International Women's Day celebrates the trailblazing women in "men's jobs" who are working harder and shining brighter

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Agence France-Presse
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  • In the ring, battling flames or lifting off into space, women have entered professions generally considered to be men’s jobs
  • Take a look at what inspires them and why they do what they do
Agence France-Presse |
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Shana Power from South Africa feels she's been fortunate in how she's been received in her industry, but suspects she's not paid the same as the men.

In the ring, battling flames or lifting off into space, women have entered professions generally considered to be men’s jobs.

For International Women’s Day on March 8, AFP met some 20 women breaking down the barriers of gender bias in the world of work.

Here are profiles of three women trailblazers around the globe:

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Firefighter in Turkey

“In the beginning, my family told me: ‘Stop, you won’t succeed, this is a job for men’,” says Devrim Ozdemir, who did not heed the advice.

In 2008, she became one of the first women to put on a firefighter’s uniform in Turkey.

“Today, everyone supports me, they have confidence in me,” says the 37-year-old.

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Assigned to a fire and rescue brigade in the western city of Izmir, she has started a trend. Now there are 51 women firefighters, though they are still a small portion of the 1,200-strong force.

“Today I am a firefighter who stands beside people in their difficult times,” she says, of her motivation.

And sometimes the firefighting itself can be physically tough.

“It has been difficult at times, for example on interventions that require physical strength. I also faced challenges in carrying all our equipment, but apart from that, I never had any trouble.”

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Ozdemir encourages young women to persevere in the male-dominated profession and points out that there is pay equality.

“For me it is important, we could have received less money for the same job, but no, we have the same salary.”

Her enthusiasm, determination and pride in her profession also inspires youngsters, like her six-year-old son – instead of reading him bedtime stories she tells him about her work.

“I’m a heroine to my son, it’s an incredible feeling,” she says, smiling, and adding proudly: “He, too, wants to become a firefighter.”

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South African fighter

Shana Power from South Africa feels she's been fortunate in how she's been received in her industry, but suspects she's not paid the same as the men.
Photo: AFP

As the first woman amateur champion in mixed martial arts (MMA) in South Africa, Shana Power defies the stereotypes about women in a combat sport with her ferocity in the ring. She was nicknamed “Titanium”.

Born in Johannesburg, the 25-year-old blonde was first attracted to MMA by such star fighters as American Holly Holm and wanted to do the same in her homeland.

“When I was growing up I was very athletic, I’ve always been sporty. So I understood that the mind was as important as the body ... if you can unlock the mind and build the mind then your body will be an unstoppable force.”

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Power says she was supported by the people who trained her in MMA and now trains and inspires others herself.

“In my profession I’ve actually been quite fortunate. I haven’t faced many challenges, for example, being a woman in a male-dominated sport. I’ve actually had a lot of positives from it.”

Except perhaps for the money.

“I don’t think we get offered the same,” admits the champion, now a MMA professional. But she adds that “in terms of the personal training and coaching, yes,” it’s the same as for men.

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Wendy Lawrence redefined gender standards and expectations in her industry. Photo: AFP

“I was 10 years old when Apollo 11 landed on the moon and that was my ‘aha’ moment, as I like to say.

“I looked at Neil Armstrong and Buzz Aldrin walking on the moon and thought that’s what I want to do when I grow up: ‘I’m gonna be an astronaut and I am gonna fly in space’,” says Wendy Lawrence, 58, a former Nasa astronaut.

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A trained Navy helicopter pilot, she realised her dream becoming an astronaut with four flights onboard a Nasa space shuttle between 1995 and 2005.

She grew up in Jacksonville, Florida, not far from Cape Canaveral, the launch pad for the space shuttles.

“I think especially here in the United States, we like to say ‘Well, you throw like a girl or you run like a girl’, and historically that’s not been a very positive thing.

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“So I suspect that in the minds of some of my male colleagues, especially when I was going through flight school, they probably thought I was gonna fly like a girl,” she recalls.

That meant she had to “work harder to be perceived as better ... I was willing to buckle down and be focused for a long period of time cause my mindset was: ‘I’m gonna prove you’re wrong’.”

Lawrence retired in 2006 and says her advice is to avoid preconceived ideas about what women can do.

“So I’d say give women an opportunity to try. You might be surprised at what they bring to the table, what they’re capable of.”

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