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Valerie Harper
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Photo: Nigel Parry
Styling: Naomi DeLuce Wilding
Cloutier Agency
Make Up: Jeanne Townsend
Celestine Agency
Hair: Healther Lloyd |
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Valerie Harper
Eliminating Hunger, Empowering Women |
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When Valerie Harper was working for passage of
the Equal Rights Amendment in the late 1960s,
she saw a poster of Golda Meir, then prime
minister of Israel, on the wall at a chapter of
the National Organization for Women. "The
caption said, 'But Can She Type?' " recalls
Harper, with a big laugh. Forty years later the
66-year-old actress still best known as Mary
Tyler Moore's sassy sidekick, Rhoda, is
following in Meir's footsteps in more ways than
one, playing the feminist icon in a touring
one-woman play, Golda's Balcony, and
working tirelessly in her spare time to improve
the welfare of women around the world. Since
1977 she has channeled much of her prodigious
energy into The
Hunger Project, a nonprofit organization
dedicated to eradicating hunger, in part by
empowering women. "The real issue holding hunger
in place is the subjugation, marginalization,
and disempowerment of women," says Harper.
"Wherever you have abject hunger, you will see
low status of women. But when there are
resources in the hands of women, the kids eat."
The Hunger Project, which has aided some 2.5
million people in 13 developing countries in
Africa, South Asia, and Latin America, provides
women with loans for small businesses and farms,
promotes girls' education, and helps build food
banks, health clinics, and schools. In the past
year Harper has worked to raise consciousness
about poverty and hunger by traveling to Africa,
lobbying Congress, and hosting fundraisers.
Activism springs from optimism, she says. "I
believe I make a difference. I think we all do.
I'm no special person." She pauses, then laughs.
"And you know what? When you take action, you
meet fabulous people." —Nancy
Griffin
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