
12 March
March 12: Scouts Founded, Salt March Begins, Women Ordained
March 12: Scouts Founded, Salt March Begins, Women Ordained
Three moments when doors opened—for girls to lead, for colonized people to resist, for women to serve
March 12 has witnessed three distinct expressions of expanding possibility. An organization was born that would teach generations of American girls that they were capable of more than society expected. A revolutionary leader began a 240-mile walk to the sea that would help topple an empire through the simple act of making salt. And a church that had excluded women from its priesthood for centuries finally opened its doors, allowing women to lead worship and administer sacraments. Together, these moments remind us that change often begins with someone deciding that the old rules no longer apply, that barriers exist to be challenged, and that institutions can evolve when enough people demand it.
Be Prepared
On March 12, 1912, Juliette Gordon Low gathered 18 girls in Savannah, Georgia, for the first meeting of what she initially called the Girl Guides, soon renamed Girl Scouts of the USA. Low, a widow who had been inspired by meeting Robert Baden-Powell, founder of the Boy Scouts, envisioned an organization where girls could develop physical fitness, outdoor skills, community service habits, and self-reliance. At a time when women couldn't vote and societal expectations confined girls to domestic preparation, Low was teaching them to camp, hike, swim, and engage with their communities as active citizens rather than passive homemakers.
The Girl Scouts grew rapidly, offering girls experiences previously reserved for boys. They learned first aid, navigation, and survival skills. They sold cookies to fund their activities, creating one of America's most recognizable fundraising traditions. The organization integrated racially in the 1950s, decades before many institutions. It adapted its programs across generations, adding badges for computer skills, entrepreneurship, and STEM fields alongside traditional outdoor activities. Today, Girl Scouts has served over 50 million members since its founding. Low's genius was recognizing that girls needed the same opportunities for adventure, leadership, and skill-building that boys received—and that given those opportunities, they would prove just as capable. The organization she founded demonstrated that empowerment begins with taking girls seriously, giving them challenges, and trusting them to rise to meet them.
In Savannah, eighteen girls began a movement that would empower millions
The March to the Sea
Eighteen years later, on March 12, 1930, Mahatma Gandhi began his Salt March, walking from his Sabarmati Ashram toward the Arabian Sea, 240 miles away. British colonial law prohibited Indians from collecting or selling salt, forcing them to buy heavily taxed salt from the British monopoly. Gandhi chose this issue deliberately—salt was essential to every Indian, rich or poor, and the tax was both economically burdensome and symbolically insulting. By walking to the sea to make salt from evaporated seawater, Gandhi would commit a simple act of civil disobedience that would electrify India and capture world attention.
Gandhi, then 61 years old, walked roughly 12 miles each day, stopping at villages to speak about independence and nonviolent resistance. His march grew—what began with 78 followers swelled to thousands. International journalists covered the journey, puzzled but fascinated by this frail man in homespun cloth challenging an empire by making salt. On April 6, Gandhi reached the coastal village of Dandi, picked up a lump of natural salt from the beach, and declared, "With this, I am shaking the foundations of the British Empire." Mass civil disobedience erupted across India as millions made illegal salt. British authorities arrested over 60,000 people, including Gandhi. The Salt March didn't immediately win independence—that would take 17 more years—but it demonstrated that British rule rested on Indian cooperation, and that cooperation could be withdrawn. Gandhi proved that nonviolent resistance could challenge power effectively, that symbolic acts could carry enormous weight, and that sometimes the most revolutionary thing is simply refusing to obey unjust laws.
Gandhi's 240-mile walk to make salt would shake the foundations of empire
❦
Breaking the Stained Glass Ceiling
On March 12, 1994, sixty-four years after Gandhi began his Salt March, the Church of England ordained its first 32 female priests in a ceremony at Bristol Cathedral. The moment arrived after decades of debate, theological argument, and legislative maneuvering. The Church of England had been ordaining women as deacons since 1987, allowing them to perform most priestly duties except celebrating communion and pronouncing absolution. The 1992 General Synod vote to allow women's ordination passed by just two votes in the House of Laity—the narrowest possible margin. The decision prompted some traditionalist Anglicans to leave for Roman Catholicism, while others remained but refused to accept female priests' ministry.
The women ordained that day had waited years, sometimes decades, for permission to exercise the ministry they felt called to perform. Some had served as deacons for years, doing virtually all priestly work except the sacramental acts reserved for priests. Their ordination represented more than personal achievement; it challenged centuries of theological arguments that women were unsuitable for priesthood, that they couldn't represent Christ at the altar, that their ordination violated apostolic tradition. The Church of England's decision influenced other Anglican provinces worldwide, though the issue remains divisive. In 2015, the church consecrated its first female bishop. The women ordained in 1994 proved that gender had nothing to do with ability to serve, that theological arguments against women's ordination rested on cultural bias rather than divine mandate, and that institutions claiming timeless traditions could, in fact, change when forced to reckon with justice. They broke the stained glass ceiling, demonstrating that women could perform the same sacramental functions as men—and that God, apparently, didn't object.
In Bristol Cathedral, women broke centuries of tradition and became priests


