“Will you still love me when I’m no longer young and beautiful?” Lana Del Rey’s touching lyrics speak to the fleeting nature of youth and beauty. Society often measures a woman’s worth by how she looks, but history tells a different story. Women are not remembered for their faces. They are remembered for their fire. Their courage, resilience, and refusal to back down have left marks on the world that no wrinkle or gray hair could ever erase.
What truly makes someone unforgettable? Is it their appearance, or is it their impact? Harriet Tubman was not just a woman who escaped slavery. She became a force of nature, risking her life to lead others to freedom. Malala Yousafzai, armed with nothing but a book and an unshakable belief in education, transformed a near-fatal attack into a global movement. Marie Curie, in a time when women were barely welcomed in science, redefined what was possible and changed the world with her discoveries. Frida Kahlo turned her pain into art, proving that even suffering can be transformed into something powerful. But strength is not reserved for the famous. It lives in the mother who sacrifices for her children, the activist who marches for justice, the leader who refuses to step aside, and the everyday woman who stands her ground when the world tells her to shrink.
Women are more than daughters, sisters, or wives. They are the backbone of humanity, the silent architects of progress, and the nurturers of future generations. They are mothers who raise warriors, healers who mend broken spirits, and visionaries who see beyond the world as it is. They are not just participants in history. They are the ones who shape it. Their power is not just in their achievements but in the way they uplift, inspire, and create change. The women who have left their mark on this world did not wait for permission to be extraordinary. They simply were, and because of that, they became impossible to forget.
Penned By:
Rtr. Arudkumaran Vengadeswaran
Editorial Committee Member 24-25


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