Miriam Saphira
Miriam Edna Saphira née Gibson CNZM is a New Zealand lesbian activist, poet, artist and psychologist. Saphira founded New Zealand's only museum of lesbian culture, the Charlotte Museum. Saphira was awarded a New Zealand 1990 Commemoration Medal, a New Zealand Suffrage Centennial Medal, and in 2022 was appointed a Companion of the New Zealand Order of Merit for services to the LGBTQIA+ community. CareerSaphira trained as a psychologist and researched and wrote about topics including incest, the sexual abuse of children, prostitution, rape, lesbian and gay rights, and violence against women.[1] She worked with sex offenders, and supported incarcerated women.[2] In the 1970s Saphira became a member of the Broadsheet feminist magazine.[1] Her 1981 book The Sexual abuse of children became an important work for people working with either children and offenders.[1] Saphira completed a PhD titled Children's understanding of sexual orientation at the University of Auckland in 1990.[3] Saphira founded the Charlotte Museum in 2007, New Zealand's only museum on lesbian culture.[1] The need for the museum became apparent to Saphira when she tried to donate objects to the Lesbian and Gay Archives of New Zealand which they could not accept.[4] The museum is named for two members of the KG Club Committee who died around the time of the museum's founding, Charlotte Prime and Charlotte Smith.[5][6] The museum held a pop-up exhibition dedicated to Saphira in April 2024 when she retired for health reasons from her positions as Secretary of the Board and Trustee.[7] Saphira was a founding trustee of the New Zealand Aids Foundation (now the Burnett Foundation Aotearoa) and Joint Secretary General of the International Lesbian and Gay Association.[1] Honours and awardsSaphira was awarded a New Zealand 1990 Commemoration Medal in 1990 and a New Zealand Suffrage Centennial Medal in 1993.[8][1] In the 2022 Queen's Birthday and Platinum Jubilee Honours, Saphira was appointed a Companion of the New Zealand Order of Merit for services to the LGBTQIA+ community.[9] Selected works
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