“I kept stumbling and falling and stumbling and falling as I searched for the good. 'Why?' I asked myself. Now I believe that I was on the right path all along, particularly with the Green Belt Movement, but then others told me that I shouldn't have a career, that I shouldn't raise my voice, that women are supposed to have a master. That I needed to be someone else. Finally I was able to see that if I had a contribution I wanted to make, I must do it, despite what others said. That I was OK the way I was. That it was all right to be strong.”
As quoted in the article Wangari Maathai:"You Strike The Woman ..." by Priscilla Sears in the quarterly In Context #28 (Spring 1991)
Help us to complete the source, original and additional information
Do you have more details about the quote "I kept stumbling and falling and stumbling and falling as I searched for the good. 'Why?' I asked myself. Now I believe…" by Wangari Maathai?
Wangari Maathai9
Kenyan environmental and political activist 1940–2011Related quotes
Gene Wolfe (1931–2019) American science fiction and fantasy writer
Fiction, "The Fifth Head of Cerberus", Orbit 10 (1972)
Otto Dix (1891–1969) German painter and printmaker
in the German army during world War 1. (1914-1918) <br class="br">Quote from Otto Dix, 1891-1969, exhibition catalogue, London: Tate Gallery, 1992, pp. 17–18; cf. pp. 27–28; as cited by Roy Forward, in 'Education resource material: beauty, truth and goodness in Dix's War' https://nga.gov.au/dix/edu.pdf, p. 9