Rachael Le Mesurier
Rachael Le Mesurier, executive director of Oxfam New Zealand, remembers a pivotal moment when everything changed. "In my early 20s, while at university in the UK, I got involved in a campaign to stop the deportation of a young woman named Afia Begum and her child.
Her husband had died in a fire and, despite him having residency, the Home Office had ruled that she had to be deported, away from her UK-based family, to Bangladesh.Walking along Brick Lane on the march, I remember a moment when I thought -- I could have been born into her world, into the powerlessness of her position, it could have been me. It was just luck that I ended up in a Pakeha middle-class family, with two passports. I realised how much injustice is underpinned by inequalities in income, wealth, gender, legal status, race, education, health, safety and access to legal protection -- wherever we are born."
This revelation led Rachael into an international career in social justice, working to improve people's lives all around the world.
Light Bulb Moment - You CAN make a difference
"We don't have to accept the injustices we see all around us," believes Rachael. "There are a wide range of ways we can make a better world for our children and grandchildren, whether they are born here in New Zealand or to the daughter of Afia Begum."
You can have a real positive impact on the world if you choose to. "Donations, volunteering, supporting a campaign, working for a justice-focused organisation or leaving a bequest -- are all helping build a better world."
Be the change
I speak and write a lot about how small regular and positive change can make a big difference over the long-term in your business and personal life. Over the next week, however, I would ask you to think about how you can support someone else in the world, helping them and their family have a better life.esurier
Rachael Le Mesurier, executive director of Oxfam New Zealand, remembers a pivotal moment when everything changed. "In my early 20s, while at university in the UK, I got involved in a campaign to stop the deportation of a young woman named Afia Begum and her child.
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