If you're a woman who played sports, or have girls or women in your life who did
or do, then you will want to see this remarkable story that explains who made
that possible. This short documentary tells the story of Title IX through the
eyes of Wendy, daughter of the amazing Patsy Takemoto Mink, a Japanese American
from Hawaii who became the first woman of color elected to the U.S. Congress.
The film shows her difficult mission to co-author and defend Title IX, the 1972
law that transformed athletics for girls and women for generations in
America.
Having met obstacles at so many turns for being a woman and for being a woman
of color, she turned those rejections into a determination to make a
difference in the world by changing laws that prevented women and others from
living freely.
This film is a reminder to never take for granted that one person can change
the world. As she said while speaking to Congress, "No matter how an
individual has been excluded in the past, an individual DOES count!"