
Our Work Will Equip The Next Generation Of Women To Outdo Us In Every Field . This Is The Legacy We’ll Leave Behind.
“You Do Not Just Wake Up And Become The Butterfly, Growth Is A Process.”

Our Work Will Equip The Next Generation Of Women To Outdo Us In Every Field . This Is The Legacy We’ll Leave Behind.
“You Do Not Just Wake Up And Become The Butterfly, Growth Is A Process.”
The BAGGGEL Foundation is a Community of Future Leaders who are Passionate about Creation of a Balanced World.
The governing Principles of its Members are :
Let No Gender Be Superior & Let No Gender Be Inferior
Let No Generation Be Superior & Let No Generation Be Inferior
Let No Geography Be Superior & Let No Geography Be Inferior
Let No Is Our War Cry For Suspending All Exclusion.
Let No One Exclude Any One (Lnea).
The BAGGGEL Foundation Is A Call For Collective Action To Value Humankind Above All.
The BAGGGEL Foundation is a Community of Future Leaders who are Passionate about Creation of a Balanced World.
- The Governing Principles of its Members are :
Let No Gender Be Superior & Let No Gender Be Inferior
Let No Generation Be Superior & Let No Generation Be Inferior
Let No Geography Be Superior & Let No Geography Be Inferior
Let No Is Our War Cry For Suspending All Exclusion.
Let No One Exclude Any One (LNEA)
The BAGGGEL Foundation Is A Call For Collective Action To Value Humankind Above All.
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GRACE LEE BOGGS was an Asian-American human rights activist, author. Boggs had a history of establishing multiracial working-class movements, and working to create equal rights for women and people of color. She was involved in the labor, civil rights, Black power, women's rights, and environmental justice movements in her time as an activist in the United States. She remained an activist throughout her life and worked with grassroots movements to initiate change. Source : https://www.globalcitizen.org/en/content/inspirational-women-leaders-from-history-100-years/
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She used her profession as a lawyer to advocate for gender equality in the United States. She volunteered at the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) and was central to the founding of their Women’s Rights Project in 1971. In 1993, President Bill Clinton appointed her to the Supreme Court, making her the second woman to be appointed. Her work in gender justice has inspired generations of women to break barriers as she helped to pass several laws in an effort to achieve gender equality. Source: https://www.globalcitizen.org/en/content/inspirational-women-leaders-from-history-100-years/
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Damilola Odufuwa and Odunayo Eweniyi are successful entrepreneurs and young feminist leaders from Nigeria. Recently, both were named in the Bloomberg 50 list of people who changed global business in 2020 and the TIME Next 100 list in February 2021 Odufuwa and Eweniyi joined forces in 2020 to create the Feminist Coalition, which focuses on women’s rights and safety, economic empowerment, and political participation of women. Source: https://www.unwomen.org/en/news/stories/2021/3/compilation-women-leaders-we-admire
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Malala Yousafzai was 11 years old when the Taliban announced on the radio that girls could no longer attend school in Pakistan. “That was the moment that I realized that education was more than reading books and doing homework. It was about the empowerment of women,” Malala says. Yousafzai began speaking up for girls’ right to education, and, because of her activism, she quickly became a target for the Taliban. In October 2012, Yousafzai was shot as she returned home from school. After months of surgeries and rehabilitation, she picked up her activism once again, becoming one of the most forceful advocates for girls’ education worldwide, and the youngest Nobel laureate at 17 years of age. “I raise up my voice not so I can shout, but so that those without a voice can be heard. We cannot succeed when half of us are held back.” Source: https://www.unwomen.org/en/news/stories/2021/3/compilation-women-leaders-we-admire
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Ellen Johnson Sirleaf led Liberia through reconciliation and recovery following a decade-long civil war and responded to the Ebola Crisis of 2014-2015. She has won international acclaim for the economic, social, and political achievements of her administration, and, in 2011, she was awarded a Nobel Peace Prize for her work to empower women. Today, Sirleaf is an influential voice for expanding women’s political participation and involvement in decision-making processes. “Increasingly there is recognition that full gender equity will ensure a stronger economy, a more developed nation, a more peaceful nation. And that is why we must continue to work,” she says. Source: https://www.unwomen.org/en/news/stories/2021/3/compilation-women-leaders-we-admire
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Dr. Alaa Murabit is a Libyan-Canadian medical doctor, global security strategist, women’s rights advocate, and the youngest appointed United Nations High-Level Commissioner on Health, Employment and Economic Growth. Murabit’s career has taken her around the world to promote women’s leadership in conflict resolution, peacebuilding, and security. “I know what it looks like to transform a family, community, country, and more, when we support, invest in, and uplift women,” says Murabit. “I strongly believe in women’s leadership, agency, equality, and power.” Her tips for leading with feminist principles include building an environment where everyone’s input is valid and heard, mentoring and supporting people to cultivate and embrace their own leadership, and having zero tolerance for harassment or abuse of any kind. Source: https://www.unwomen.org/en/news/stories/2021/3/compilation-women-leaders-we-admire
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Ela Bhatt is a major figure in international movements for various causes including and especially women rights . In 1972, Ela founded the self employed women’s Association of India [SEWA]. Ela is strong advocate of equality for women and girls, especially on the issue of child marriage and works together this goal along with The Elders. She is the recipient of several national and international awards, including the Ramon Magsaysay Award [1977], Right Livelihood Award [1984] and the Padma Bhushan [1986] Source: https://www.naaree.com/indian-women-role-models-empowerment/
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Sinha is the founder of Mann Deshi Mahila Sahakari Bank [Mann Deshi Bank] a regulated cooperative bank run by women for women. There are thousands of girls who drop out of school in Maharashtra every yeary year, and Mann Deshi Udyogini aims at providing vocational training and financial training to these young women to enable them to become entrepreneurs. The Bank offers loans to these women to start businesses after graduating. Source: https://www.naaree.com/indian-women-in-business/
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President & Founder Gutshe Foundation - An NGO for Her vision is to bring all women together where they can bring their strength for the betterment and uplift of the follow women and together can make society a better place to live for all. Addressing issues which a women has to go through in their daily lives or in long run and fight against it as a common force. Source: https://in.linkedin.com/in/nisha-pandey-715423229
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Laxmi Agarwal is not an acid attack survivor; instead, she is the symbol of courage, hope and strength. She has shown tremendous strength and courage to stand against the crowd of teasers. Her story is an inspiration for all as it is difficult to fight for the rights and Laxmi has done this effectively. In such a man-dominated society, women are always advised to be quiet. Laxmi has proved that women also have the dignity and worth to establish their standards as it is important to empower women globally. The incident with her could not ever affect her internal soul. She fought for her identity and at last proved that the “acid attack survivors are the real heroes, not the accused”. Although women empowerment workshops are also helpful in encouraging females and their rights. Thus to solve the issue at bud this movement was initiated. Source: https://www.opengrowth.com/resources/laxmi-agarwal-acid-attack-survivor-and-iconic-symbol-of-women-empowerment
Many kids can't come back to school because of poverty, so they need your help to have a better education.
Low-income people need to supply food and other basic necessities to ensure a better life.
We help poor people to break the cycle of poverty through education, build healthcare systems in remote areas to help poor people to stay healthy.