Gossip99.co.uk | Breaking News, Politics, Business & Entertainment

GOSSIP.CO.UK : “Things Will Change”: Amal Clooney On Finding Light In The Darkness

When Amal Clooney was a young girl, growing up in Buckinghamshire, after her Beirut-based family relocated to the UK to escape the Lebanese Civil War, her mother told her to pick one thing and try to be the very best at it. “She inspired me to work hard,” says the human rights barrister and activist now. “I was conscious that I was able to get out of a war zone while others were not; that I grew up in safety and with access to the best education – luxuries so many girls in the region I was born in do not have.”

She read – and continues to read – about girls also called Amal living in the Middle East, killed in war or alive, but with little hope in their lives. “I try to use my podium to speak truth on behalf of people who can’t,” continues the powerhouse, who is dedicated to providing legal aid in defence of free speech and women’s rights through the 2016-born Clooney Foundation for Justice. “To always remember that I have been so lucky – and should try to spread that luck.”

And so, this week, Clooney found herself in Bangkok giving a keynote address at the Cartier Women’s Initiative Awards, celebrating 20 years of “women lighting the path” via their courage, creativity and commitment while driving social and environmental change. This was not an in-and-out, collect-the-pay-cheque gig. Amal spent the best part of a week mentoring the young entrepreneurs, despite being fresh off a plane from the UK, where Oxford University’s visiting professor had been checking in on her students.

“I can feel the weight that they are carrying on their shoulders when they describe the conditions they face in their countries,” she shares of the unshakeable gloom clouding her conversations – as well as the news cycle. How does she instil even the vaguest sense of positivity? “I remind them that history doesn’t move in a straight line; that things will change. That we are all privileged to be able to play a part in bending the arc towards justice. And that they are not alone – they are part of a community of people who care, and who are trying to make a difference.”

Image may contain Linda Kelsey Muriel HurtisHouairi Jaya Sharma Im Jeongeun Muriel HurtisHouairi and Iyeoka Okoawo

Courtesy of Cartier

Exit mobile version