The ability to reshape the rules can often stem from a single conversation with women who know that their struggles are interconnected. On International Women’s Day 2025, the report was presented alongside courageous women, each leading change in the fight for freedom, justice, and equality.
– **Manel Msalmi** – An activist of Tunisian descent, fighting for the right of Muslim women to be free from coercion, oppression, and silencing in Arab countries and Iran. She calls on the world to listen to what many Muslim women want, rather than what is sometimes more convenient to assume about them.
– **Natalie Sanandaji** – An American of Iranian descent who uses her life experience — both as a survivor of the Nova massacre and as a woman who intimately knows the pain of Iranian women — to lead the fight against patriarchal oppression and strengthen the fight against antisemitism.
– **Baroness Verma** — A member of the House of Lords in the British Parliament, dedicating her political efforts to protecting women and girls from sexual violence, so that every woman in the world has a safe place to be.
In a panel held on International Women’s Day at Cambridge University and in the British Parliament under the auspices of ISGAP and Professor Charles Asher Small, our groundbreaking report was presented. The report was designed to ensure that on this day, the female voice would be heard in the justice system, in every environment — even in a terror environment.
🔹 This is not just a struggle for women. It’s a struggle for all of us.
🔹 We don’t ask for permission — we are changing the rules.
🔹 Women deliver justice, women create change.

