On July 16, 2025, Jennifer Geerlings-Simons was sworn in as Suriname‘s first female president. This historic investiture is not simply a change of face at the head of the State: it marks a profound transformation of mentalities, in a country where cultural diversity is as vast as its primary forests. A woman of conviction, a doctor by training and a long-standing member of parliament, Jennifer Geerlings-Simons embodies a new type of leadership, based on listening, transmission and the universality of rights.
A woman doctor at the service of the common good
Born on September 5, 1953 in Paramaribo, Jennifer Geerlings-Simons first devoted her life to medicine, before even considering the public sphere. A graduate of Anton de Kom University, she worked for almost thirty years as a general practitioner in the public sector. Specialized in dermatology and involved in the fight against sexually transmitted infections from an early age, she has distinguished herself by her ability to build bridges between health, education and community development.
This on-the-ground experience is the foundation of her humanist vision. For her, running a country means understanding the day-to-day realities of its inhabitants. This proximity is one of the keys to her approach: putting people at the center, listening before acting, and drawing on local skills to build a collective future.
A career forged in rigor and continuity
If Jennifer Geerlings-Simons is President today, it’s the fruit of a long journey, marked by consistency, discretion and high standards. First elected to the National Assembly in 1996, she won the confidence of her peers through hard work and integrity. She remained in office for 24 years, including ten as President of the Assembly, becoming a figure of stability in a sometimes turbulent institutional environment.
But she has never presented herself as a woman of power. What drives her is the idea of service. During her investiture speech, she declared: “I learned to care before leading. My profession has taught me to respect life, not to judge, and to think long term.” These words sum up the way she approaches her new position: not as a summit to be conquered, but as a mission to be accomplished.
A message of emancipation for Caribbean women
The election of Jennifer Geerlings-Simons goes beyond the borders of Suriname. It sends out a powerful signal to all women in the Caribbean and South America: access to the highest office of the State is no longer an exception, it’s now an open path.
At 71, she has become a model of belated accomplishment, proving that it’s never too late to realize an ambition driven by the general interest. In a regional environment where women remain under-represented in decision-making positions, her presence at the head of the State fills a symbolic void.
Jennifer Geerlings-Simons makes no claim to gender-based leadership. But she does recognize the significance of her election for all those who don’t dare to break the barriers. “If my journey can inspire even one young girl to believe in herself, then this responsibility takes on its full meaning,” she confided recently.
A new era in Caribbean governance
Joining Mia Mottley in Barbados and Claudia Sheinbaum in Mexico, Jennifer Geerlings-Simons is part of a profound movement to reinvent governance in the Americas. But her uniqueness lies in the way she combines humility and determination.
It’s not so much authority that she embodies, but attentiveness. Not loud words, but active listening. Her mandate is based on the conviction that leadership is not measured in words, but in deeds. In a region often plagued by crises, this calm, resilient and structuring approach could set an example.
The election of Jennifer Geerlings-Simons as Suriname’s first female president represents more than just an institutional breakthrough. It represents a break in style, a reaffirmation of human values in the exercise of power, and a source of inspiration for all those who believe in governance based on care, equity and responsibility.
Through her journey, another path is opening up for the Caribbean : that of a calmer leadership, driven by life experience, local knowledge and an unshakeable faith in collective capacities. For Suriname, it’s a woman taking the lead. For the region, it’s a message for the future.