March marks the beginning of Women's History Month, and there are a lot of women shaping history right now in Massachusetts. We asked five of the city's most prominent female leaders to share stories about the women who helped them become who they are today.
The Boston Women's Memorial on the Commonwealth Avenue Mall with statues of Lucy Stone, Abigail Adams and Phillis Wheatley. This is an excerpt from WBUR's Saturday morning newsletter, The Weekender. If you like what you read and want it in your inbox,March marks the beginning of Women's History Month, and there are a lot of women shaping history right now in Massachusetts. They're at the top of their fields — in politics, in business, in health care, in media.
“So in the early ‘90s, I vividly remember when Magic Johnson announced he had HIV, and Arthur Ashe announced he had AIDS. We had very little pharmacology on HIV drugs back then. I was at Johns Hopkins in ‘91, and many people coming in then were dying of AIDS, too. But by 1995, there was an cocktail that created hope. With this new drug — even though it was so many pills — we could tell people we had something that could allow them to live.
“I have this little porcelain Madonna that belonged to one of our guests, David. He was someone who really struggled, and a lot of staff didn’t know how to help him. But he and Sandy really had a special bond. When he wouldn’t come in, Sandy would go out and talk him into coming inside on a really cold night. Sometimes she’d be able to talk him into going into treatment.
“I met Jane early in my environmental career, circa 1997, after leaving public relations. Science-based conservation is at the core of our work at the New England Aquarium, and it was Jane who helped me see that science can’tpolicy, but must inform it. It was from her I learned that creating policies that protect our natural resources, like the ocean, is key to conservation. She helped me see that while science informs policy making, political will and public engagement make it happen.
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