Daily Times (Primos, PA)

Meghan Markle has advocated for women since the age of 11

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UNITED NATIONS » Meghan Markle became an advocate for women when she was an 11-year-old elementary school student, and achieving gender equality remains a driving force for the fiancée of Britain’s Prince Harry and selfdescri­bed “feminist.”

Since 2014, the American actress has helped put a global spotlight on the need for equality between women and men as an “Advocate for Political Participat­ion and Leadership” for the women’s agency of the United Nations.

In her role for UN Women, Markle spent time at the World Bank and with the team of then Secretary of State Hillary Clinton learning more about the issue. She also visited Rwanda, which has the highest percentage of women in parliament and where she also met with female refugees.

UN Women said in a statement after Monday’s announceme­nt of Markle’s engagement to Queen Elizabeth II’s grandson that it “trusts and hopes that in her new and important public role she will continue to use her visibility and voice to support the advancemen­t of gender equality.”

Markle spoke about her accidental road to becoming an advocate at a star-studded celebratio­n in March 2015 for the 20th anniversar­y of the Beijing women’s conference that adopted a roadmap to achieve equality for women, which is the framework for UN Women’s activities.

Her opening words drew loud applause and cheers: “I am proud to be a woman and a feminist.”

Markle recalled that around the time of the 1995 Beijing conference she was in school in Los Angeles watching television and saw a commercial for a dishwashin­g liquid with the tagline: “Women all over America are fighting greasy pots and pans.”

“Two boys from my class said, ‘Yeah. That’s where women belong — in the kitchen,’” she said.

“I remember feeling shocked and angry and also just feeling so hurt. It just wasn’t right, and something needed to be done,” Markle said.

When she went home, she told her dad, who encouraged her to write letters.

“My 11-year-old self worked out that if I really wanted someone to hear, well then I should write a letter to the first lady. So off I went scribbling away to our first lady at the time, Hillary Clinton,” Markle said.

She also wrote to her main news source, Linda Ellerbee, who hosted a kids news program, as well as to “powerhouse attorney” Gloria Allred and to the manufactur­er of the dishwashin­g soap.

To her surprise, she said, after a few weeks she received letters of encouragem­ent from Clinton, Allred and Ellerbee, who even sent a camera crew to her house to cover the story.

“It was roughly a month later when the soap manufactur­er, Proctor and Gamble, changed the commercial for their Ivory Clear Dishwashin­g Liquid ... from ‘Women all over America are fighting greasy pots and pans’ to “People all over America ...’,” Markle said.

“It was at that moment that I realized the magnitude of my actions,” she said. “At the age of 11, I had created my small level of impact by standing up for equality.”

 ?? PHOTO BY EVAN AGOSTINI — INVISION — AP, FILE ?? In this Thursday file photo, actress Meghan Markle participat­es in AOL’s BUILD Speaker Series to discuss her role on the television show, “Suits”, in New York.
PHOTO BY EVAN AGOSTINI — INVISION — AP, FILE In this Thursday file photo, actress Meghan Markle participat­es in AOL’s BUILD Speaker Series to discuss her role on the television show, “Suits”, in New York.

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