness from the Children of…Continue
Started by karriem el-amin shabazz in Sample Title Jun 1, 2022.
© 2025 Created by Bilal Mahmud المكافح المخلص. Powered by
You need to be a member of Oppressed Peoples Online Word...The Voice Of The Voiceless to add comments!
Join Oppressed Peoples Online Word...The Voice Of The Voiceless