Jaha Dukureh (born 1989 or 1990) is a The Gambia women's right activist and anti-female genital mutilation campaigner. Dukureh was subjected to female genital mutilation in the Gambia when she was a little more than a week old. She is the founder and executive director of Safe Hands for Girls, an organization working to end FGM, and was the lead campaigner in The Guardians End FGM Guardian Global Media Campaign. In April 2016, she was named to the 2016 Time 100 list. Dukureh was nominated for the Nobel Peace Prize in February 2018, has won the Eleanor Roosevelt Val-Kill Medal, and is a UN Women Goodwill Ambassador for Africa. A feature film about Jaha's life was released by Accidental Pictures and The Guardian. Her memoir, I Will Scream to the World was published by Kensington Books in 2024.
Dukureh earned a Bachelor's degree in business administration management at Georgia Southwestern State University in 2013. That year, she founded Safe Hands for Girls, an anti-FGM non-profit organization. Dukureh became an American citizen in late 2015. Dukureh also has a Master's degree in Non-Profit Management from The University of Central Florida in 2018.
Dukureh's activism led to the banning of female genital mutilation in The Gambia.
Dukureh currently resides in Atlanta. The Guardian developed the documentary film Jaha's Promise, which premiered in 2017.
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