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#waad
catsloverword · 1 month
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Oggi, 2 aprile, è la Giornata Mondiale della Consapevolezza sull’Autismo (WAAD, World Autism Awareness Day).
La giornata è stata costituita nel 2007 dall’Assemblea Generale delle Nazioni Unite (ONU) con l’obiettivo di promuovere consapevolezza, inclusione e comprensione per i disturbi dello spettro autistico. La WAAD ci porta a porre l’attenzione all’eterogeneità che caratterizza la manifestazione dei sintomi dell’autismo da persona a persona, questa consapevolezza deve dunque essere declinata nella ricerca per il riconoscimento, nella diagnosi e l’intervento dei disturbi dello spettro autistico.
OPL Ordine degli Psicologi della Lombardia
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chobistudio · 3 months
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【What They Told】-027- Angelina Jolie & Waad Al-Kateab: "That's not the world" (2023/12/16)
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chocolate-w · 1 year
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Happy world autism awareness day everyone :3
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wellesleyunderground · 11 months
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Honoring a Trailblazer: Dr. Harriet Rice, Class of 1887, the first African American woman to graduate from Wellesley
Cleo Hereford ’09
As presented by Hereford during the Wellesley Alumnae of African Descent Annual Meeting on Sunday, June 25, 2023.
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During this year’s annual meeting, we wanted to highlight a true trailblazer - Dr. Harriet Rice, the first African American woman to graduate from Wellesley College. Rice was born just one year after the Civil War ended in 1866 in Newport, Rhode Island to father George, a steward for the Newport Steamship Company and mother Lucinda. A talented student, Rice achieved the highest class ranking in Greek at Newport’s racially integrated Rogers High School. After graduating in 1882, she matriculated at Wellesley a year later and was one of only three black students. One can only imagine what it was like to be a black woman at Wellesley during the 1880s but College archives do provide some insight. In 1935, the Alumnae Association sent Dr. Rice a biographical sheet asking about physical or other handicap to which she responded “Yes! I’m colored which is worse than any crime in this God blessed Christian country!”
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Nevertheless, she persisted.
After receiving her degree from Wellesley in 1887, Rice, following in her brother’s footsteps, earned a medical degree from the Women’s Medical College of the New York Infirmary for Women and Children in 1891 at a time when few women pursued medicine. She then sought additional training while interning at the New England Hospital for Women and Children. Her advanced medical training is especially notable when one considers that up to 1904 only half of all medical graduates of any race or gender received postgraduate training making Dr. Rice a highly qualified physician.
As expected, given the post Reconstruction time period, black physicians faced rampant racism and discrimination often relegated to only working with black populations while female doctors, including white women, were often denied appointments at hospitals due to gender based discrimination. Rice was amongst only the second generation of black female physicians but also female physicians in general in the country. (For those interested, Rebecca Lee Crumpler was the first African American woman to become a formerly-trained physician receiving a medical degree in 1864). By 1896, there were just 115 Black female doctors in the country.
Despite this, she forged ahead determined to be a successful physician. Though largely prohibited from practicing medicine in any American hospital as an African American woman, she found a way to utilize her skills providing medical treatment and care to low income individuals at Hull House, an organization offering a variety of social services, on Chicago’s Near West Side. It was in Chicago where Rice worked alongside famous social worker, women’s suffrage leader and first American woman to receive the Nobel Peace Prize, Jane Addams. Much different than the Chicago we know today, however, only 1.3% of Chicago’s population in the 1890s was black and Rice faced discrimination, particularly from Hull House’s white European immigrant clientele (black residents were limited to residence on the South Side, far from Hull House). Further, working at the settlement house offered little in the way of financial compensation, upward mobility or recognition for Rice; at one point, she was listed as a secretary at the organization when she was in fact running the medical clinic. Rice sought other professional opportunities and, in 1897, she became the only doctor at the Chicago Maternity Hospital and Training School for Nursery Maids providing obstetric care.
After years working in the medical field in Chicago and later Boston, Dr. Rice opted to serve on the frontlines as a military physician for three years during World War I. Throughout the war, which lasted from 1914 through 1918, women of color contributed to the effort both as individuals and through organizations such as the YMCA. At the start of the war, Rice attempted to join the American Red Cross effort to provide medical services to American troops but was ultimately denied because of her race. Again, she persisted contacting the French government who leapt at the opportunity to have an experienced medical doctor available to treat French troops. Joining the effort at 49 years old, Rice served on hospital duty in France from January 1915 until just after Armistice in 1918, longer than most American troops. This period in Rice’s life finally afforded her the opportunity to both practice medicine and be recognized for her work, opportunities that had previously alluded her. As a result of American racism, she made important contributions to the Allied war effort, not under the American flag, but the French. In 1919, Rice was awarded the Medal of French Gratitude at the French Embassy in Washington, DC for outstanding service in French military hospitals treating wounded soldiers. The medal was specifically created to express gratitude by the French government to non-military participants who, in part, had performed an act of exceptional dedication in the presence of the enemy during the war. After returning home, Dr. Rice continued to work in medicine before retiring in West Somerville, MA.
Dr. Harriet Rice, Class of 1887, passed away in 1958 at age 92 in Worcester, MA and is buried in Newport, RI alongside her parents in the God’s Little Ace section of the Common Burying Ground. She is remembered as “a woman of valor.”
Sources:
Dr. Harriet Rice, Class of 1887 (Davis Museum)
A Woman of Valor
American Women Physicians in WWI
History Bytes: Dr. Harriet Alleyne Rice
Who was Harriet Rice? (Jane Addams Hull-House Museum)
Dr. Harriet Rice: First Black Resident at Hull House
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nexusnyx · 1 year
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Wishing you the happiest of birthdays, you deserve everything you want and desire!!! Glad yo see you back lovely🥺
thank you so so much Waad! i am glad to be back too <3
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autismday · 1 month
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Recognizing & Celebrating the beautiful diversity of the experiences and contributions people with autism make to our world.
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Whether you're #autistic or a person who loves & supports someone on the #autismspectrum, this month is for recognizing & celebrating the beautiful diversity of the experiences & contributions people with #autism make to our world
Join Autism Awareness Australia in the celebration of World Autism Awareness Day 2024!
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warrenwoodhouse · 13 years
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Mentions: My 200ft Abseil from the top of The Vermont Hotel in Newcastle on the 2nd April 2011
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Video by NEAS North East Autism Society CIC featuring @warrenwoodhouse.
Article by @warrenwoodhouse
In 2011, I took part in a charity event at The Vermont Hotel in Newcastle on World Autism Awareness Day, which is the 2nd April. This event was an abseil from the rooftop to street level on the road called Side. This was a 200 foot abseil and it was a very breezy day too. I throughly enjoyed my time.
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redcarpetsecrets · 3 months
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Sheryl Lee Ralph in Waad Aloqaili
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emmasource · 6 months
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Premiere screening of We Dare to Dream in London, England - November 26, 2023
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divdevdump · 5 months
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To quote Lyntwig_ on twitter: Everything Angelina Jolie and Waad Al-Kateab said were facts. “There are human rights sometimes for these people…never for these people…justice for these people, but not these people…accountability for this crime, but not this crime if there are business interests.” Colonialism. Control abuse of developing countries. “It’s the entire system.” “Even the United Nations and the way it’s set up…and who has the final veto power…even the emergency relief can be vetoed by a country with business interests” “or by the country that’s bombing…” Angelina’s always been critical of the UN and its system. I know she’s made a few comments about them here and there but to see her actually tell it how it is makes me kind of feel bad for her. I 100% understand why she stepped down and chose to work with local organizations. Screw movies (just give me Maude v Maude first). I would rather watch these sit-down videos with real, insightful people all day. There’s so much to learn from them. I enjoy every single one. "Is she talking about Palestine?" Lyntwig_: More so talking about refugees/displacement in general. The chat with Waad is for her film about refugee athletes.
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brian-in-finance · 6 months
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Video 📹 from Instagram
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Lauren’s guest: Waad Al-Kateab
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Tickets Dice FM
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Remember Lauren’s upcoming interview with Waad Al-Kateab in support of Choose Love?
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vyorei · 7 months
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Well what does the US expect when they stand with ethnic cleansers and assist them in their slaughter?
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chocolate-w · 1 year
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soloh · 1 year
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Uh, now that I'm not scrolling straight past every Dan tour video on Tiktok, I keep seeing things involving the orange cubes??? We didn't have cubes in the Wellington show, what did he use them for?!?!?!
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