A list of inspirational children and young people who have made a positive difference in the world.
These young people, from a diversity of different backgrounds have
helped to change the world in a positive way. They stand as examples of
courage and integrity.
Joan of Arc (1412-1431)
– Aged just 16, Joan of Arc made an unlikely journey to the Dauphin of
France. Impressed with something inside this young peasant girl, the
Dauphin of France was inspired to renew the fight with the English,
defeating them at Orleans – as Joan had predicted. She was executed,
aged just 19, but her predictions of France gaining her freedom proved
correct.
St Thérèse of Lisieux
(1873 – 1897) Aged just 15 she asked the Pope for special permission to
enter a convent early. She died aged just 23, but her writings of her
spiritual journey became a best-seller, inspiring many with her simple
but meaningful philosophy.
Sophie Scholl (1921-1943)
– As a student at the University of Munich, Scholl was arrested by the
Gestapo for distributing anti-war leaflets. As a consequence, she was
executed for ‘high treason’ in 1943. Motivated by her Christian faith,
she opposed the Nazi ideology of Germany and was willing to risk her own
life in standing up for her activities.
Anne Frank
(1929 – 1945) Jewish diarist. Whilst hiding from the Gestapo in the
Netherlands during the Nazi occupation, Anne Frank kept a diary of her
experiences as a young Jewish girl. She died in Bergen-Belsen
concentration camp in 1945. However, after the end of the war, her
diaries were published by her father. ‘
The Diary of Anne Frank‘
became an international best-seller and helped give a young person’s
perspective on the holocaust statistics, in which 6 million Jews and
millions of other people were killed.
Hector Pieterson
(1964-1972) Hector Pieterson was a young black South African youth. He
took part in the Soweto uprising a – protest against apartheid in South
Africa in 1972. During the protests, he was killed at the age of just
13. The iconic image of the shot Pieterson being carried away by his
brother became a powerful symbol of resistance to apartheid and racial
inequality.
Samantha Smith
(1972 – 1985) Samantha was an American schoolgirl from Maine. In 1982,
she wrote a leader to the leader of the Soviet Union, Yuri Andropov,
asking why relations between the US and the Soviet Union were so tense.
Her letter was published in Pravda, and later Andropov replied. Smith
was also invited to visit the Soviet Union, which she did. The visit was
followed with great interest by the international media. Smith saying
she found Russians to be just like us. In 1983, she visited Japan –
acting as America’s youngest ambassador. She died, aged just 13, in a
plane crash.
Iqbal Masih
(1983 – 1995) Iqbal was a forced child labourer in Pakistan. He was
able to escape and began campaigning against child labour and for the
right for children to receive education. After escaping a second time,
he joined Bonded Labour Liberation Front (BLLF) a movement dedicated to
stopping child labour around the world. He helped over 3,000 children
escape forced labour in Pakistan. He was shot in the head aged 12.
Nkosi Johnson
(born Xolani Nkosi) 1989 – 2001) Nkosi was born with HIV / AIDS
inherited from his parents. In 1997, he was refused admission to a
public school because of HIV status. He became a powerful speaker for
treating HIV victims with equality and respect (at a time when there was
often discrimination). Together with his foster mother, he founded a
refuge for HIV mothers and their children. He posthumously received the
Children’s Peace Prize. Nelson Mandela referred to him as ‘an icon of
the struggle for life.’
Om Prakash Guruj
(1992) Prakash was born in NW. India to a family of bonded labourers.
For many years he worked as a forced child labourer. Since being free
from his servitude, he has worked with the
Bachpan Bachao Andolan
movement to free other child labourers and campaign for the rights of
children to be honoured. He was awarded International Childrens Peace
Prize in 2006.
Malala Yousafzai -
(1997- )Pakistani schoolgirl who defied threats of the Taliban to
campaign for the right to education. She survived being shot in the head
by the Taliban and has become a global advocate for human rights,
women’s rights and the right to education. She has sought to emphasis
the peaceful nature of Islam and the respect Islam has for education.
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