Google celebrates International Women's Day, today, March 8th, through the innovative "Google Doodle" graphics, by displaying a group of the achievements of the pioneers around the world, who have contributed to making advances in all areas of humanity throughout history.

The short video clip launched by Google, included the hands of pioneering women from different cultures and races in several fields, starting with the right to vote in elections, education, science, judiciary, sports, special needs, music, human rights fields, space, aviation, arts and cinema, to confirm in just 41 seconds that the hands of women are able to bypass Challenges.

You can watch the video by clicking here.

Google celebrates International Women's Day with a video clip that includes the achievements of women throughout human history (Google)

Corona atmosphere

Health care, home education, work from home, and an increase in home jobs, these are some of the repercussions of Corona on the International Women's Month 2021. The month of March is an annual opportunity to review the woman’s file, celebrate her achievements and call for the fulfillment of her demands. On March 8, despite the well-known debate about demanding equality in exchange for gender parity, United Nations statistics confirm that neither of them has been achieved.

According to the Secretary-General of the United Nations, António Guterres, women represent 70% of health care workers, and they are among the people most affected by the pandemic and among the leaders in attempts to find ways to deal with the pandemic.

Choose to challenge

Organizers of International Women's Day this year chose the slogan "Choose to Challenge" to encourage breaking the stereotypical image of women, and the site encourages all those who support this idea, including women and men, to send their pictures with a hand up to declare their solidarity "I am with you."

As for the United Nations page, it chose the slogan "Women in Leadership: Achieving an Equal Future in the World of COVID-19".

2.7 million women are still deprived by law of jobs available to men (social networking sites)

Prejudice against them

According to a report by the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization, UNESCO, many women do not go through work in the engineering and scientific fields due to the prejudice of men.

"Inequality between the sexes has worsened in the past year as women bear the brunt of school closures and work from home," Guterres said in the organization's news.

Guterres explained that the closure of scientific laboratories and the proliferation of caring responsibilities leave women with less time for much-needed research work. The Secretary-General of the United Nations, Antonio Guterres, said, “Without more women in science, technology, engineering and mathematics, men will still be the ones. They shape this world for their sake, and the potential of girls and women will remain untapped. "

Heartbreaking statistics

According to statistics announced by the United Nations, 2.7 million women are still deprived of the jobs available to men by law, and addressing violence against women continues to top the list of demands, as one out of every three is exposed to violence simply because she is a woman.

The Women's March and Trump

International Women's Month has been associated with many successes, as it includes the march of women, where they march to affirm their demands.

These demands are adapted to the camping climate, as they usually demand justice in wages or protection and tougher punishment for harassment, but after US President Donald Trump took office in 2017, the march acquired a new color.

Trump's speeches angered many for what they considered to be an antagonism to women, Muslims, immigrants, blacks, Mexicans and even the media, which made all of these groups solidarity with men and women in a march that reached hundreds of thousands in Washington alone and extended to many American states, and the call raged globally and marches against him took place in major cities around the world.

Trump sparked anger with speeches that he viewed as antagonizing women, Muslims, immigrants, blacks and Mexicans (Reuters)

When did International Women's Day begin?

Persecution against women pushed women to raise their voices, and in 1908, 15,000 women turned out in New York City, USA, demanding reduced working hours, increased wages, and the right to vote.

In 1909, the American Socialist Party celebrated Women's Day on February 28 and then on the last Sunday of February until 1914, and during that period in Europe, specifically in Copenhagen, it was agreed to make it a global event in 1911. Russian women caught up and countries continued to join and finally in 1975. For the first time, the United Nations celebrated International Women's Day.

Colors of International Women's Day

Violet, green and white are the colors of International Women's Day, violet symbolizes justice and dignity, green represents hope and white is the color of purity, and the Women's Social and Political Union (WSPU) in England chose it in 1908.


We always hear about the persecution of minorities, but we find Women, who are partners in society, are forced every year to go out and demand their rights for something exciting and the most exciting is that some of the demands for which they came out at the beginning of the last century are still not fulfilled.