R.A. Kartini and Queen Esther are two prominent female figures who emerged from vastly different historical and cultural contexts colonial Indonesia and ancient Persia yet both exemplify strategic leadership and moral courage in confronting patriarchal structures and social crises. Kartini is known for her intellectual resistance against colonial hegemony and Javanese feudal culture, utilizing education as a transformative means for women's emancipation. Meanwhile, Queen Esther demonstrated a form of faith-based leadership and moral diplomacy in the face of a systematic threat of ethnic annihilation (genocide), employing a strategic approach rooted in moral courage and a deep awareness of collective identity. This study offers a comparative analysis across three key dimensions: (1) resistance to structural injustice, (2) the construction of female leadership in historical narratives, and (3) the social impact of value-driven collective action. Using a historical-hermeneutic approach and critical gender studies, the research highlights how the legacies of Kartini and Esther remain relevant in understanding contemporary dynamics of women’s empowerment, through narratives of struggle and the advocacy of gender justice values across time. It argues that the historical experiences of these two figures reveal a model of female leadership grounded not only in moral identity, but also in the capacity to effect social transformation through collective resistance strategies and cultural renewal.
Copyrights © 2025