Time magazine has selected 16 women for its Woman of the Year project for 2026. There are also three women of Indian and Indian origin in the list. All of these leaders are working to create a more equal world. Also, they are busy solving the biggest challenges of women and girls. The project is separate from Time’s annual Women of the Year list. It was started in 2020. Hollywood actress Teyana Taylor is on the cover. His performance in the film ‘One Battle After Disrespect’ has been excellent. There are also some unseen faces like Isata Dumbuya, who heads Sierra Leone’s first maternity center, and Sister Norma Pimentel, who is running humanitarian operations on the US-Mexico border. Read the inspiring journey of selected leaders… Safina Hussain – Education remained incomplete, turned this pain into strength, won ‘Asia’s Nobel’ Childhood passed through the pain of poverty, violence and incomplete education. Turned this pain into strength and laid the foundation of ‘Educate Girls’ in Mumbai. She says, ‘I know how it feels to be left behind. Last year, the organization succeeded in sending 20 lakh girls from India’s villages back to school. The target was only 15 lakhs. For this the organization received the Ramon Magsaysay Award. His NGO became the first organization to receive this honour. In her recently released book ‘Every Last Girl’, the character of Anitabala is a symbol of every girl whose voice was unheard. ‘No girl wants to graze goats or become a child bride, every girl just wants to go to school’ – Safina Reshma Kewalramani – Discovered the cure for sickle cell, now she is determined to defeat diabetes, to eradicate incurable diseases. The journey that started as a kidney doctor has today reached her becoming the first woman CEO of the world’s leading biotech company (Vertex). Under his leadership, Vertex is providing free expensive medicines for ‘Cystic Fibrosis’ (lung disease) in 14 countries of the world including India. Under Reshma’s leadership, the company launched the first CRISPR-based gene-editing therapy for sickle cell disease. Now working on therapy to completely eliminate diabetes and kidney diseases. ‘The real purpose of medicines is not just to make profits, but to bring a person from the clutches of death’ – Reshma Reshma Saujani – the voice of American mothers, the face of the childcare campaign. The daughter of a refugee and the first Indian-American Congress candidate, courageously shook the power. This opened the way for affordable childcare for mothers in America and ‘universal care’ in New York. She is empowering 7.6 lakh girl students through her organizations ‘Moms First’ and ‘Girls Who Code’. We want to make our daughters ‘perfect’ and our sons to be ‘brave’. Real equality will come in the society when we teach women not to be ashamed of their mistakes, but to be proud of their bravery. ‘Real strength is not in ‘winning’, but in ‘the courage to stand up again even after losing”- Reshma Saujani
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Woman of the Year Project-2026, 3 Indian women: Safina returned 20 lakh daughters to school, Reshma is providing free medicines to 14 countries; Saujani is empowering 7.5 lakh girl students through coding
