Showing posts with label YOWLI. Show all posts
Showing posts with label YOWLI. Show all posts

Feb 22, 2011

The YOWLI Monologues (AWOMI CSW 55 Parallel Event)

The African Women's Millennium Initiative (AWOMI) would like to invite you to attend our CSW parallel event entitled: "The YOWLI Monologues: Young African Women Speak Out on SRHR, Climate Justice and Youth Leadership". The event will take place on Tuesday March 1 from 2:00pm to 3:30pm in the 10th Flr Room of Church Center.

It consists of a panel session: "Assessing the Impacts of Climate Change on Women and SRHR in Africa" which will be co-chaired by UN-Women Africa Division Chief Letty Chiwara and UNFPA Chief of Gender, Human Rights and Culture Aminata Toure (TBC) and include graduates from AWOMI's Young Women's Knowledge and Leadership Institute (YOWLI).

In addition, there will be an "Africa-Style" Monologues presentation featuring representatives from Sierra Leone, Namibia, Madagascar, Rwandaon the aforementioned issues. To RSVP for the event kindly email awomiweb@gmail.com by Feb. 27 at 5pm ET.

Please find the concept note and official flyer (English and French) below. Feel free to share with interested persons and organizations. We look forward to meeting and interacting with you. Thanks!

Official Flyer (English) - Design by Sughey Abreu

Official Flyer (French) - Design by Sughey Abreu

Nov 25, 2010

Creating space for women - Interview with Talent Jumo (YOWLI '08) on YOWLI Zimbabwe

Talent Jumo, YOWLI '08 Grad
What inspired the formation of the Young Women’s Leadership Initiative?

In 2007 a group of young women came together to discuss issues, things that were happening around us. We realised that spaces were getting smaller and most young women weren’t able to participate because of the environment - it was getting volatile. It had also been unfriendly out there for young women to come out and speak. So we thought we should create our own space.
Our focus is young women and leadership, but we have also decided to look at sexual and reproductive health and rights. We felt that it was important for young women to be able to relate to themselves, to know their bodies so that they can gain some form of control over their bodies and their sexuality. It’s only when we are comfortable that we can then manoeuvre into the public space and assert ourselves in those spaces. 

Given all the things that young women are ordinarily concerned about; school, getting a husband, a job, etc; how does YOWLI get young women to think about and actively participate?

The fact that we are talking about our bodies and sexuality is what makes it possible for us to maintain that interest. We are talking about things that are happening to us everyday. In really addressing issues that are affecting us now, and also trying to see how we can live a more meaningful life and be able to participate more fully in other spaces.

So sexuality is an interesting topic for people?

It is. You know people get excited, and when you start talking you never finish. For us we thought we would start talking about issues, which have been deemed ‘sacred cows’. We have players who have been looking at this thematic area for a long time, but not talking about abortion for example. We know that women are aborting. And we know that if a woman wants an abortion they will go ahead and have one. These are the real issues that young women are facing. Issues of lesbianism, bisexuality and being gay, those are issues that we thought we have to talk about it. Issues of sex work: we have a programme where we are helping sex workers to organise through the sisterhood agenda. 

How does the subject of Feminism relate to YOWLI’s work amongst young women?

YOWLI is a feminist organisation. We share the same principles [as feminism], we believe that women have rights; women’s rights are human rights. Human rights are indivisible and they are universal. These are all issues we are pushing through. But because we are at different levels we felt that it would be important to continuously build our own capacities, to strengthen our understanding of feminism, and also to reflect on our lives.
The feminist circle that YOWLI is currently hosting is called the Chimurenga Sisterhood. It’s unique in that it’s not just an academic space. We look at feminism from our lived realities. We want to bring it into our homes and our lives.

Is there a brand of Feminism that may be considered uniquely African?

As a feminist circle we have just started exploring what feminism should be for Africans. I think this feminism for me would be a feminism that [understands] that there is need for us to look at our background and traditions and see the good therein, and be able to build on that, rather than labelling all traditional practices as negative. Take for example the practice of roora, personally I feel that if we do away with roora, we may have trouble. Women may find themselves in huge trouble, where men may feel that women today are worthless. Creating a balance would be for people to be able to exchange gifts. The imbalance comes in because a woman is being equated to a herd of cattle and some cash. 

Would you say this is the beginning of a Zimbabwean Feminist movement?

I believe that feminism is a title that has been stigmatised for a very long time. The arrival of the gender-mainstreaming ideology swept out feminist ideologies. Most women’s groups wanted to be identified with being gender activists and not really feminists. Some people believe that feminist has something to do with being radical extremist pro-abortionists who don’t take time to think. We have had a women’s movement, we have had a gender sector, but I also believe that women’s groups have tended to mainstream gender. Most organisations have taken that approach and used it as an excuse for not really committing resources and time to look at women’s’ empowerment issues. It has watered down the struggle in a way

To find out more about YOWLI Zimbabwe's work and initiatives, check out their website: http://www.pepeta.org/

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Interview & Photo Source: http://www.kubatana.net/html/archive/women/101006inzwa2.asp?sector=WOMEN



Nov 9, 2010

Call for Submissions: AWOMI "Share Your Thoughts" 16 Days of Activism Campaign

Hello Everyone!

Every year since 1991,  the time period of November 25 (International Day Against Violence Against Women) to December 10 (International Human Rights Day) has been recognized as the 16 Days of Activism Against Gender Violence. Throughout this period, women and youth groups, development practitioners, human rights activists, every day people like you and I, have stood up in their own way to discount gender violence and promote human rights. This year's theme focuses on violence in the context of conflict, and with gruesome instances like the high incidence of rape in Congo, it couldn't come at a better time.

Since its inception in 2005, AWOMI has worked with local African women and youth on issues pertaining to gender violence and human rights. During our biannual Young Women's Knowlegde and Leadership Institute (YOWLI), young activists from Africa and the Diaspora are trained on gender violence issues like rape, female genital mutilation, domestic violence and so on. Such workshops not only help in informing our YOWLI participants and graduates, but also promote story sharing.

YOWLI 2008 participants using silent theatre performances to depict rape during their Gender Violence training