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Maha Mamo (born February 29, 1988)[2][3] is a Brazilian human rights activist. She is an advocate of the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees' #IBelong campaign, which seeks to end gender discrimination in nationality laws through local and international advocacy.[4]

Early life

Mamo was born in 1988 to Syrian nationals. Her father was Christian and her mother was Muslim,[5] barring them from legal marriage and thus preventing Mamo and her two brothers, Souad and Eddie, from obtaining Syrian citizenship.[6] In absence of identification documents during the Lebanese Civil War, Mamo and her brothers avoided potential security checkpoints, thus restricting them from education and healthcare services.[7]

Activism

In 2014, the Brazilian embassy invited Mamo and her siblings under a special visa for Syrians.[7] Members of the United Nations helped her obtain a travel document, and Mamo began advocating for the creation of legal avenues to citizenship. The New York Times described Mamo as "the face" of this campaign.[7] In 2018, after Brazil legalized stateless people to apply for citizenship, she became a registered citizen of Brazil.[8]

References

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