Mother
Teresa shows that no matter how humble your beginnings, you still have the
capacity to help others less fortunate than you. After a life dedicated to
charity and humanitarian work, she is regarded as one of the most selfless
people to have ever lived, and her efforts were recognised in 1979 when she won
the Nobel Peace Prize. However, one of the most admirable things about Mother
Teresa is that she wasn’t doing it for the recognition – she spent nearly 30
years of her life helping others before anybody even knew who she was..
Kelly
Holmes’ was a career full of set-backs and challenges, but one that ultimately
had a happy ending. After years of trying for Olympic gold, her last chance
came at the 2004 Games – a chance that was almost taken away from her by a leg
injury. Despite suffering severe depression as a result of this, Kelly was able
to battle through the injury through sheer determination, and ended up going
above and beyond her wildest dreams by winning double Olympic gold in the 800m
and 1500m
Amelia Earhart’s is a story of both success and tragedy, full of adventuring and pioneering for women’s rights. She was the first woman to fly solo across the Atlantic, and was rewarded with the Distinguished Flying Cross for her efforts – again, she was the first woman to receive this. While other women were being held back by a male dominated society, Amelia was soaring through the clouds, breaking records, and having the time of her life.
With 39 Grand Slam titles to her name and 6 separate spells as world number one, Billie Jean King is undoubtedly one of the greatest female tennis players to ever grace the game – however, it is her battle for equal rights for sporting women that she will be truly remembered for. In 1973 she took on and defeated self professed chauvinist Bobby Riggs in ‘The Battle of the Sexes’. A former world number one himself, Riggs’ defeat proved once and for all that women deserved both respect and equality in the world of sport.
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