Grace Jarsor Archives - 91短视频 News /now/news/tag/grace-jarsor/ News from the 91短视频 community. Mon, 25 Jun 2012 14:05:08 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.9 First Women鈥檚 Peace Leadership Program at 91短视频鈥檚 Summer Peacebuilding Institute /now/news/2012/first-women%e2%80%99s-peace-leadership-program-at-emu%e2%80%99s-summer-peacebuilding-institute/ /now/news/2012/first-women%e2%80%99s-peace-leadership-program-at-emu%e2%80%99s-summer-peacebuilding-institute/#comments Wed, 06 Jun 2012 21:56:15 +0000 http://emu.edu/now/news/?p=13003 Little more than six months after alumna , 91短视频 (91短视频) has hosted its first participants in a program designed to train more women for leadership roles in .

The first group of students in the included 12 women from Africa聽 (Liberia, Kenya, and regions in and around Somalia) and the South Pacific (Fiji and Solomon Islands) at the 2012 under .

After returning home, the participants will be provided with mentors and will take two additional classes in their respective home regions before earning a graduate certificate. An additional eight Somali women who did not receive visas to attend SPI this year are also enrolled in the program鈥檚 first cohort.

鈥淚鈥檓 grateful, I鈥檓 overwhelmed to be a part of this,鈥 said Gwendolyn Myers, a 21-year-old activist and journalist from Liberia who was selected for the program. 鈥淚 want to bring this key message to the group: prioritize young people! Young people can contribute positively towards peace and development, if given the chance.”

She said her SPI classes taught her how to analyze and 鈥渕ap鈥 conflicts and to bring all parties involved 鈥渢o the table,鈥 enabling her to act more strategically in Liberia in the future.

Myers is executive director of , a nonprofit organization that works with university students and youth to promote peace, reconciliation and a spirit of volunteerism in Liberia.

Hiba Mohamed Ismail, an instructor with the in Hargeisa, Somaliland, echoed Myers鈥 thoughts: 鈥淚 was so lucky to be chosen.鈥 She spoke of the benefits of being granted a safe, hospitable place to gain wider knowledge while reflecting on the social situation at home.

Ismail trains at-risk youth 鈥 many of them homeless, battling drug addictions or recently released from prison聽鈥 in conflict management and vocational and social skills.

As a follow-up to SPI, experienced leaders in the peace field will act as mentors for each sub-group of women, helping them to integrate their academic training with their day-to-day work.

Members of the first group of students in the Women鈥檚 Peacebuilding Leadership Program (left-to-right); Gwendolyn Myers, Windor Dorko, Asli Ahmed Mohamoud, Philma Zaku, Amina Hassan, Priscilla Singh, Hiba Mohamed Ismail, Jerolie Belabulie, Amal Yasin Ibrahim, Vaiba Flomo, Grace Jarsor and Alita Waqabaca. Photo by James Souder.

The Center for Justice and Peacebuilding received more than 100 applications for spots in the first cohort of the women鈥檚 leadership program and has already begun planning for future sessions. Working with its funding partners, and the German development organization, EED/, the peacebuilding center is expecting a larger group from the South Pacific next year, and it hopes to bring more Liberian and Somali women as well. Plans are also underway to add a new cohort of women leaders from Burma.

鈥淭he leadership of both women and men is vital to developing, implementing and sustaining robust peacebuilding processes at all levels of society,鈥 said , director of the Women鈥檚 Peacebuilding Leadership Program. 鈥淢ore and more organizations and countries are realizing that the participation of women in leadership is vital to their well-being.聽This program is assisting countries and regions in developing the capacity of women to take up these leadership roles that are so needed.鈥

Three of the women in the program 鈥 Asli Ahmed Mohamoud, Amina Hassan, and Priscilla Singh 鈥 spoke appreciatively of having the support of their husbands for their peacebuilding work. In their home regions, it is almost unknown for a husband to care for the children in the family to enable a wife to play a public role, but their husbands have been exceptional. Mohamoud has three children, Hassan has five, and Singh has two.

Mohamoud, employed by , is the founder of a radio program called 鈥淰oice of Women,鈥 which draws on the oral tradition of the Somali community to mobilize women to participate in their country鈥檚 peacebuilding process. She also writes a weekly newspaper column to encourage women.

Trained as a schoolteacher, Hassan founded Women for Peace and Development in Mandera, the northeast district of Kenya, in 1998. 鈥淭wenty or 25 years ago, you would hardly see a woman participate in activities beyond the family,鈥 she said. 鈥淪ome changes have been realized.鈥 She said frequently recurring droughts 鈥 probably due to climate change 鈥 have forced some of the changes. Her people are seeing the end of the tradition of men supporting their families by owning herds of camels and other animals.

鈥淢en are becoming idle and not knowing what to do or where to start over,鈥 she said. Hassan鈥檚 group has doled out small loans 鈥 鈥渨e started with 100 women receiving 5,000 Kenyan shillings (about 60 U.S. dollars)鈥 to empower women to start supporting their families through setting up market stalls and other small businesses.

For her efforts at reducing violent conflict and seeking other ways for her people to survive, Hassan has received the Head of State commendation in Kenya. She is planning to run for a seat in the nation鈥檚 parliament.

As the first woman to be elected to local government in her region of Fiji, Singh faced bullying and came to realize that women need to form a 鈥渃ritical mass鈥 in government in order not to feel alone in the 鈥渓ion鈥檚 den.鈥 Singh is working to increase the role of women in the next national election and plans to run for a national office herself at some time in the future.

All of the participants in the Women鈥檚 Peace Leadership Program made the point that women and men must be respectful partners if there is to be lasting social change, for the betterment of all. 鈥淧romoting leadership for women is also promoting collaborative leadership for men,鈥 said Jenner.

Though they were together at SPI for just a month, these first participants developed strong bonds and friendships, said 26-year-old Philma Zaku, a youth coordinator for the surrounding Honiara, Solomon Islands.

鈥淵ou鈥檙e able to communicate with people who have the same passion 鈥 for making the world a better place,鈥 said Zaku, whose job includes a significant focus on reducing and preventing domestic violence against women.

Zaku made a point of linking peace to other issues affecting the Pacific Islands, notably climate change and rising sea levels, which threatened the islands鈥 very existence.

, the executive director of 91短视频鈥檚 Center for Justice and Peacebuilding, said he hopes the women鈥檚 leadership program marks the beginning of the participants working together over their entire lifetimes, sometimes in collaboration with 91短视频.

Zaku agreed: 鈥淭his first cohort of the women鈥檚 leadership program is just the beginning of something that must continue for the betterment of the world.鈥

Other members of the first Women鈥檚 Peacebuilding Leadership Program at SPI were: Amal Yasin Ibrahim, who works with the in Somaliland; Windor Dorko, executive director of the Foundation for Human Rights and Democracy in Liberia; Vaiba Flomo, featured in the documentary 鈥溾 as one of the founding members of the Women鈥檚 Mass Action Campaign in 2003, which was instrumental in ending war in Liberia; Grace Jarsor, who was also one of the founding members of the Women鈥檚 Mass Action Campaign in Liberia, works for her government’s Ministry of Gender and Development; Jerolie Belabulie, a monitoring and evaluation officer employed by the in the Solomon Islands; and Alita Waqabaca, clinical practice leader for in Fiji.

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