There’s Nothing for you Here
Today is the
International Day of the Girl 2021. I see encouraging posts online like the one
by UNWOMEN saying, “Girls can study and take on any career. Girls are smart and
innovative. On #DayOfTheGirl let's speak up against systematic barriers &
long-standing stereotypes that continue to keep girls from #STEM careers.“ STEM
is an acronym that stands for science, technology, engineering, and
mathematics. Yes, girls are smart, but many girls have to face multiple
challenges even in today’s world that make it difficult for girls in many parts
of the world to get the necessary education to reach their goals and fulfill
their dreams.
We keep on
saying, „Girls can do anything and be anything they want to be.“ There should
be nothing that keeps them from achieving distinction. And yet, we still live
in a world with a lot of disadvantages for girls that discourage them.
I am reading
Fiona Hill’s book There is Nothing for
You Here: Finding Opportunity in the Twenty-First Century. In her memoir,
Fiona, who was born in 1965, describes what it was like for her to grow up in
the North-East of England in the mining town of Bishop Auckland in the
post-industrial decline. As coal mining and heavy industry closed down, the
people in County Durham were left without jobs and prospects, often just surviving.
Although both her parents worked, they were poor, and poverty influenced the
possibilities of getting a good education as well. The English class society
that automatically divides people into the working class, middle class or upper
class still made it difficult for working-class people to make changes in their
lives.
Fiona Hill’s book
is particularly interesting reading for me because I lived in England in the
middle of the last century and can identify with many of the things she writes
about. My family never had to face the problems her family faced. I was able to
go to Grammar School while she had to go to a Secondary Modern School. The type
of school would set the stage for further possibilities of getting a high-class
education, but Fiona Hill was fortunate in finding people who encouraged her and
told her where she could apply for various grants. Even this information was
not readily available in her community. Education was her route out of poverty
and the door to opportunity. She writes, „Education was the key to changing my
circumstances, but the kind, quality, and affordability of the education would
be critical factors.“ [1]
The three
questions that she was always asked were: „Where do you come from? What does
your father do? What school do you go to?“ Fiona calls these harmless-sounding
questions a socio-economic sorting that would put people in their places. Her
father told her to get out – to go to London, or Europe, or America. „There’s nothing
for you here, pet,“ he said.
Fiona Hill
went on to St. Andrews University where she studied Russian and History. She
then spent a year in Moscow and went on to Harvard where she earned a master's
degree in Russian and Modern History in 1991, and a Ph.D. in History in 1998.
She went on to work for the government under George W. Bush, Barack Obama, and
Donald Trump, becoming Senior Director for Europe and Russia of the US National
Security Council. What a career for a poor girl from County Durham! Overcoming the
hurdles of poverty, class, dialect, and gender was made possible for her
because she was determined to press on. She never thought she would land in the
limelight at the first impeachment of Donald Trump as the top expert on Russia
and Ukraine.
The career of
Fiona Hill shows that nothing is impossible. Today there are still lots of
girls in the world – even in prosperous countries - who are trapped in poverty
and lack possibilities. Such “success stories“ usually combine the elements of
hard work, determination, talent, education, and mentorship. Mentoring young
girls and women is so important. I would like to challenge all to help girls
find their way through the difficulties they face and direct them toward
excellence.
Photo by Kuhlmann /MSC -
https://securityconference.org/mediathek/asset/fiona-hill-1632-16-02-2017/, CC
BY 3.0 de, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=71345528
[1] Fiona
Hill, There Is Nothing for You Here:
Finding Opportunity in the 21st Century, Houghton Mifflin Harcourt.
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