Posts Tagged 16 Days

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Art as Activism

Wednesday, December 2nd, 2009

Today marks the halfway point in our 16 Days campaign. On this day we have chosen to highlight the role of the creative community in educating and advocating for an end to genocide and violence against women. I’ve always considered myself to be a creative person and a dedicated activist. In college I put these two together for a project. I chose to combine painting, photographs I’d found and quotes from various world leaders to express my frustration at continuous pattern of genocide followed by declarations of “Never Again.” It proved to be a great and unique way to educate my classmates about this topic. 16 Days Photos - Rebecca Blog

Despite this, I hadn’t really thought about how others might be using art to raise awareness until I found out about a choreographer in Philadelphia, Rebecca Davis. Rebecca had sent Save Darfur information about a ballet she’d created about the genocide in Darfur. I was immediately interested. Dancing has always been one my greatest passions, I studied ballet for years, and even taught it in for a period of time. I knew that dance had often been used to make statements about social issues but had no idea anyone had done a piece on Darfur.

I was fortunate enough to be able to attend a performance of excerpts from Rebecca’s Ballet Darfur. I was extremely impressed with what I saw. Not only was she able to put together a beautiful, technically exceptional piece of dance, but was also able to depict issues such as sexual violence and genocide on stage in a way that was very emotionally moving for an audience. The best part was of the evening was getting to talk to audience and the dancers about how this work of art had inspired them to learn more about the genocide and its effects on communities, families and the women in the Darfur.

I am so happy to see Rebecca Davis being honored today for both her talents as an artist and an activist. I encourage everyone to follow her example today and use their individual talents to help educate and inspire those around them. If creating art isn’t your thing, you can still learn about and enjoy the creative things others in your community are doing to help raise awareness.

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Social Networks and Digital Activism

Tuesday, December 1st, 2009

On December 1st of each year, the world observes World AIDS Day to spread awareness and hold world governments and international leaders accountable for promises and pledges to help halt the pandemic. This year’s theme is Universal Access and Human Rights. It is my hope that by promoting human rights, education, and gender equality, especially within at-risk populations such as women in Sudan, the world’s efforts to end the global AIDS pandemic will be more effective.

According to the United Nations Development Programme, Sudan has one of the highest rates of HIV/AIDS in North Africa and the Middle East. Women and girls are disproportionally affected due to their vulnerable status and the use of rape as a weapon of war in Sudan. On Day 7 of the 16 Days campaign, we remember the words of Hilary Clinton – “women’s rights are human rights.” As we work to bring peace to Sudan, we must not allow the marginalization of women and the myriad issues they face to continue.

Today, I am asking everyone in my network on Facebook and Twitter to update their status to help spread awareness about the plight of women in Sudan. In Darfur, rape is used as a weapon of war—a weapon that has lasting physical and psychological effects. Today, tomorrow, and the next day, be the voice of these women—help build awareness by telling your networks to stand up for women’s rights. Together we can give the women of Sudan access to much needed care and empower them to be agents of change in their communities.

Facebook screenshot

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Write a Letter to the Editor (LTE)!

Monday, November 30th, 2009

16 Days Photo - EDFToday, on Day 6 of the 16 Days, I am writing a Letter to the Editor (LTE) to my local newspaper to express my concern about the women in Internally Displaced Persons (IDP) and refugee camps in Darfur and Chad.

Different events compete for air time or column space in the media, and journalists face numerous obstacles to get their stories—censorship, intimidation, and detention, for example. However, a handful of reporters have tenaciously followed the plight of Darfuri women. Today, we honor them.

LTEs can have an enormous impact.  The more ways we spread the message about violence against women in Darfur, the more likely we are to influence others (our Congressional Representatives and Senators, our neighbors, Editorial Boards) to help us bring an end to sexual violence in Darfur and throughout Sudan. With the power of your words and your determination to do good, I hope you will join me in writing a letter to your local newspaper today.

Check out our basic guidelines for a successful LTE and find newspapers in your area.  Good luck!

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Reflections: Faith and Activism

Sunday, November 29th, 2009

16 Days Photos - Will 2Today, 30 November 2009, is the fifth day of our 16 Days Campaign. On this fifth day we’re celebrating faith, human rights and anti-genocide leader, Rev. Gloria White-Hammond. Like the Reverend, I carry my faith with me at all times and it is a vital part of who I am. In addition to helping mold someone into who they are I also feel that faith should and can shape what a person is and does. As an action on this Thanksgiving weekend, I chose to reflect on the role that my faith plays in my work fighting genocide and working to bring peace and stability to the people of Darfur and Sudan.

Living during this time of the world in which we find so many evils, calamities, and tribulations, one can easily become let down with their fellow man. It really doesn’t take much effort or thought to look at what’s going on, and conclude that…“you know, there sure are a lot of problems out there, and I’m just going to worry about myself.”

After all “What can I do”, you ask.

In the Book of Ecclesiastes (3:1-8) God, through Solomon, tells us that there is a time for everything – a season, actually. A season, as you know is a time that has a defined purpose, whether that purpose is defined as weather, war, peace, or harvest, all seasons have a beginning and an end. We’re no different either-though we think of our long lives, they are, in fact, just short seasons in the big picture.

This said, I will not allow myself to be a bystander is these troubled times. I will not allow the seasons of trouble, hunger, genocide, and war to begin before me and end long after I have returned to dust. I will use my faith and resolve and I will be Ecclesiastes. I will be the changes in season that I want to see, and I’ll live well because I’m lucky to live in this time. I will be happy with work done towards the betterment of my fellow man – this because I, as God instructs me, should “enjoy the good of all my labor, for it is the gift of God.”

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Things that make us happy

Saturday, November 28th, 2009

thanksgivingDSC_0540After a weekend full of family, friends and food my cousins and I sat down to write a letter.  We wanted to tell the people fighting for the women and children of Darfur what their work meant to us.

We talked about how we felt this was an important thing to do, because if it was our mothers, or our grandmother, or us living in the camps struggling to provide for our family and always living in fear we would be very grateful that there was someone out there working so hard to help us.

Today, the Save Darfur Coalition honors one such leader, Dr. Mohammed Ahmed Abdallah.  Dr. Ahmed worked with survivors of violence and torture in Darfur, providing a safe space for women to speak about their experiences and with hope that their psychological and physical wounds could be healed. (more…)

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Light a Candle

Friday, November 27th, 2009

Andrea_16daysIt was especially meaningful to me to light a Save Darfur Connection Candle on Thanksgiving with my close female friends. For the three of us, it truly was a way to connect with women in Darfur. We talked about what they would be doing today. Their day would have been a repeat of the last Thursday in November for the past five years – uncertainty, insecurity and unparalleled fear of being sexually violated while taking a routine walk to collect firewood. We agreed that lighting a candle would be one of 16 actions that we’ll all take over the next 16 days. We hope you’ll join us.

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Wear a white ribbon

Thursday, November 26th, 2009

This Thanksgiving, my family was very into the spirit of the 16 Days. We found some holiday ribbon upstairs and, with the help of kitchen scissors and safety pins, had our very own “White Ribbons” – ribbons that serve as a pledge to never commit, condone or remain silent about violence against women – to mark Day 2. Sadly, my sister is abroad this year but we plan on pinning one on her as soon as she reaches the States.

White Ribbon - 16 Days Campaign Blog Pic

While wearing a ribbon might seem like a small action, it is a fantastic tool for spreading awareness. I remember a Darfur vigil I attended last fall, where we all received green ribbons. I pinned it onto the coat I was wearing then and have never taken it off. Every time I wear that coat now, both strangers and friends ask me about its significance, and I have the opportunity to talk about the conflict. This small action has spurred so many conversations and has sparked real interest in a cause close to my heart. While I can’t wear this shirt every day, I’ll find a more permanent place for my white ribbon to keep the conversation going all year long. From all of us at Save Darfur, Happy Thanksgiving to you and yours – and thank you for all that you do to bring attention to the cause.

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16 Days of Activism Against Gender Violence

Wednesday, November 25th, 2009
Women in the Farchana refugee camp in eastern Chad

Photo Credit: Physicians for Human Rights

This year, the Save Darfur Coalition is participating in 16 Days of Activism Against Gender Violence — an international campaign which recognizes the strength of women around the world and challenges advocates and global leaders to raise their voices to end the violence.

Over the next 16 days — from International Day for the Elimination of Violence Against Women on November 25th to International Human Rights Day on December 10th — the Save Darfur Coalition will recognize leaders in the fight to bring peace, security and opportunity to women in Sudan and offer corresponding actions to help end violence against women in Sudan.

On the first of these 16 days, the Save Darfur Coalition is honoring not one individual leader, but the Darfuri women living in the Farchana refugee camp in eastern Chad. On this day, we hope you will read and share with your friends and family “The Farchana Manifesto,” a declaration of women’s and human rights written by a group of Darfuri refugee women after the brutal beating of several women in their camp by community leaders.

Most of us who have taken part in years of advocacy for peace in Darfur will at times reach points of overwhelm, even of hopelessness. News coverage — and sometimes our own awareness-raising — about the conflict in Darfur often focuses on the cold, impersonal and huge facts of death tolls and numbers of displaced people.

What has continued to ground me over my last three years at the Save Darfur Coalition are opportunities to connect with and learn the stories and actions of survivors. I am humbled each time I meet Fatima Haroun and Zeinab Eyega, two Sudanese community advocates now working in the U.S., whom we’ll honor for their leadership on December 4th and December 10th respectively.

(more…)

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