Nana Alexandria – a Pillar of Women’s Chess13.10.2009 – Born in Poti, Georgia (USSR), Nana learned chess at the age of four. At ten she started formal lessons and within six months became the girls’ champion of Tbilisi. By the age of twenty she had won the USSR Women’s Championship three times. Traumatically she missed becoming World Champion by tiny margins, but devoted her life to promoting women’s chess. Today Nana Alexandria turns sixty.

Nana Alexandria – a Pillar of Women’s Chess
By Elmer Dumlao Sangalang

Until a few decades ago, women chess players were an obvious minority in the chess playing population. Rated women chess players, an even much smaller entity. FIDE had separate listings of men and women players. The top places in the International Rating List were monopolized my men. And the best women chess players belonged to only a few European countries.

Today, women’s chess has gone a long way. If there’s one particular individual who can be credited for its tremendous growth and development, it’s none other than International Woman Grandmaster Nana Alexandria. From 1986 to 2002, Nana was Chairperson of the Commission for Women’s Chess, FIDE’s permanent committee tasked to promote and develop chess activities for women and the preparation of programs aiming, progressively, at a better representation of women in all aspects of chess activities. She was the ideal choice for the job because of her keen understanding of the means to stimulate interest in chess.

Here is the full article on Chessbase.com.

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