Bilkisu Yusuf

Wikimedia Commons

Modern era

Bilkisu Yusuf

Nigeria, West Africa 1952–2015

Nigerian journalist and editor; first female editor of a major Nigerian newspaper. Advocate for press freedom, women's rights, and peace; died in the 2015 Hajj stampede.

Biography

Bilkisu Yusuf was born in 1952 in Kano, Nigeria. She became a journalist and rose to become the first female editor of a major Nigerian newspaper, editing the New Nigerian and later working with other publications. She was a respected voice on governance, gender, and conflict and was involved in peace-building and interfaith dialogue.

She was a devout Muslim and advocated for women's rights within Islamic frameworks. She died in September 2015 in the Mina stampede during the Hajj pilgrimage in Saudi Arabia. She was widely mourned as a pioneer in Nigerian journalism and a champion of women and peace.

Historical Context

Nigerian newsrooms were largely male-dominated. Bilkisu Yusuf broke the glass ceiling as an editor and used her position to promote ethical journalism, women's voices, and peace-building in a country often divided by religion and region.

What She Fought For

Bilkisu Yusuf fought for press freedom, women's rights, and peace and dialogue across religious and ethnic lines. She advocated for responsible journalism and for women's leadership in media and public life.

Major Achievements

  • First female editor of a major Nigerian newspaper; respected journalist and columnist
  • Advocate for peace, interfaith dialogue, and women's rights; work with civil society
  • Remembered as a pioneer and a voice for accountability and inclusion

Her Impact Today

Bilkisu Yusuf is remembered as one of Nigerian journalism's leading figures and a trailblazer for women in the media.


Sources: Wikipedia (Bilkisu Yusuf), Nigerian media

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