The Lebanese pioneer women’s rights defender, Anissa Rawda Najjar passed away on Wednesday at 103 years of age. Najjar received the “Commandor” medal of honor at her 100th anniversary by then President of the Republic Michel Suleiman and was also honored by the Ministry of Communications which issued a stamp carrying her name and picture. Early in her life, Najjar fought in defense of human rights and women’s rights, in particular, crowning her struggle with the formation in 1953 of the first of its kind rural development community in the Arab world, ‘Village Welfare Society’, to promote and support rural women through enabling them to become economically productive. She also established a number of clinics and schools and sought to set up a rural institute that educates women (Madrasat Al Maraa Al Masoula). Najjar has been one of the earliest Arab women journalists where she published and wrote in ‘Al Ahliyah’ newsletter back in 1931 when she was still a student. In 1963 she was appointed editor in chief of ‘Al 3urwa Al Wuthqa’ magazine before she became secretary of the Druze Orphanage and the Lebanese Council for Women respectively. She contributed to the founding of the Lebanese League for Good Housekeeping and partook in numerous conferences in Lebanon, the Arab region and the world, and was honored at over 20 social, educational and cultural occasions .( An Nahar, As Safir, January 15, 2016)