The Foundation’s philosophical stance explicitly rejects the contemporary tendency toward capitulation in the face of pressure, drawing strength from the example of historical figures who maintained their principles regardless of personal cost. This “refusal to bow” represents not mere stubbornness but principled resistance to compromising core values for expedient accommodation.
With the launch of the Liberty Values & Strategy Foundation on this historically significant date – June 13 , my heart carries the weight of years spent wrestling with a profound question: How do we honor our deepest convictions when the world seems to demand compromise at every turn?
This Foundation emerges not from boardroom strategies or market analysis, but from sleepless nights questioning whether integrity still has a place in institutional leadership. For years, I carried the burden of knowing that my participation in previously announced organizations would require me to bow—to diminish the very values that define who I am as a person. The pain of that realization cut deeper than any professional disappointment could.
When Staying Becomes Betrayal
The decision to walk away from established pathways wasn’t born from ambition—it was born from necessity. There comes a moment when continuing to participate in structures that contradict your core values becomes an act of self-betrayal so profound that it threatens the very essence of who you are. I reached that crossroads when I realized that integrity and dignity weren’t just important values to me—they were the foundation upon which my entire identity rested.
As a Jewish woman, the sanctity of life and the pursuit of liberty aren’t abstract concepts—they are the bedrock of survival itself. My ancestors carried these values through pogroms, exile, and systematic attempts at annihilation. How could I dishonor their sacrifice by compromising these principles for the sake of organizational convenience?
The Fierce Heritage That Refuses to Bend
My name carries the weight of conquest—not the conquest of domination, but the conquest of principle over pragmatism . The Shilluk people, from whom my name derives its meaning, understood that true leadership requires the courage to stand firm when everything around you is shifting . This understanding flows through my veins alongside the blood of Southern Ethiopian resistance fighters who chose death over submission.
I think of Woizero Shewareged Gedle, captured twelve times by fascist forces, tortured beyond imagination, yet never revealing a single secret that could harm her people. Her story isn’t just inspiration—it’s a mirror reflecting what we’re capable of when we refuse to compromise our deepest convictions. When I feel the temptation to bend, to accommodate, to make things easier, I remember her face and find my spine straightening once again.
The Tears Behind Rosa Bonheur’s Triumph
Rosa Bonheur didn’t just paint horses—she painted freedom itself. Every brushstroke was an act of defiance against a world that told her she couldn’t exist as herself. I imagine the loneliness she must have felt, the constant pressure to conform, the whispered criticisms that followed her wherever she went. Yet she persisted, creating art so magnificent that it forced the world to acknowledge her brilliance on her own terms.
Jane Dieulafoy’s journey through the archaeological sites of ancient Persia wasn’t just about uncovering artifacts—it was about uncovering the possibility that a woman could claim space in a man’s world without apologizing for her presence. The courage it took for her to obtain legal permission to dress as a man, to travel to dangerous territories, to demand recognition for her scholarly work—these weren’t just professional decisions, they were acts of revolutionary self-determination.
The Ache of Cultural Inheritance
My Afrikaner heritage carries complexity that sits heavy in my chest. It’s the weight of understanding that survival sometimes requires hardness, that protecting what you love sometimes demands actions that others will never understand. The frontier spirit that runs through my blood isn’t about conquest—it’s about the fierce determination to preserve dignity in the face of impossible circumstances.
From my Southern Ethiopian roots comes the understanding that resistance isn’t always loud—sometimes it’s the quiet refusal to let your spirit be broken. It’s the knowledge that cultural identity isn’t just something you carry, but something you’re willing to die for. This inheritance doesn’t make decision-making easier—it makes it more essential.
The Solitude of Refusing to Bow
People ask me why I don’t just bend a little, why I can’t find ways to work within existing systems. They don’t understand that for some of us, bending feels like breaking. The ferocity they see in me isn’t anger—it’s the concentrated essence of generations who understood that some principles are non-negotiable.
Zora Neale Hurston faced similar pressures to soften her voice, to make her brilliance more palatable to those who couldn’t handle the full force of her authenticity. She refused, and in that refusal, she gave permission to countless others to refuse as well. Her legacy reminds me that authenticity isn’t comfortable—for us or for those around us—but it’s essential.
The Sacred Weight of Jewish Values
As a Jew, I carry the memory of what happens when principles are abandoned for the sake of accommodation. The value I place on life and liberty isn’t philosophical—it’s visceral, cellular, inherited through centuries of understanding that these aren’t negotiable. When I say these values matter more than anything else, I’m not speaking in abstractions—I’m speaking from the marrow of historical memory.
The Foundation I launch today carries this weight deliberately. It’s built not just on ideas, but on the accumulated pain and triumph of those who refused to compromise their deepest convictions even when it cost them everything.
A Foundation Born from Authentic Struggle
The Liberty Values & Strategy Foundation isn’t a strategic pivot or a career move—it’s the manifestation of years of emotional wrestling with what it means to live with integrity in a world that often rewards its absence. Every sleepless night questioning my path, every moment of doubt about whether standing firm was worth the cost, every tear shed over relationships strained by my unwillingness to bend—all of it led to this moment.
This institution was not the easy choice. No, it was the only choice that allowed me to look at myself in the mirror without flinching. It’s built on the understanding that authentic leadership requires the courage to disappoint those who want us to be smaller than we are.
An Invitation to Shared Courage
I share this journey not to seek sympathy, but to extend an invitation. There are others who carry similar weights, who feel the pull between accommodation and authenticity, who understand that some values are worth the loneliness that comes with defending them. This Foundation is for you—for us—for everyone who has ever felt the cost of refusing to bow.
Together, we will create something worthy of the sacrifices that brought us here . Together, we will prove that institutions built on authentic conviction rather than strategic calculation can not only survive but thrive. Together, we will honor the legacy of those who chose principle over popularity, even when it broke their hearts.
Jane Dieulafoy (1851-1916)
French Archaeologist, Explorer & Pioneer
- First woman awarded the Legion of Honor for archaeological achievements
- Pioneered groundbreaking excavations in ancient Persia (Susa)
- Obtained legal permits to wear men’s clothing in defiance of 19th-century laws
- Fought alongside her husband in the Franco-Prussian War as a sharpshooter
- Co-founded the Prix Femina literary award for women denied other recognition
- Known as “the intrepid explorer who wore men’s suits”

Legacy: She Demonstrated that scholarly excellence and gender nonconformity could coexist with social acceptance through dedication to important work.
Rosa Bonheur (1822-1899)
French Artist & Feminist Icon
- Most famous female painter of the 19th century
- First woman artist awarded the Legion of Honor
- Created the masterpiece “The Horse Fair” – sold for astronomical sums
- Challenged traditional gender roles through masculine dress and lifestyle
- Lived openly with female partners for over 40 years
- Raised in Saint-Simonian tradition advocating women’s equality

Legacy: She Proved that artistic talent and financial independence could overcome societal constraints on women’s expression.
Woizero Shewareged Gedle (1890s-1946)
Ethiopian Resistance Fighter & “The Lion-Hearted Woman”
- Known as “the Ethiopian Joan of Arc” for her fierce patriotism
- Organized 2,000 partisans in resistance against Italian fascist occupation
- Founded the Ethiopian Women’s Support Organization
- Captured twelve times by Italian forces; never revealed information under torture
- Sold inherited land to purchase weapons and medical supplies for fighters
- Mobilized women’s patriotic league with oath to fight until death

Legacy: She Embodied the principle that integrity and national dignity are worth any personal sacrifice.
Zora Neale Hurston (1891-1960)
American Writer, Anthropologist & Cultural Champion
- Central figure of the Harlem Renaissance
- Author of “Their Eyes Were Watching God” – now considered a masterpiece
- First Black student at Barnard College, studying under Franz Boas
- Pioneering anthropologist documenting African American folklore
- Champion of individualism over collectivism during era of group identity politics
- Valued character over racial categorization

Legacy: She Demonstrated that cultural pride and individual excellence could flourish simultaneously without bowing to limiting expectations.
Inspiration
Each of these remarkable women shared key characteristics that resonate with the Liberty Values & Strategy Foundation’s mission:
- Refusal to bow to conventional limitations
- Fierce independence and self-determination
- Commitment to excellence in their chosen fields
- Willingness to sacrifice personal comfort for principles
- Pioneer spirit in breaking gender and cultural barriers
- Integration of intellectual achievement with courage
Their legacies demonstrate that dignity, integrity, and liberty are not abstract concepts but lived values that require daily courage to maintain and defend. And now, it’s our turn. Bring it on. Let’s roll.




















