Professional Documents
Culture Documents
International Women S Day
International Women S Day
ISSN2255-033X
Con el apoyo de la
Oficina de
Santiago
Organizacin
de las Naciones Unidas
para la Educacin,
la Ciencia y la Cultura
8 TH MARCH:
INTERNATIONAL WOMENS DAY
UNHCR / B. Sokol
Con el apoyo de la
Oficina de
Santiago
Organizacin
de las Naciones Unidas
para la Educacin,
la Ciencia y la Cultura
Marta Benavides
6.- Reflections for the 21st Century: On How to Discern
on the Importance of International Womens Day
10. nica solucin:
refundar unas Naciones
Unidas capaces de
establecer un nuevo
orden mundial
30. MDGs
UNESCO
DREAM
Center
Editada en
Almansa,
Espaa, por
ONGD Educar
para Vivir
Follow us!
Jos Gay
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concern, to the point that in many countries there are offices to monitor them as
femicides. El Salvador, Guatemala and Mexico are concrete examples of this
situation, which happen in many more countries and still does not seem to be
effectively addressed.
Violence against women is not just what is happening to individual
women, we see that the educational, economic, social and cultural aspects of the
current systems, at local, national and global levels must intentionally work with
a transformational agenda to be able to achieve this urgently needed change, that
not only robs women and societies of peace, but does not allow the qualitative
development for the new paradigm to become a reality in our life time.
There are aspects, many historical, many legal, many cultural, and
economic that affect directly the maintenance of this reality: the colonial and
slave enterprise, the international division of labor, the forced impoverishment
that maintains people to live in survival, which in turn needs to force women
into the care and the so called informal economy and to be cheap labor. All these
conditions are based in ignorance and a culture of discrimination and the
exploitation of peoples and whole nations, this is what we consider to be the
extractive model of development, which is based in the violations of all human
rights, the economic,social and cultural rights of peoples, and the rights of the
planet and the environment.
The structures of the state, must reflect the commitment to this
understanding, that this is a matter of peace and of national security, thus there
must be policies of state and administration of government that in fulfillment of
the national constitution go about meeting in a timely manner, these demands for
the well being of all, and the care of the planet. The national and international
budgets must reflect this commitment. This is not about assistance, but about
real transformation of all the endeavors of national and global society. If a
country finds a way to meet the basic needs of women by taking loans that the
whole society must pay, but the national constitution, and the various policies
and services do not show the timely commitment for equity and equality, the
chance to eradicate poverty and hunger will only be about the alleviation of
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we are now, and to figure out the ways to move ahead. Cultural aspects are also
very important factors of development
For our communities peace and development are one and the same.. and
happiness is what we see as a good result of them... success and progress do not
mean the same to us as those people that see them as privilege, position and
money.
The UN is a peace
organization, thus all its work must be
for the enjoyment of a culture of
peace.
We a r e a f f i r m i n g t h e
recommendation consumption and production patterns by Social Watch:
Joint civil society action around Post-2015 has to focus on goals and
commitments for the countries of the North, the necessary changes of the
consumption and production patterns in these countries, and the structural
Ensure full application of prior free and informed consent: Indigenous and
local knowledge systems and technologies are adequately recognized,
protected, strengthened and used ensuring control by the indigenous
communities. Women and other affected groups participate effectively in
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By Marta Benavides,
GCAP Global Co Chair, and the Feminist Task Force/FTF,
SIGLO XXIII Movement for Culture of Peace,
El Salvador
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unos cuantos pases y la total irresponsabilidad intergeneracional con que han intentado
gobernar el mundo.
Es necesario y apremiante poner en prctica la Carta de las Naciones Unidas y el diseo
de cooperacin, solidaridad, justicia y libertad para la igual dignidad de todos los seres
humanos, tan bien establecidos en los principios democrticos de la Constitucin de la
UNESCO.
Est clara la crisis sistmica tica, social, poltica, econmica, medioambiental,- que
estamos atravesando y que, como tantas veces he repetido, requiere mltiples transiciones:
La transicin desde una economa de especulacin, deslocalizacin productiva y guerra a una
economa de desarrollo global sostenible y humano.
La transicin desde una cultura de imposicin, dominio, violencia y enfrentamiento a una
cultura de encuentro, conversacin, conciliacin, alianza y paz.
Una transicin, en suma, de la fuerza a la palabra.
por
La Carta de las Naciones Unidas se inicia con un prrafo en el que, insisto, se sintetiza la
razn de ser de las Naciones Unidas en 1945 y, hoy mismo, las soluciones que podran permitir
a la humanidad en su conjunto iniciar una nueva era: Nosotros, los pueblos hemos resuelto
evitar a las generaciones venideras el horror de la guerra. No se cita a los gobiernos o a los Estados sino a los pueblos, que son quienes deben tener en sus manos las riendas del destino comn.
Y no se aplica, una vez ms, como se ha hecho a travs de la historia, el perverso adagio de Si
quieres la paz, prepara la guerra. Se tiene que evitar el horror de la guerra, es decir, se debe
construir la paz. Paz en uno mismo, paz en relacin a los dems, en relacin a nuestro entorno,
paz a escala nacional, a escala regional, a escala mundial. Pero el inicio de la Carta nos da otra
clave esencial para el maana: la responsabilidad intergeneracional, el tener en cuenta, como
compromiso supremo, segn palabras del Presidente Nelson Mandela, a la generacin que llega
a un paso de la nuestra. Debemos cuidar la habitabilidad de la Tierra, y debemos cuidar tambin
desde un punto de vista conceptual nuestro legado, de tal manera que todos los seres humanos, y
no slo unos cuantos, puedan vivir dignamente.
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El neoliberalismo globalizador sustituy a las Naciones Unidas por grupos plutocrticos y los valores ticos por los burstiles, por el mercado. El resultado est a la vista: crisis de
toda ndole y de gran profundidad, en la que todos los parmetros se agravan, con en efecto,
desigualdades inadmisibles -85 personas, segn OXFAM, acaparan una riqueza equivalente a
la de la mitad de la humanidad (!), estimada en 3.300 millones de seres humanos, que sobreviven (o mueren) en condiciones de pobreza extrema-; amenaza nuclear; trficos
supranacionales de drogas, personas, armas; incumplimiento reiterado de las
responsabilidades propias de ciudadanos democrticos, puesto que evaden los impuestos en
lugar de procurar comportarse como corresponde a las representaciones fidedignas de la voluntad popular... Hace aos, a principios de la dcada de los ochenta, puse de relieve que la
adopcin de medidas no poda aplazarse, especialmente en casos de potencial irreversibilidad.
Y hoy, de manera particular en todo lo que tiene que ver con los procesos sociales y naturales,
en lugar de asumir con criterios socialmente apropiados y con rigor cientfico la situacin, nos
dejamos guiar exclusivamente por el cortoplacismo de los beneficios dinerarios. El mercado lo
domina todo, mientras que la propia habitabilidad del planeta se deteriora.
Slo el poder ciudadano, slo Nosotros, los pueblos puede ahora terminar con la
deplorable situacin mundial y esclarecer los sombros horizontes actuales.
Los siguientes ttulos publicados en los ltimos das en un peridico (El Pas) pueden
hacernos reaccionar y expresar en un gran clamor popular el rechazo total, la objecin de
conciencia y la desobediencia cvica a quienes intentan, a pesar de la severidad de los retos y
amenazas que afligen a la humanidad, seguir favoreciendo la pujanza de unos cuantos cuando
los muchos ven cmo se van mermando cada da sus necesidades materiales, intelectuales y
culturales:
La rebelin laica en Siria se rompe.
Ucrania se hunde en la violencia y La represin desencadena una matanza.
Los desmanes de la mayor mina europea de cobre a cielo abierto(las multinacionales
mineras siguen produciendo estragos en el medio ambiente llenndose los bolsillos y
colmando los parasos fiscales).
El negocio del cambio climtico. Empresas y fondos apuestan por industrias que se
beneficiarn del aumento de las temperaturas. Para los inversores, la clave estar en el
agua.
Tres aos despus de la primavera rabe"... (y once aos despus de la invasin de Irak en
medio del total desconcierto, aunque, eso s, los yacimientos de petrleo ya estn, desaparecidos Sadam Husein y Gadaffi, en manos de los grandes del poder energtico)
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Se ven luces, pero Oriente Prximo no mejora: es de especial urgencia terminar con la
vergenza del eterno conflicto palestinoisrael slo, con la autoridad de unas Naciones
Unidas dotadas de un apoyo global y de los medios humanos, financieros y tcnicos necesarios, podra reorientarse adecuadamente y sin mayor retraso, el futuro de Siria, Egipto
Inflamable (las noticias que llegan de Ucrania, Tailandia o Venezuela hacen evidente que la
historia es una pelea perpetua).
59 aos de crcel para siete acusados de inducir a la prostitucin a menores (el trfico y
consumo de drogas, inmensamente mortferos, no se resolvern hasta que se enfrenten, con
acciones reguladoras apropiadas, como problemas de orden sanitario y no de seguridad, y dejen
de promoverse, por los fabulosos rditos que proporcionan y por la existencia de parasos fiscales, que nunca desaparecern porque son los pases ms ricos de la Tierra, cuya brjula est
desquiciada por la ambicin, los que los protegen celosamente).
Pequea guerra fra: el contraataque de Bruselas a Suiza intenta contener la escalada populista en Europa
Justicia Universal, s, si no afecta al amigo La presin poltica y la diplomtica se imponen sobre los derechos si los criminales son socios. Prima la geoeconoma
El G-20 promete un plan para acelerar el crecimiento un 2% en cinco aos", y "las tensiones
por la fragilidad de los emergentes afloran en el G-20"
Ya ven: Para muestra, dice el refrn, vale un botn. Este desolador panorama requiere
con gran apremio un Sistema de Naciones Unidas eficaz para toda la humanidad, sin excepciones. El Partido Republicano de los Estados Unidos se opondr siempre como lo hizo ya en
1919 con la Sociedad de Naciones- a que la justicia, la seguridad y la paz sean garantizadas por
la unin de todos los pases, capaces de reaccionar con prontitud y contundencia cuando un
pas recurra a la violencia, contraviniendo los principios de convivencia democrtica.
Democracia a escala mundial es la solucin.
Por primera vez en la historia, podemos construirla e incorporarla a nuestro comportamiento
cotidiano. El tiempo de la obediencia ciudadana y de la sumisin ha terminado. Podemos expresarnos libremente y tenemos que hacer posible la gran inflexin histrica de la oligocracia a la
democracia, del bienestar de unos cuantos al bienestar generalizado, donde cada ser humano
nico pueda desarrollar plenamente las facultades que le distinguen.
Nosotros, los pueblos tenemos la palabra. Unos cuantos tienen la fuerza. No
estemos distrados ni atemorizados: ha llegado el gran momento, despus de tantos siglos de oprobio y sumisin, en que la palabra prevalezca sobre la fuerza.
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LG: The Liberian women peace movement demonstrated to the world that
grassroots movements are essential to sustaining peace; that women in
leadership positions are effective brokers for peace; and the importance of
culturally relevant social justice movements. Liberias experience is a good
example to the world that womenespecially African womencan be
drivers of peace.
Leymah Gbowee: Thank you very much to you Javier. The pleasure is mine.
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man. In an effort to gain back some independence and selfconfidence, Leymah enrolled in a local social work program.
There she received her social work certificate and began
working with refugees of the Sierra Leone civil war, helping
to heal them from the traumas of war. Leymah enjoyed her
role in helping others to heal, and in an effort to also heal
herself, left Daniel and moved back in with her parents.
Then, her work as a peace-builder really began. With
the encouragement of her mother, Leymah returned to school
and received her Associate of Arts Degree while volunteering
with the Trauma Healing and Reconciliation Program
(THRP). She worked with those in the rural communities who
had suffered the worst acts of violence during the war; as well
as with Taylors Boys, who where the children Taylors
men had abducted and forced to become child soldiers.
Leymahs work, especially with the women of her
country, made her realize how important it was for women to
have a voice in the peace process, and Leymah dreamed of a
time when women would be called together to fight for peace.
A friend of Leymahs, who she had met through her trauma
healing work, presented her with a life-changing opportunity
to make this dream a reality.
Leymahs friend, Thelma Ekiyor, had started an
organization known as the Women in Peacebuilding Network,
or WIPNET, and she asked Leymah to head the Liberian
chapter. Leymah became their voice as the women of Liberia
called for an end to the war. By this time, Taylor had been
elected President of Liberia, but another rebel force had been
carrying out attacks in and around Monrovia in an effort to
overthrow him. There had now been violence in Liberia for
roughly 14 years. The women of WIPNET decided they
would not rest until peace was achieved. Leymah led several
outreach campaigns to both Christian and Muslim women,
which started the creation of the Women of Liberia Mass
Action for Peace Movement. This movement brought
Resource: Peacejam
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ACNUR: La igualdad es un
derecho, la aceptacin una
decisin
El 10 de diciembre de 1948 se firm la Declaracin Universal de los Derechos
Humanos reconociendo que todas las personas nacen libres y en condiciones de dignidad e
igualdad de derechos. Sin embargo, 66 aos despus, actos de discriminacin y violencia
siguen provocando la persecucin de nios, nias, hombres y mujeres alrededor del
mundo.
Dentro de la totalidad de la poblacin, las personas lesbianas, gays, bisexuales,
transgnero e intersexuales (LGBTI) y los defensores de sus derechos hacen parte de uno
de los grupos ms perseguidos. Una muestra de los niveles atroces de violencia social y
poltica en su contra est relacionada con el hecho de que la orientacin sexual e identidad
de gnero de las personas LGBTI son ilegales en 76 pases, siete de los cuales castigan las
relaciones con personas del mismo sexo con la pena de muerte. Lo anterior, sumado a expresiones de violencia y discriminacin permanente por parte de todos los sectores de la
sociedad, incluso en pases en donde no es penalizado, han obligado a miles personas a
huir de sus lugares de origen en busca de proteccin. En situaciones de conflicto armado o
extrema violencia los derechos de las personas LGBTI se ven amenazados con mayor vehemencia, generando la necesidad de buscar proteccin en el exterior o ser vctimas de
desplazamientos forzados internos.
Ante las ms recientes y preocupantes demostraciones de brutal violencia hacia
personas de la comunidad LGBTI, ACNUR manifiesta que todas las personas sin excepcin alguna deben ejercer sus derechos independientemente de su orientacin sexual o
identidad de gnero y saluda con gratitud las iniciativas y expresiones de solidaridad que
al respecto han surgido.
Es importante insistir en que ser lesbiana, gay, bisexual, transgnero o intersexual
no es una enfermedad. La violencia y la discriminacin estn basadas en la inequidad de
gnero y esquemas de valores restrictivos contrarios a la libertad e integridad sexual, y al
libre desarrollo de la personalidad. Ser LGBTI es ser una persona como cualquier otra que
por cuenta de su orientacin sexual o identidad de gnero se ve enfrentada a desafiar los
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estar en riesgo en sus pases de origen, reiterando el proceso al que cualquier ciudadano
tiene derecho.
ACNUR define como refugiado a aquella persona que huye de su pas de origen
y cruza fronteras internacionales por un temor fundado de persecucin por pertenecer a
un grupo, raza, religin o partido poltico. Dado el contexto y las circunstancias en las
que viven lesbianas, gays, bisexuales, transgnero e intersexuales, esa persona puede ser
su vecino, su colega de trabajo, su amigo cercano, su hija, incluso usted, y en todos los
casos dicha persona tiene derecho de acceder a un proceso adecuado de proteccin dentro o fuera de su pas de origen.
En las Amricas, ACNUR ha trabajado en colaboracin con organizaciones, civiles y estatales, para garantizar la proteccin de todas las personas de inters y en
promover la creacin de un espacio de proteccin libre de discriminacin y desigualdad.
El gobierno de Brasil ha concedido asilo y ha aceptado los casos de reasentamiento de
personas que huyeron de la persecucin por motivos de su orientacin sexual. En
Venezuela, ACNUR ha trabajado con la Comisin Nacional encargada de elaborar los
criterios y el procedimiento de tramitacin de los casos LGBTI. Mxico ha incluido
como una quinta casual para el reconocimiento de la condicin de refugiado la persecucin por motivos de gnero. En Colombia ACNUR, a travs del Sistema de Gestin de
Datos sobre Violencia Basada en Genero (GBVIMS) que se ejecuta en coordinacin con
UNFPA, ha identificado graves casos de violencia sexual contra jvenes y mujeres por
su orientacin sexual que han causado su desplazamiento forzado. Todos estos pases se
han sumado a la campaa lanzada por ACNUR con el fin de erradicar la violencia y la
discriminacin hacia personas LGBTI.
ACNUR agradece y fomenta que todos los pases mantengan abiertas sus puertas
y trabajen en aumentar la proteccin de aquellos que huyen a causa de la violencia por
ser lesbianas, gays, bisexuales, transgnero o intersexuales, dentro y fuera de los pases
de origen, y se mantiene firme y comprometido en la lucha contra la discriminacin, la
intolerancia y la violencia basada en gnero.
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INTERVIEW WITH
CECILE GUIDOTE-ALVAREZ
Javier Collado Ruano: Dear readers, today we have the opportunity to learn from a big
activist and a distinguished theatre artists in drama, music, literacy, arts, dance, visual and
martial arts. Her name is Cecile Guidote-Alvarez and she is the Director of the Philippine
Center of International Theater Institute/Earthsavers UNESCO DREAM Center. I met her
in Rio+20 and since then we have exchanged reflections about how to achieve sustainable
development, between many other issues. Ms. Guidote-Alvarez, thank you very much to
attend us today, for our special edition of Global Education Magazine: International
Womens Day.
Cecile Guidote-Alvarez: Thank you for allowing us the golden opportunity to share the
Bohol Declaration that launched interdisciplinary, interfaith, the RAINBOW CROSS
Movement of healing trauma through the arts.
by Cecile Guidote-Alvar!
JCR: I would like to start the interview saying thank you very much for invite us to
attend the Workshop-Forum entitled the Inter-disciplinary Cultural Roadmap to Healing Trauma and Building climate Solutions, which took place two weeks ago in
Bohol, the area affected by earthquake/ Super Typhoon Haiyan. Unfortunately, our academical obligations did not allow us to visit the Philippine that time, but I hope to have
new opportunities in the closed future. In the letter you sent me, you said the forum
and workshop will orient and engage teachers, artists, social workers, medical practitioners, policymakers, industry representatives, scientists, and other stakeholders in a
lively discussion and demonstration of the realistic options at hand for restoring and nurturing the mental health of survivors with skills training for employment or entrepreneurship
while engendering fortitude, faith and the strength of spirit to triumph over adversity.
Could you please let us know what the results of such dialogue and effort were? Did you
achieve the goal to build the Interdisciplinary Creative Arts Therapeutic Emergency
Response?
CGA: Yes, the demonstration workshop with disaster survivors was an effective theatre
experience. Artists from different parts of our country worked together and collectively
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created scenarios that reflected the angst, the fears, and hopes through the coordination of
the NCCA- National Committee of Dramatic Arts (NCDA) chaired by Luthgardo
Labad. I think it is noteworthy to underscore the observation of Dr. Hubert Gijzen who
witnessed the workshop and the vignettes created by different teams from Luzon, Visayas
and Mindanao and teachers from Bohol that had theatre healing orientation through the
support of Save the Children This was complemented by the Earthsavers handicapable artists synergized with indigenous and out-of-school youth working with deaf
children and survivors for 3 hours which they joined the showcase performance.
The Earthsavers within the Philippine Center of the International Theatre Institute (ITI)
were honored by UNESCO as Artists for Peace in 2003 and in 2011, the Earthsavers
Academy with its inclusive and transformative teaching module for persons in difficult
circumstances was designated the 6th in the world as a UNESCO DREAM Center. It was
personally inaugurated in the Philippines by Director-General, Dr. Irina Bokova.
Speaking in Bohol, Dr. Gijzen, Diector of
the UNESCO Asia-Pacific Science
Bureau stated: With the Theatre on the
Edge Festival, I also saw that building
back better for you is not only related to
the infrastructure, but also to the software, to the society at large. You, the performers and artists showcased today the
power of culture, the power of arts and
music, which can be applied in so many
areas.
Whether it is to raise awareness on
MDGs, on political or societal issues, on
the MDGs, or on complex issues such as
climate change, the performing arts and
music play a very special role in conveying sometimes difficult and complex messages.
Via this Theatre on the Edge Festival you
focused on the specific theme of natural
disasters, and I could recognize at least
three key functions:
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The United Nations office of Coordinating Affairs (OCHA) reports that the AsiaPacific region suffered worst national disasters in 2013 besides the impact of the fiercest typhoon recorded in history, the Philippines also suffered 16 natural disasters. The
Asia-Pacific region was hit by 137 natural disasters compared with 93 separate events
in 2012. Meanwhile, the number of people killed recorded was 18, 375 and 82 million
affected. More than 3.9 million people in 4 countries hit Cambodia, Vietnam, Lao PDR
and Thailand. Bangladesh and Sri Lanka were hit by deadly typhoon Mahasen. India
and China were also heavily affected by floods, not to count other earthquakes and tsunamis in the last 3 years.
In the light of this reality, the Asia-Pacific Science Bureau of UNESCO headed by Dr.
Hubert Gijzen is humongous. We are grateful for the commitment of support from
UNESCO Director-General Irina Bokova as expressed in her message: It is symbolic
and important that this workshop is held in Bohol, which suffered from the impact of
the earthquake and from the devastation of typhoon Haiyan. Bohol embodies the
spirit of resilience that all societies need today, and especially those of Small Island
Developing States, on the frontline of climate change.
This Asia-Pacific Regional Forum is designed to address trauma through an interdisciplinary approach to restore the confidence of communities and to rebuild anew. For
this-the workshop will train and mobilize national teams to cope and overcomethrough creativity and solidaritythe difficulties faced by survivors of disasters, victims of armed conflict or other forms of violence.
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This vision is re-enforced by the message of our President, His Excellency Benigno
Aquino III who applauded the organizers led by the UNESCO DREAM Center in stressing that Adaptation, education, and synergized action are fundamental components of
the global discourse on climate change. No longer are nations resigned to tackle
environmental threats and issues within borders; all are moving towards more comprehensive and inclusive approaches to development.
Citizens hold crucial roles in the task, ensuring that our dialogues remain focused on
intergenerational progress and grounded in the current and future needs and aspirations
of the people. This is especially important as the Philippines recovers from one of the
most devastating calamities in recorded history, and as we refine our strategies in the
context of our vulnerabilities to climate risk.
May your initiative serve the Filipino people as well, as it lends face to our countrys
disaster preparation and risk reduction campaign. Let your exchange effectively channel efforts into managing the risks we are exposed to as humanity harnesses natural
resources, and enable your participants to become agents of healing and empowerment
within and beyond our archipelago.
JCR: Without doubts, these efforts will go a long way as community members become
more aware of the phenomenon of climate change, especially for the natural disasters.
In this sense, I totally agree with Dr. Irina Bokova, Director-General of UNESCO,
when she expressed you in the letter of 19th December 2013 that the expedition of the
Ensemble to Paris would not have been possible without your personal engagement and
energy. Your presence here in the aftermath of Typhoon Haiyan was a more timely gesture to honour the victims of the devastating natural disaster. I am sure the initiative Theatre Training for All of the ITI in the Asia-Pacific region will represent a big
initiative to help all survivors. How could our readers support this initiative? How
could they be involved?
CGA: Readers can liaise and identify the theatre or culture group within their schools
or community. You can share this methodology of cultural caregiving to get involve
with them as a volunteer and reach out to vulnerable and marginalized sectors in your
place to extend to them, with value laden art education. Hospitals, prisons, refugee
camps, organizations for persons with disabilities and senior citizens, rehabilitation centers for drug abusers can all be given arts education for their recuperation and restoring
their mental health.
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Those interested can join our growing network and can connect with the International
Theatre Institute (ITI) whose Director-General Tobias Biancone can be accessed for
events like: the World Theatre Day in March, Arts Education Week in May, World
Dance Day in April or the Earthsavers for participation in Clean Up the World in September, Earth Day in April. The ITI website is: www.iti-worldwide.org Our Philippine
Center of the ITI will be offering this Creative Theatre Transformative course showcased in Paris and Bohol through a consortium of universities like the University of
Makati, Isabela State University with La Salette University in Northern Luzon, through
the SVD system and other community groups through the Earthsavers-UNESCO
DREAM Center. My Skype address is cecile.alvarez7 and Viber number is +63917543-2889. We have a nationwide radio broadcast. We are now building a new Earthsavers website with the help of Filipino-American students from Stanford University in
California, USA. Our email address is: dreamcenterphilippines@yahoo.com.ph
JCR: By the other hand, I wanted to quote a phrase of Mr. Ban Ki-moon, SecretaryGeneral of the United Nations: There is one universal truth, applicable to all countries,
cultures and communities: violence against women is never acceptable, never excusable, never tolerable. Under this premise, our intentionality would be to integrate
the new humanism vision of UNESCO to all our readers, especially for the women. In
this way, I was thinking about how create a new vanishing point and raise awareness
about the situation of women worldwide. Thats why I feel you could help us to build
that kind of vision with your artistic and creative approach. Why do you think it is so
important the theatre to help people in general and specially for those who are now
handicapped physically and psychologically?
CGA: Theatre is a mirror. It calls attention to problems and provides a multi-sectoral
avenue for an intercultural dialogue to reflect on solutions and creatively bond groups
of common interest to cooperatively address or prevent crisis. Creative empowerment
with skills and confidence building coupled with endurance and perseverance is a prerequisite armor for people who are in a mental state of discombobulation because of
incalculable grief of loss, anger and despair due to physical incapacity or deprivation. It
is an engine for creative industry and social entrepreneurship.
Theatre is also an anchor that can help participants and audience grow in the appreciation of indigenous heritage and traditional values that must not be laid aside but reconciled with technological advances. It is an antidote to forgetfulness. In fact, a memory
bank to draw lessons from history to guide present and future action because the worst
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illness that can be inflicted on a person or a nation is amnesia and even Alzheimers disease.
JCR: In this sense, doing a cultural-sensitive parallelism between the emotional shock
after earthquake that shook Bohol, I wanted you to express that, under UN WOMEN studies, 70% of women in the world report having experienced physical and/or sexual
violence at some point in their lifetime. Do you think it could be interesting to
introduce theatre therapy into educational curricula at schools? Could that help the 60
million girls worldwide who are married before the age of 18?
CGA: Yes. It is necessary to introduce an early awareness for the curriculum in
schools. I had talked with our Secretary of Education informing him of our healing arts
education module and he was receptive to integrate it in our K-12 educational
curriculum. We are concerned that media also serves as a creative classroom and that
local governments must be appropriately involved.
There is a Commission on the Role of Women. Media must sustain interest on the
violations or non-implementations of laws to protect the rights of women and children
provide as well the good news. We linked up agencies of government, a number led by
women and there is a greater number of women in both houses of the legislature.
Senator Loren Legarda, Chair of the Committee on Environment and Climate Change
has stressed that there is an urgent need of healing. Disasters have wreaked havoc on
cities and psyches across the Philippines. We cannot allow these people to wallow in
collective sense of loss, grief and depression the same way we dont allow the wounded
to be left untreated. We need to deliver psycho-social assistance to these
victims. Besides her commendation, our Bohol effort has received attention as well
from other women legislators, Senator Pia Cayetano who heads the Education and
Culture Committee, Senator Cynthia Villar who addresses agricultural security, Senator
Grace Poe who supervises the Committee on Communications and Information and
Senator Nancy Binay as Minority Leader in the Committee on Women, Family
Relations and Gender Equality and Senator Miriam Defensor-Santiago for Foreign
Relations.
In the House of Representatives, the President of the Lady Legislators,-Representative
Gina de Venecia composed of of the Congress. She is a mother, who in losing her
only daughter in a fire has created a support network to deal with the pain of loss of
their children.
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the personal visit of United Nations Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon to Tacloban, Leyte.
UNESCOs advocacy of global citizenship underscores the need to inculcate a sense of
kinship with the family of nations and as well as a sense of duty and responsibility to
advance the welfare of every citizen, regardless of race or creed to protect the planet
earth, our common home.
JCR: By the other hand, I also wanted you to ask about your beliefs, in order to
understand better the bridges that you do between culture and spirituality. Is theatre therapy a thinking way faced with religions or, on the contrary, it is a new form of entanglement cultures?
CGA: Theatre therapy requires the appreciation and sensitivity in applying the inherent
qualities of theatre (the meeting ground of all the arts) for healing. Those in difficult
circumstances feel isolated and helpless. Theatre is a social art that engenders linkages,
participation, and social interaction. It brings hope like a Balm in Gilead. After conducting theatre workshops since I was 15 years old beginning at the Orthopedic
Hospital under a Jesuit drama and media teacher, Fr. James B. Reuter pursuing this
mission when I founded the Philippine Educational Theatre Association (PETA in
1967); and carrying on in exile at La MaMa Theatre in a Brooklyn public school, working the trainable and educable students, many institutions like the prison and church
groups in ghettos, the deaf, the mentally challenged and even the delinquent at some
point. I have been elated and gratified that the crippled, the blind are transformed like
butterflies out of a cocoon.
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JCR: At this point, it is interesting note that famous quantum physics Basarab Nicolescu said that word war does not exists anymore in the vocabulary of transdisciplinary, because its goals are understand the present world, which passes by
understanding the meaning of our life and our sense of death in this world which is
ours. Then, seeing theatre therapy as interdisciplinary programs which were
recognized as UNESCO Artists for Peace for the cultural bridges developed How do
you see the future of the humanity after all your long experience as exiled? Could we
achieve the SDG goals proposed in the agenda post-2015?
CGA: Our work in exile to help achieve a peaceful restoration of our democracy
provided me a stronger perspective that justice will prevail no matter how exceedingly
slow it may seem to grind. Nothing is impossible with Gods grace coupled with ones
willingness to sacrifice with determination, patience and faith to pursue what is right
and defend the truth.
I am confident that if the social conscience is forged and global political leaders are concienticized; the post 2015 agenda for sustainable development can be agreed upon and
can be realized. I believe that we all care for the future of our children and
grandchildren. Cooperation is absolutely essential to insure the survival and safety of
mankind through the health of our habitat. We cannot afford to fail. Self-interest must
be substituted by commitment for the common good.
JCR: I cannot imagine how such experience as exile changed your life and your way of
thinking. Maybe it is interesting mentioned now that, globally, around 603 million
women live in countries where domestic violence is not yet considered a crime. Have
you ever considered writing a theatre piece to empower women in such situation?
Our theatre therapy experience is a vehicle to draw them out of despair and despondency to help them express their fears and anxieties, to recall their experience of trauma
and portray through any artistic form synchronized with their dream of a better life and
hope for its fulfillment. They become handicapable able to smile and continue
learning while earning, rebuilding their lives with fortitude and faith. They have to recall their own good experiences and use it as a foundation to develop the spiritual
strength to continue and find a sense of confidence and purpose of existence.
CGA: Returning to the Philippines When I was in exile, convinced that the UN
Conference on Women in Mexico in 1980 was a historic milestone to put in the global
agenda. I was determined to participate and call attention to the marginalization of
women in all aspects of life. We are lucky in the Philippines there is a law that punishes
violence against women and children. The UN has passed the convention on the
Elimination of Discrimination against Women. (CEDAW)
I believe in miracles and the power of prayers having undergone the persecution and
repression of a dictatorial regime and being victorious after a long difficult struggle for
freedom. Personally being afflicted with cancer, faith together with respect for my doctors medical formula for recovery has been the spine for my journey of survival. This
is the wellspring of my conviction.
I have featured in our award-winning DZRH Radio Balintataw, the heroic lives of
ordinary women on nationwide broadcast & global webcast to inspire those in trouble and in doubt about stories of women in difficult circumstances that fought for their
right to a dignified life and strengthen their faith in Divine providence with the value of
a supportive family.
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One is a crippled who was able to serve as a senior official in the Solicitor-Generals
office. Another is a cancer victim after being cured had set-up a help cooperative for cancer patients called the I CAN SERVE FOUNDATION. An indigenous woman in Palawan
struggled to achieve education and after graduation, did not look for greener pastures in
the city life but remained to teach the tribal children.
A historical figure, the wife of Sultan Kudarat, jumped-off the cliff with her child rather
than be caught and used as a hostage by the Spanish conquistadores to allow Kudarat to
lead the Muslims in defying the unhampered occupation of Mindanao.
Beyond our local heroines, there is the path-breaking leadership of Dr. Irina Bokova, the
first woman to lead UNESCO on her second term is a champion of new humanism with
her cross- disciplinary vigorous pursuit of education for all especially for girls.
JCR: I am agree that Dr. Irina Bokova is a big example for thousand of women, but you
are too. I am sure there will be thousands of people very fortunate to be around of your
transformative energy, because you work with passion and wisdom. Personally, I will contact you again in the closed future, when I visit the Southeast Asia. Thank you very much
to share your reflections and your time in this special day. I am wondering if there is anything I have not asked about that you wish I had?
CGA: Partnerships and linkages are so important in spreading the apostolate of theatre
that I have been engaged for 55 years reiterating like a Mantra, that we can win the war against poverty and pollution, crime
and corruption, disease and drugs, terrorism and tyranny. Not by
force but by art, not by compulsion but by persuasion through a
community spirit of caring and collaboration.
Dear Javier, You were incisive and comprehensive in your
questions, I was delighted to respond.
We look forward to your visit where we can have a stronger
exchange of best practices to realize our common vision that
culture with arts is a catalyst to realizing the UNESCO
Education for All Policy, now given the mechanics for
implementation by UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moons push
for a Global Education First Initiative.
The assurance of the replication, echoing and adoption of the
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Bohol Declaration that launched RAINBOW CROSS is guaranteed through the messages
from the Ocean Security Initiative led by its Chairman, Viktor Sebek, with Carlos Mauricio Iriarte Barrios, Gobernador del Departamento del Huila, Colombia in the LatinAmerican region, Professor Dr. Angela de Luca Rebello Wagener, Member of the OSI
Scientific and Academic Board, Potificia Universidade Catlica Do Rio de Janeiro, Vinicio A. Cerezo, President 0f Guatemala from 1989 to 1991 as well as from leaders in key
points of the globe: from South Africa, Francois Baird, Chairman of Daniel J Edelman
Inc./ Policy Advisory Board Member: Ocean Security International; from Russia, Vtaly
Lyststov, member of OSI Scientific and Academic Board National Research Center Kucrhatov Institute as well as the network of the Climate Institute in Washington
D.C USA, one of the oldest NGOs concerned with global warming headed by its President, Mr. John Topping, Jr. with Philippine Climate Change Commissioner Heherson Alvarez as Chairman of its advisory board.
We are planning a global playwriting contest as a collaborative effort of the ITI-CIDC and
the International Playwrights Forum (IPP) that will be coordinated by our SecretaryGeneral of our Philippine ITI Center, an award-winning playwright, Dr. Isagani Cruz.
JCR: Thanks a lot Cecile, I will try to visit you in the following months to continue with
our dialogue. At the final point, what should it be your message to all the readers of
Global Education Magazine in the International Womens Day?
CGA: Women constitute the other half of the world population. A
woman is a symbol for Mother Earth, for our motherland. It is a
portrait of love, the heart of the home. It is sad that the lament of
mothers so often heard in areas of armed conflict and places devastated by ecological disasters have not been fully responded.
Justice, peace and sustainable development must prevail in all
corners of the world. Women must be harnessed in the center of
peace negotiations and good governance. We are grateful for the
concern of Global Education Magazine in linking women
through media to continue the struggle for gender equity, protection of their rights and family solidarity. We must sustain energy
and strength from our common vision of restoring the beauty and
bounty of our environment as we seek a safer, peaceful, sustainable world for our children up to the seventh generation.
JCR: Thanks a lot again Cecile for your inspiring words in the
interview.
24
5 JUNE
DEADLINE FOR MAY 5
Con el apoyo de la
Oficina de
Santiago
Organizacin
de las Naciones Unidas
para la Educacin,
la Ciencia y la Cultura
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by Sonia Colasse
e-mail: soloinfinity.ws@gmail.com
website:www.soloinfinty.com/enzo
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Ma maman fait parti de ses nombreuses femmes aux grands curs, aux sourires enjleurs et dots dun trs grand courage!
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Ma maman fait parti de ses nombreuses femmes aux grands curs, aux sourires enjleurs et dots dun trs grand courage!
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Research Papers
Millennium
Development Goals
Inspiring Change With the
Womens Directorship
Programme
Amy Lau and Nick Marsh
Empoderamento feminino sem
fronteiras
Valdir Lamim-Guedes, Eliane Santana, Luciene Silva
Souza, Paulo Guilherme
Martins da Rocha
Rape in Somalia: Women and
Double Victimisation
Transversal Studies
Global Education
Mulheres Rurais: Cooperao Internacional para Estudos Multidisciplinares de
Gnero, Educao, Cidadania e Responsabilidade Social da Universidade,
Jos Cludio Rocha e Denise A. B. F. Rocha
The Story of the Green Lane Environmental Diary: Uniting Children and Cultures
through Environmental Education, Katy Orell
The Divine Nature of Women Naturally A Challenge of 21st Century. Rashmi
Chandran
And the Walls Come Folding Down: A Transdisciplinary Approach to Building
Awareness, Balance, and Connection in Ourselves, Our Schools, in Our Communities,
and in Our World. Karen Melaas
Raquel Bocardi
Julia Carter
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Nick Marsh
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unknown, which means they more often than not hire men, using channels to access people
they know of, or are already familiar with. But change is coming
down, especially in places such as India, Japan and Korea, coupled with a general lack of
government support for childcare and other family-led initiatives.
Companies often highlight the lack of a skilled talent pool of women though
research consistently demonstrates this is not the case. Female leaders are simply more
hidden and less inclined to put themselves forward as they do not feel empowered or ready to
take on a board role. Many current female leaders highlight a lack of confidence as a key
barrier to their progression. Statistics show women will only put themselves forward for a
role if they feel they fulfil at least 80 percent of the stated criteria, while men will pursue a
role if they only fulfil 50-60 percent of the requirements.
The gender imbalance costs firms money, as those who fail to attract, retain and
promote women to top leadership positions experience a significant drain on resources and
talent. AMcKinseystudy (iv) found that companies with the highest female representation in
top management positions achieved return on equity of 41 percent higher than companies
with the lowest representation.
Recent moves in Europe, where the European Parliament passed a vote requiring
large, listed companies ensure women hold 40 percent of non-executive board seats by 2020
(v), are a timely reminder of the need for companies to act. This directive may lead to female
leaders in other regions being called upon to take up board positions in Europe, resulting in a
costly drain on talent in some markets.
Giving women equal opportunities and enabling them to reach their full potential also
offers macroeconomic benefits. In Japan for example, by 2030 the National Institute of
Population and Social Security Research estimates the labour force will have contracted by
over 15 percent (vi), threatening GDP growth and placing a high burden on those in work to
provide benefits for a growing number of retirees. Women could be a key solution to this
problem as they are currently underrepresented in the workforce and often overlooked for
senior positions. Japan is now committed to changing the levels of female participation with
Prime Minister Shinzo Abe recently reviving a government target set a decade ago, of raising
the proportion of women in leadership positions to 30 percent by 2020. Listed companies are
also required to appoint at least one woman to their board of directors. In a positive first
move, Honda has just announced its first female board member, Hideko Kunii (vii).
The benefits of gender balanced boards are well documented, not only do women
serve to better represent the needs and wants of shareholders, but they bring a fresh dynamic
and a skillset that enriches the boardroom. It is proven that greater diversity ensures a better
outcome, so why is progress stalling?
Issues at play
Gender diversity is a long debated and discussed issue, but we were seeing little
action being taken to tackle the root cause of the issue.
There are many factors at play that impact on the existing gender imbalance - societal
expectations, family pressures, workplace culture and environmental barriers. In Asia in
particular the double burden of balancing work and family pressures wears many women
In the context of all these global issues, and a clear business need to change the
dynamics of boardrooms across the globe, Harvey Nash set out to discover steps that were
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being taken to enhance the readiness of female talent to take on board positions. What we
identified was a huge gap between discussion and action there were no internationally-led
programmes available to support women to build their confidence and prepare them for the
next step in their careers. Therefore in 2012 Harvey Nash partnered with The University of
Hong Kong and the Womens Directorship Programme was created to answer the worldwide
business communitys call to tackle the existing gender diversity imbalance.
participants develop their own set of strategies tailored to their career ambitions, situation
and personality, recognising that these will evolve over time as new challenges arise and
elements in their lives change.
Harvey Nash and Executive Education of the Faculty of Business and Economics
launched the certificated Womens Directorship Programme in early 2013 with a view to
enabling participants to be more effective at managing boards, and serving to increase the
supply of board-ready women executives across geographies and business sectors.
The programme includes five modules, taught over two three-day sessions and covers
the following subjects:
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After the completion of the inaugural programme, 30 percent of the participants went
on to hold board positions and a further 30 percent achieved a promotion.
The Womens Directorship Programme alumni network serves to provide on-going
support and networking opportunities to ensure the past participants are well placed for the
next step in their careers.
Ruth Rowan, Marketing Director AMEA of BT Group, a participant on the inaugural
programme, described the course as an opportunity to broaden her experience and perspective,
and highlighted the opportunity to network with senior business leaders. She added: Im
certainly delighted that I took the initiative to join this course and would encourage anyone,
male or female to think more broadly about how we invest in developing ourselves to the
same extent that we consider how we develop our teams and our businesses. Its only going to
be a win-win for everyone.
See more responses here (x).
Secondly we planned to raise the importance of equal opportunities in the workplace,
enabling women to reach their full potential. Results to date include:
The involvement of the business community (including over 20 business leaders as guest
speakers) and their commitment to change
The programme itself has been cited as best practice by the business leaders involved and
has received widespread coverage in global outlets including The FT, International New
York Times and Bloomberg
Increased confidence
Defined career plans and objectives
Higher profile within their companies and externally
Exposure to additional board roles
The Womens Directorship Programme has highlighted the keys to success in a
womans career sponsorship, mentoring, coaching and networking. The programme has
enabled participants to develop board communication and management skills, develop tailored
strategies to realise their career ambitions, gain access to senior business leaders and benefit
from peer-to-peer learning from high achieving women from different business sectors and
cultures.
It is recognized by the 30% Club (xi) London and Hong Kong as a transformative initiative
and has gained high renown with Chairmen of FTSE 100 companies
In terms of the wider implications of this programme, it has served to highlight the
numbers of women ready to take on board roles and has enhanced the visibility of the issue as
a whole. This in turn serves to inspire other women to follow suit and over the coming years
we will track the enhanced participation rate and better business outcomes as a result.
The programme is a long-term approach to manage the pipeline of female talent and
promote equal opportunities for women.
Together with the business community we are committed to creating lasting change by
unlocking the talent pipeline and enabling more senior women leaders to reach the boardroom.
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We are already starting to see the transformation through the enlarged group of board-ready
participants and their impact as agents of change.
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gress and work their way up the ladder to take on these senior roles in the future. Social
dynamics are shifting, men are no longer the sole breadwinners and it is widely recognised that
women make 80 percent of all purchasing decisions.
Programmes such as the Womens Directorship Programme serve to raise the business
benefits of balanced boards and the visibility of the plethora of female talent out there. In turn
it also enables women to see the opportunities that exist.
It makes sense for women to achieve the same success as men across the globe the
business community just needs to readjust and realise the full value women bring to the
boardroom table.
Women need to adopt the four keys to success as highlighted through the Womens
Directorship Programme. These elements, coupled with the support of their peers,
organisations and on-going training, in addition to commitments from search firms, will result
in a positive uplift of the number of women progressing through the ranks:
i v M c K i n s e y Wo m e n M a t t e r
2007-2009: http://www.globewomen.org/Diversity/2011%20Diversity%20Colloq/Fiona%20Grie
g%20PPT.pdf
v EU Parliament proposal:
http://eur-lex.europa.eu/LexUriServ/LexUriServ.do?uri=CELEX:52012PC0614:EN:NOT
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Abstract: Gender equality and women's empowerment are Human Rights and
prerequisites for the successful development, and actions to reduce poverty, build
democratic governance, crisis prevention and recovery, and promoting sustainable
development. In this paper, Education is presented as an important initiative to
promote female empowerment, based on the activities of Non Governmental
Organization Brazilian Educadores sem Fronteiras. This organization, by providing
free complementary educational activities in areas of socio-cultural-educational high
vulnerability allows several girls start to take their life stories transformed through
education.
Keywords: education, Human Rights, gender equality, Educators Without Borders.
Valdir Lamim-Guedes
Eliane Santana
Luciene Silva Souza
Paulo Guilherme Martins da Rocha
Instituto Educadores Sem Fronteiras.
contato@educadoressemfronteiras.org.br
web: www.educadoressemfronteiras.org.br
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Segundo Kochiro Matsura, Diretor Geral da UNESCO entre 1999 e 2009, movimentos como a Educao para Todos (EPT) tratam, basicamente, da igualdade: Se as crianas
forem excludas do acesso educao, elas sero privadas de seus direitos humanos e impedidas, da forma mais bsica, de desenvolver seus talentos e interesses (Unesco, 2003, p. 1). O
EPT e outros movimentos como a Educao Global, a Educao para a Paz e aqueles que
promovem uma Educao Critica, reconhecem o papel poltico da educao, como fez o
pedagogo brasileiro Paulo Freire (1921-1997) em sua obra, sobretudo ao apresentar uma
concepo libertadora da educao (Freire, 2002).
Entre os Objetivos do Milnio, o 3 se refere promoo da igualdade entre os sexos e
autonomia das mulheres, eliminando as disparidades em todos os nveis de ensino. Isto ,
superar as divergncias no acesso escolarizao formal e promover polticas que ofeream
oportunidades para mulheres ocuparem papis cada vez mais ativos no mundo econmico e
poltico, aes essenciais para a superao das desigualdades de gnero (OdmBrasil, 2014).
O empoderamento (empowerment, em ingls,) das mulheres importante no apenas para o
cumprimento do objetivo 3, mas para vrios outros, em especial os ligados pobreza, fome,
sade e educao. No Brasil, as mulheres j estudam mais que os homens, mas ainda tm menos chances de emprego, recebem menos do que homens trabalhando nas mesmas funes e,
quando no ocupam os piores postos (Pnud, 2012).
Entre os Sete Princpios de Empoderamento das Mulheres: igualdade significa
negcios, propostos pelo Fundo de Desenvolvimento das Naes Unidas para a Mulher
(UNIFEM), o 4. se refere promoo da educao, ao treinamento e desenvolvimento
profissional das mesmas (Unifem, 2010). Ou seja, o reconhecimento do papel da educao na
promoo da igualdade financeira para as mulheres. Bem como, o estimulo a esforos para
que as mulheres tenham igualdade de acesso educao elementar, mas incluindo-se a
profissionalizante, ao passar a frequentar os bancos universitrios. Isto passa a ser
especialmente importante se considerarmos que as exigncias so maiores em relao formao feminina para ocupar melhores cargos.
A educao, em diferentes nveis, deve ser
um esforo da sociedade, como de polticas pblicas, visando a igualdade de gnero. O princpio 6,
trata de promover a igualdade atravs de iniciativas comunitrias e de defesa. Estes dois
princpios de Empoderamento das Mulheres so
complementares, pois devem ser desenvolvidos
dentro das comunidades, com o apoio do Estado.
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A qualidade da educao bsica pblica no Brasil baixa, sobretudo nas escolas das
periferias, como no bairro Jardim ngela, regio sul da cidade de So Paulo. A Organizao
no Governamental Instituto Educadores Sem Fronteiras (ESF), nascida em 2008 a partir do
sonho de Ndia (co-fundadora do Instituto) de entrar na Universidade de So Paulo (USP)
(mais sobre este sonho em Blog da Redao, 2008), desenvolve um importante trabalho de
permitir aos educandos complementar os estudos formais fora do perodo escolar. Isto tem
sido essencial para os oitenta educandos atendidos no projeto, entre Ensino Fundamental (ciclo II) e Ensino Mdio.
Este trabalho est em consonncia com a Misso do ESF que de apoiar crianas e
adolescentes em
risco social, proporcionando o
desenvolvimento
d a s p o t e n c i a l idades do cidado,
atravs da
educao complementar e da democratizao do
conhecimento
(Educadores Sem
Fronteiras, 2013).
A atividade
principal do ESF
a de proporcionar
educao complementar gratuita
em regies de alta
vulnerabilidade scio-cultural-educacional - Jardim ngela e na regio oeste de So Paulo,
prximo ao Conjunto Habitacional (Cohab) Raposo Tavares -, oferecendo aulas transdisciplinares, com vrios elementos ldicos e conectadas com a realidade dos alunos e tambm encontros e expedies culturais que possibilitem, alm do acesso, a construo autnoma do
conhecimento. Assim, se pode instigar a curiosidade, resgatar o fascnio, democratizar e
viabilizar sonhos....
Com o apoio extra, muitos educandos conseguem entrar em um curso tcnico ou
superior, o que para o Instituto o resultado de uma grande superao pessoal, sobretudo,
para as meninas. Ou seja, o ESF proporciona um empoderamento emprico e cientfico para
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estas jovens, permitindo-lhes que reescrevam suas histrias. A seguir, destacamos algumas
dessas histrias de vida que encontraram um colorido novo por meio da Educao.
Quando eu entrei no Educadores Sem Fronteiras, no imaginava a importncia
que esse lugar teria pra mim. Mesmo sem gostar de estudar, me esforcei porque
sabia que precisava passar em uma boa faculdade; e com o mtodo de ensino
Sem Fronteiras, descobri que estudar pode ser muito legal! Apenas um
semestre como educanda me fez refletir sobre muitas coisas e mudar meus
conceitos sobre educao! Hoje, sou bolsista em uma das melhores faculdades do
pas e continuo em busca do saber, porque descobri que eu sou Sem Fronteiras!
Thawane, educanda do
ESF em 2010, uma das primeiras colocadas do curso de
Administrao do Centro
Universitrio da Faculdade
de Engenharia Industrial
(FEI) em 2011. estagiria
do setor administrativo financeira do ESF. Na reportagem da Rede Globo (2012),
alm da descrio das
atividades do ESF, h um
vdeo com um trecho do depoimento da Thawane.
Os Educadores, na minha
vida, fechou um ciclo que eu
no conseguia concluir
sozinha. Tive que estudar por
cerca de trs anos solitariamente, at que entrei na faculdade e em seguida, conheci a ONG.
Comecei a estudar aos sbados com os educadores, enquanto cursava o primeiro ano de
faculdade, pois sentia que ali algo importante iria acontecer. Percebi como fcil aprender
quando se tem professores interessados no seu crescimento, em turmas pequenas, disponveis
a tirar as suas dvidas a qualquer momento, no somente durante as aulas. Lamentei no os
ter conhecido antes, pois teria encurtado o caminho longo que percorri.
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Referncias
BLOG DA REDAO. (2008). Educadores sem fronteiras. Planeta Sustentvel. Disponvel
emhttp://planetasustentavel.abril.com.br/blog/blog-da-redacao/126843/
EDUCADORES SEM FRONTEIRAS (2013). Disponvel
emhttp://www.educadoressemfronteiras.org.br/home#!educadores
FREIRE, P. (2002). Pedagogia da autonomia. 23. ed. Rio de Janeiro: Paz e Terra.
ODMBRASIL (2014). O Brasil e os ODM. . Disponvel
emhttp://www.odmbrasil.gov.br/o-brasil-e-os-odm
ONU (1948). Declarao Universal dos Direitos Humanos. Disponvel
emhttp://portal.mj.gov.br/sedh/ct/legis_intern/ddh_bib_inter_universal.htm
PNUD (2012). 3: Igualdade entre os sexos e a autonomia das mulheres. Disponvel
emhttp://www.pnud.org.br/ODM3.aspx
REDE GLOBO. (2012). Minuto Criana Esperana gravado na ONG Educadores sem
Fronteiras. Disponvel em
http://redeglobo.globo.com/criancaesperanca/noticia/2012/10/minuto-crianca-esperanca-e-g
ravado-na-ong-educadores-sem-fronteiras.html
UNESCO (2003). Gnero e Educao para Todos: o salto rumo igualdade (relatrio conciso). Disponvel em http://unesdoc.unesco.org/images/0013/001324/132480por.pdf
UNIFEM (2010). Princpios de Empoderamento das Mulheres: Igualdade Significa
Negcios. Disponvel emhttp://www.unifem.org.br/sites/700/710/00001126.pdf
UNIFEM e UNICEF (2004). Desigualdades Raciais e de Gnero entre Crianas,
Adolescentes e Mulheres no Brasil, no contexto dos Objetivos de Desenvolvimento do
Milnio. Disponvel em http://www.unifem.org.br/sites/700/710/00000163.pdf
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Introduction
Abstract: Rape is crime that ought to be punished and prevented, but in Somalia after
more than two decades of protracted conflict, sexual violence is now being referred to
as normal by Human Rights Watch report (1). United Nations human rights argue
that women and girls in Somalia suffer double victimization due to the pervasive
nature of sexual violence. The perpetrators of the violence include security agents,
armed gangs and well known neighbours to the victims, all with complete impunity.
The Federal Government of Somalia is yet to walk the talk when it comes to resolve
to tackle sexual violence.
Keywords: Rape, Somalia, Mogadishu, Women, Girls, Human Rights Watch,
Conflict, Federal Government of Somalia, camp, Internally Displaced Persons,
AMISOM
Somalia has had no centralised and capable governing authority that can safeguard its
most venerable population from sexual violence. The security forces now stand accused for
orchestrating, rather than preventing and prosecuting sexual violence against women, girls
and boys. The Human Right Watch report brings froth the pervasive nature of sexual
violence in the country that has had no central government since 1994 with the most
vulnerable segment of her population with nowhere to turn to. The state security machinery,
which ought to protect the defenceless, happens to be associated with perpetrating, if not
being a silent observer. According to the rights body in its 2014 report titled Here Rape is
Normal: A Five-Point Plan to Curtail Sexual Violence in Somalia, women and girls are a
target from members of state security forces, operating with complete impunity, sexually
assault, rape, beat, shoot, and stab women and girls (2). In Somalia women, girls, and boys
are not even safe even in places where they have sought refuge like in the camps (3). Within
the vicinity of the camp women and girls get attacked when going to the market, field to
fetch firewood. As a result, Somalia women and girls face what the UNs independent expert
on human rights in Somalia refers to as double victimization. First is the rape or sexual
assault itself, then failure of the authorities to provide protection neither effective justice or
medical and social support.
Sexual Violence and the Compounding Factor
The two decades of protracted conflict has resulted in the collapse of medical services
making it torturous for affected women and girls to secure medication. Culture of impunity
and the patriarchal nature of the Somalia police force make it even complicated for the
victims not turn to the police for protection or prosecution of perpetrators. One of the heartbreaking stories in the Human Rights Watch report is that of the 37-year-old single mother of
six, Maryam, who was raped in 2012 at a camp in Wadajir district of the capital Mogadishu.
[]The four men all raped me one by one while one of them stood guard
outside. I was struggling with the last man and he stabbed me with the bayonet
on his gun. I was screaming and no one came out to help. (On reporting to the
police that one of the rapists was wearing a police uniform she then started to
bleed profusely from my vagina). They told me to go home and wash off the
blood. But before they let me go, they told me I had to wash the floor where I
was bleeding. I sat down, they gave me a brush and I cleaned the floor (4)
This was not the first time Maryam was raped by then five months pregnant and after
the police station humiliating experience, she never returned to the station to pursue her case.
At the back of her mind, fear for retribution from her assailants, among them an attacker
dressed in uniform. Maryam later miscarried, and three months later she was raped again at
night in her tent by a different gang of assailants, notes the report. The Federal Government
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of Somalia has in time indicated its intention to tackle sexual violence against women and
girls. In May 2013, the government signed a pact with the United Nations representative on
sexual violence in conflict committing to addressing the problem. The government has yet to
follow its words with action as no credible actions have been taken to protect the women,
girls and boys who now continue to be assaulted.
State of Rape in Somalia
The United Nations Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA)
notes, in the first half of the year, 800 cases of sexual and gender-based violence were
reported in Mogadishu, Somalia capital. Jens Laerke, OCHA spokesperson said (5) the rape
perpetrators are said to be armed men and men wearing military uniforms. UNICEF(6)
spokesperson Marixie Mercado also notes that around one-third of the victims of sexual
violence were children, mostly boys with UNICEF and partners providing help to some
2,200 victims. According to UN (7) between January and November 2012, United Nations
partners and service providers registered over 1,700 rape cases. With all of these figures, the
actual number is likely much higher, as many victims of sexual violence never report their
experiences to the authorities for various reasons, including fear of reprisals from authorities
or perpetrators. Women and girls are also wary of the ostracism and social stigma associated
with rape and they have little confidence that the authorities will undertake an adequate
investigation into their cases.
Another story in the Rights report is that of 34-year-old Shamso (8) who in early
2013 was raped by three men in her home at night in a camp. The attackers stabbed her when
she attempted to resist in front of her three children.
[...] One of the men came in and raped me while the second and third men
stood outside [the hut] and guarded it. They took turns. The men didnt hurry
because mostly women live in the camp and are no threat to them. During the
attack, one of them told me, You can tell anyone that we did this, were not
scared (9)
The UNs report (10) on Sexual violence in conflict note that sexual violence is
almost universally underreported and this is due to a number of reasons namely the risks
faced by survivors, witnesses, humanitarian workers and journalists who come forward,
including the risk of reprisal. On February 5, 2013 a woman was tried and sentenced after
reporting that she raped by security forces. Not spared also was the journalist who
interviewed her. This ordeal suffered by the victim and by the journalist exposes a strategy to
target and silence the reporting and exposure of sexual violence. Another story is that of
Razmo (11) that the Human Rights watch researchers, whose daughter was raped and die
before reaching the hospital
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[...] 17-year-old daughter, who had been raped at the Sarkuusta Camp, died as
they were trying to take her to a hospital several kilometers away. With no
mobile emergency medical services available and with no money to hire a
vehicle or even
Medical services availability is hampered by the departure of international medical
NGO Medecins Sans Frontieres (MSF) back in 2013 (12) due to insecurity highlighting the
complexity of the prevailing situation in Somalia. Such service could prevent rape victims
from contracting HIV or other sexually transmitted disease as it happened to 28-years-old
Asha (13).
[...] I was raped; I fled and took a minibus back home. I went to a [local]
hospital first and then after a week I got more ill and went to the hospital on the
Burundi base (AMISOM), but didnt get treatment I went to NGO service
provider at the end of Ramadan a month later so it was too late for [preventative
medical treatment]. I had gone to the other hospitals and been treated for a chest
infection. When I went to the two hospitals I didnt mention that I was raped
because I didnt know anything about HIV and sexually transmitted infections.
The United Nations High Commission for Refugee (UNHCR) told Right Watch
researchers that, services for sexual violence are available across the capital Mogadishu but
victims says they are not aware of such services. The two decades of conflict do not help
either as existing judicial system is weak where it does exits. Compounding the quest for
justice by the victims is the cultural taboo that makes it even torturous to report rape to fear
for reprisals considering that among the perpetrators, some happens to security officers. This
would need training for security officers on issues of human rights to strategies of assisting
victim to initiate prosecution where there favourable grounds. Not all is lost as reports from
Somalia police reports indicate that about 100 rape cases were opened in Mogadishu
between January and November 2012 (14). But beneath this, the Mogadishu courts rarely
hands down rape prosecutions, but in July 2013, a court convicted a neighbour for raping a
15-year-old girl with disabilities in a camp in Hodan and sentenced him to 10 years
imprisonment (15). This indicates that with help and time rape perpetrators can face justice
but much will to be done for rape to stop being a normal occurrence in Somali.
Sexual Violence and Protracted Conflict
Its twenty four years now since Somalia descended into anarchy and there has limited
progress on the political front towards a stable Somalia. UN reports (16) on sexual violence
talks of the correlation between spike in the number sexual violence recorded cases and
intensification of military operations against Al-Shabaab in the suburbs of Mogadishu. The
victims caught in this context have been subjected to repeated and systematic sexual
violence from members of organised armed groups and Somalia security forces.
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Complicating the victims plight is the inability to identify perpetrators when it comes to
which armed or security group they belong due to fear for retaliation. Reprieve for the
victims would be a functioning and credible judicial system, but that is none-existence in
Somalia.
The Penal Code, under which sexual violence ought to be prosecuted, does
criminalize rape. However rape within the context of penal code is considered as a crime
against morals rather than against the person. This is an additional layer on top of the
dehumanization, stigmatization and notion that most women dont even trust the judicial
system, as it has done little if any to punish the perpetrators. UN observes that there situations
when cases are settled through traditional mechanisms where the victims are compelled to
marry their perpetrator. While the wheel of justice have been slow and sluggish, as of
November 2013, the military court had opened 13 cases of sexual violence against members
of the Somali security forces. Of the cases, one resulted in death sentence, nine still pending
and the other three in acquittal.
Methodology
Desktop Research review from various reports on rape cases in Somalia
Human Rights Watch: Steps to Tackling Sexual Violence in Somali
The Human Rights Watch in their 2014 report proposes a five-point road map as a way of
tackling sexual violence in Somalia. Key among them is minimizing risk factor that
intensifies womens vulnerability especially those living in camps like joint patrols of
competent and trained security offices coupled with community with safety coordinators
and thirdly campaigns against existing attitudes of men and women about their roles and
status. These measures would work if approached from a short to medium and long term
approach and through a collaborative approach.
Second is the need for accessibility to emergency health services to deal with acute and
long-term physical, psychological and social consequences (17) of sexual violence. Due to
broken down system due to conflict few of the victims of rape have been able to access postrape care. This could be done by ensuring that health service provide necessary medical
support (18) to women more so medical supplies to treat post-rape care. The Federal
Government of Somalia will need to walk the talk beyond just pledging that it will tackle
sexual violence. With the security officer being on the spot for sexual violence, then the
government has a role to play beyond just boosting the capacity of the judicial services to
prosecute. The police are very instrumental in containing rape but that cannot be possible if
some of the officers are the perpetrators.
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Notes
1Human-Rights-Watch. (2014). Here, Rape is Normal A Five-Point Plan to Curtail
Sexual Violence in Somalia.Washington: Human Rights Watch
2Human-Rights-Watch, 2014. P:1, Here, Rape is Normal A Five-Point Plan to Curtail
Sexual Violence in Somalia.United States of America: Human Rights Watch
3 According to United Nations, there are 1.1 million people internally displaced persons in
Somalia with 369,000 found within Mogadishu
4 Human-Rights-Watch, 2014. P:1. Summary: Here, Rape is Normal A Five-Point Plan
to Curtail Sexual Violence in Somalia. Washington: Human Rights Watch
5 OCHA. (2013, August 16). UN humanitarian wing warns of pervasive sexual violence in
Somalia. Retrieved February 19 , 2014, from United Nations News Centre:
http://www.un.org/apps/news/story.asp/html/story.asp?NewsID=45641&Cr=sexual+violen
ce&Cr1=#.UwRbFe7frMw
6 Ibid
7 United-Nations, 2013, P. 14. Somalia; UN General Assembly Security Council, Report
of the Secretary-General on Sexual violence in conflict. New York: United Nations
8 Human-Rights-Watch, 2014. P:18. Improve Presention Strategies: Here, Rape is Normal A Five-Point Plan to Curtail Sexual Violence in Somalia. Washington: Human Rights
Watch
9 Ibid
10United-Nations, 2013, P.4UN General Assembly Security Council, Report of the
Secretary-General on Sexual violence in conflict. New York: United Nations
11, 12, 13, 14, 15 Ibid
16 United-Nations, 2013, PP. 14-15. Somalia; UN General Assembly Security Council,
Report of the Secretary-General on Sexual violence in conflict. New York: United Nations
17 Ibid
18 Human-Rights-Watch, 2014. P:1. Summary: Here, Rape is Normal A Five-Point Plan
to Curtail Sexual Violence in Somalia. Washington: Human Rights Watch
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Ideas and movements lay the foundation for social change, but in the end, it is the
people on the ground that make it happen. As we mark the arrival of International Womens
Day, it is important to ponder upon this years theme: Inspiring Change. We can analyze
these goals on an abstract level, looking at world-wide statistics and can then look at more
local cases to see the progress taking place on the ground.
While recent triumphs have allowed women to achieve a much greater degree of
equality, a cursory glance at recent statistics show that monumental progress is still
needed. Across the globe, 222 million women in developing countries that would like to
either delay or stop childbearing do not have the right forms of contraception to do so. In
addition, 16 million girls between the ages of 15 to 19 give birth every year roughly 11%
of all births worldwide. Faced with such startling figures, it is hard to know where and how
to start tackling such matters. It is due to the severity of these issues that the Millennium
Development Goals (MDGs) hold such a high importance towards the development of
societies around the world. The MDGs, created by the United Nations in 2002, aim to tackle
eight pressings issues plaguing the lives of the worlds poorest.
The MDG we are focusing on today is to promote gender equality and empower
women around the world. This goal aims to give girls their voice back; a single voice has the
potential to change communities and in turn, the world. Ban Ki Moon, the Secretary General
of the United Nations, spoke recently at Davos, the socio-economic world summit. During
his speech, he spoke on this theme. In his powerful and moving speech, he stressed, You
understand that when we give a girl better health, education and well-being, we see results
far beyond that individual. A girl is as valuable to our world as a tree is to a forest. When a
tree grows up straight and strong, the whole environment benefits. When a girl grows up
straight and strong, her family, her community and even her country can feel the positive
effects. In order to inspire change throughout the world, the key players in that change must
be aware of their potential to better the lives of their family, community members and
country. The plight of girls is addressed throughout this MDG and it is imperative that we
help Inspire the Change that is needed throughout the world. The question then is how do
we best accomplish this on a local level?
Email: Julia.carter333@gmail.com /
web: www.causeandaffectfoundation.org
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girls in school. The impact of this program has delayed the marriage of 10,000 girls in
Ethiopia, allowing those 10,000 girls to make an impact on their community and have the
opportunity to believe in a bright future!
I was not able to reach 10,000 girls, but I did
have the opportunity to reach out to a high school
class of forty Brazilian girls and boys. After
becoming immersed within the culture of Brazil
and having the chance to see all the beauty and
flaws that are intertwined within their culture, I
was able to detect an issue at hand. While in a lot
of countries, the issue for women is that they do
not have access to family planning and
contraception, that was not the case in my town.
In Lenis, contraception and family planning is provided for free at every health clinic. The
issue is that even though this contraception is available, teenagers are not aware that it is
accessible. Throughout my time, I visited four health clinics and spoke to various nurses
about the issue of teenage pregnancy. I asked them: if there is so much accessible
contraception, why are so many girls getting pregnant? They answered that many did know
the contraception was available, but many others just chose not to use it. A problem that
plagued the town was how young girls were being manipulated by their boyfriends who told
them that in order to prove they loved them, they had to have their babies. The mentality that
a girl has to do something so drastic and life-changing to please a boy is a troubling mindset
impregnated into their culture. Along with that, I noticed a trend that many of the girls in my
town look at themselves with little self-respect, walking around in tight, revealing clothes and
treating their bodies and lives with little dignity.
In order to address these aspects of Brazilian society and incorporate the values of
Girl Effect, I delivered a presentation to a group of high school students about the importance
of maintaining respect for yourself and others. I partnered up with a local nurse who gave a
presentation on the contraception available to them. I encouraged them to use these tools and
spoke about how important it is to dream for a brighter future and expect more out of yourself
than having babies. Together, we spoke about how in order for them to receive respect, they
must respect themselves first. The presentation, delivered entirely in Portuguese, inspired
meaningful conversations between the high school students and sparked the realization
amongst their teachers in attendance that many of their students are not fully grasping their
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own potential. Though the speech was far the most nerve-racking experience of my life, it
was also one of the most rewarding. Not only was I able to learn about the Brazilian culture
throughout my experience, but I also had the opportunity to learn that the things that are
happening to Brazilian adolescents do not stray too far from what is happening to American
kids of the same age.
Eager to learn more about the comparisons and contrasts between the two societies, I
decided to take another gap year in order to
volunteer in an inner city public school. I am
currently serving as a City Year Corp Member in
Providence Rhode Island in a 7th grade math
classroom. In the after school space, I help run a
program called Girl Talk, which is aimed to be a
safe space for young girls (sixth through eighth
grade) to discuss the obstacles they face in school
and in society. We aim to inspire the girls to aim
for a bright and hopeful future through discussionbased sessions.
One thing that I have learned throughout all my travels and volunteering is that the
small things can make the biggest impact. Even though Girl Talk only reaches the minds of
thirty girls, those thirty girls have the potential to change generations of lost potential. A
movement can start with just one girl who decides to change her fate and believes in inspiring
a broader change.
The MDGs on one level, are abstract and quite visionary, but each of those goals point
out a struggle that is happening on the ground and effecting the lives of millions. The success
of the MDGs is dependent upon organizations like The Girl Effect and Girl Talk where girls
around the world are being educated on the potential that their lives hold. Women around the
world are gaining their rights and proving that they can break generations of oppression and
poverty. While a long road stands between us and the success of the MDGs, it is imperative
that we maintain the mindset of inspiring change and continue to push forward. The
Millennium Development Goals may sound like abstract ideas, but there is an army of
activists, teachers, therapists and policy-makers committed to improving the lives of girls and
women. Now that I have spent a few years on the front lines, I look forward to participating
in the struggle towards equality.
44
21st September
Con el apoyo de la
Oficina de
Santiago
Organizacin
de las Naciones Unidas
para la Educacin,
la Ciencia y la Cultura
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Introduo
Em pleno sculo XXI mulheres rurais ainda lutam para afirmar seus direitos humanos
em uma sociedade machista e excludente que insiste em sonegar direitos fundamentais seja
no Brasil, seja na Espanha. Essa a concluso a que chegam pesquisadores (as) do Observatrio da Educao Direitos Humanos, Cidadania e Violncia (OBEDHCV) projeto em
rede da Universidade do Estado da Bahia (UNEB), Universidade Federal da Bahia (UFBA) e
Universidade Catlica do Salvador (UCSAL), financiado pela CAPES e o INEP e do
Centro de Estudios de la Mujer (CEMUSA) da Universidade da Salamanca (USAL),
Espanha, quando decidem firmar um acordo de cooperao institucional e internacional envolvendo as respectivas Universidades e Centros de Pesquisa para tratar de um tema to
importante como Mulheres Rurais, principalmente, em relao a sua educao e ao processo
de emancipao social.
O presente artigo relata a experincia que vem sendo travada pelas instituies no
projeto de cooperao internacional que envolve o desenvolvimento de projetos de pesquisa
em comum, a mobilidade de professores e estudantes, a realizao de estudos compartilhados, seminrios, workshops, conferncias, oficinas nos dois pases e a publicao de artigos
cientficos e livros pelas instituies envolvidas. importante desde logo destacar que a
cooperao internacional um dos grandes desafios para a pesquisa e a ps-graduao brasileira, bem como um das principais metas do atual Plano Nacional de Pesquisa e PsGraduao (PNPG 2011 a 2020). Nos termos do estudo em direitos humanos, essa
cooperao prevista tambm no Plano Nacional de Educao em Direitos Humanos
(PNEDH).
2.
E-mail: jrocha@uneb.br
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No lado brasileiro, a rede do OBEDHCV tem como objetivo geral fomentar a produo acadmica, a difuso do conhecimento e a formao de recursos humanos em nvel de
graduao (iniciao cientfica) e ps-graduao (mestrado e doutorado), bem como incentivar a articulao entre ps-graduao, licenciaturas e escolas da rede pblica de educao
bsica, em especial, na formao continuada dos profissionais da educao em temas como
gnero, educao e diversidade na escola; Educao em Direitos Humanos (EDH); educao
para a cidadania e mediao de conflitos e violncia na escola; educao para as relaes tnicas e raciais; e educao ambiental.
Desde 2006 0 CEMUSA coordenado pela professora doutora Esther Quinteiro, professora titular de histria contempornea da USAL. O Centro tem uma caracterstica
pluridisciplinar e interdepartamental e seus estudos e investigaes tratam daquilo que se
chama de perspectiva de gnero. A perspectiva de gnero assumida pelo CEMUSA guia o
trabalho de investigao sobre as mulheres desde um paradigma terico, histrico e crtico,
no s para conhecer a realidade das relaes desiguais de gnero em sua profundidade, mas
para transform-las em direo a uma sociedade mais justa e igualitria (Disponvel em
mujeres.usal.es).
2.3Outros partcipes: Observatrio de Derechos Humanos de Valladolid
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Rurais
3.
pao
O objeto do acordo internacional que est sendo gestado entre as instituies e centros
de pesquisa a colaborao no estudo da situao de Mulheres Rurais no mundo, principalmente, em relao a sua educao e emancipao social. de grande interesse a experincia
tanto do lado brasileiro como do lado espanhol com o que chamamos de educao no-formal,
ou seja, aquela modalidade de educao que no acontece no sistema oficial de ensino, mas
em atividades educativas propostas por movimentos sociais, sindicatos, organizaes no
governamentais (ONGS), grupos religiosos entre outro. Em outras palavras, so atividades
educativas e formativas realizadas pela sociedade civil organizada.
Essa modalidade de educao tratada pelo Plano Nacional de Educao em Direitos
Humanos (PNEDH) como essencial a educao em direitos humanos (EDH), j que o
PNEDH reconhece que foi a sociedade civil organizada a primeira fora social a realizar
atividades de formao que podem ser compreendidas como educao em direitos humanos.
Segundo o PNEDH:
A educao no-formal em direitos humanos orienta-se pelos princpios da
emancipao e da autonomia. Sua implementao configura um permanente
processo de sensibilizao e formao da conscincia crtica direcionada para
o encaminhamento de reivindicaes e a formulao de propostas para as
polticas pblicas, podendo ser compreendida como: a)qualificao para o trabalho; b) adoo e exerccio de prticas voltadas para a comunidade; c)
aprendizagem poltica de direitos por meio da participao em grupos sociais;
d) educao realizada nos meios de comunicao social; e) aprendizagem de
contedos da escolarizao formal em modalidades diversificadas; e f)
educao para a vida no sentido de garantir o respeito dignidade do ser
O mtodo de educao popular difundido por Paulo Freire provocou grandes transformaes no Brasil e no mundo e at hoje a principal referncia sobre como educar o povo
para a cidadania e para a democracia. Pensando nesse tipo de educao, as ideias de Paulo
Freire aparecem com uma das expresses da emergncia poltica das classes populares e, ao
mesmo tempo, conduzem a uma reflexo e a uma prtica dirigida para o movimento popular.
Segundo Leonardo Boff, entre ns brasileiros a ideia de educao popular est fortemente associada s ideias de Paulo Freire, no porque ele tenha inventado a educao popular,
mas porque, sem dvida, ele foi quem melhor interpretou e com mais felicidade formulou
uma verdadeira pedagogia do oprimido, uma autntica educao libertadora que se busca
praticar em diferente rea do trabalho popular, seja em nvel sindical e partidrio, seja nas
mais diversas associaes e movimentos populares (BOFF, 2012).
Segundo Freire, quando o sujeito social inicia a formao de sua conscincia crtica, o
faz numa prtica histrica social e materialmente situada, ou seja, o ser humano comea a ser
sujeito social, em contato com outros seres humanos e num contexto de realidade que os determina do ponto de vista do territrio, de sua cultura e de sua histria. Deste modo, a
conscincia crtica uma situao concreta de transformao do sujeito social e de suas
relaes sociais com o outro e com o mundo (FREIRE, 2000).
Para Freire, a educao pode ser utilizada para que as pessoas se acomodem com o
mundo em que vivem ou se envolvam na transformao dele. Deste modo a educao pode
ser transformadora ou conservadora da realidade social, numa viso dialtica a educao para
a liberdade se constitui como ato de saber, um ato de conhecer e um ato de transformar a
realidade que se procura conhecer (FREIRE, 2000).
A educao popular como formulada por Paulo Freire a base metodolgica pra o que
chamamos hoje em dia de educao jurdica popular. Essa metodologia de educao nasce da
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necessidade de (in)formar os indivduos sobre quais so os seus direitos e em que medida eles
podem ser exigidos, j que o primeiro passo para a garantia de direitos humanos ou direitos
decorrentes das relaes de gnero a (in) formao tempestiva das pessoas (ROCHA, 2011).
A falta de educao de grande parte da populao no acontece por acaso, ela uma
forte estratgia das elites dominantes para que a dominao acontea no seio da sociedade,
como afirma Pedro Demo, a pobreza poltica muito pior do que a pobreza material j que ela
priva o trabalhador do conhecimento sobre quais so os seus direitos (DEMO, 2004, p.35).
O direito humano a educao um direito sem o qual outros direitos no podem ser
exercidos, j que sem a educao se torna mais difcil o acesso a igualdade nas relaes
humanas e sociais, ao emprego e renda e a servios sociais bsicos.
A Educao Jurdica Popular nasce, portanto da compreenso de um grupo de
organizaes no governamentais de que no basta prestar assessoria quando um direito
humano violado, preciso investir na formao do cidado () para que ele passe a exigir dos
gestores pblicos a reparao de seus direitos. no processo de educao que surge a
autonomia, a emancipao dos seres humanos (ROCHA,2008).
Essa modalidade de educao nada mais do que uma tentativa de fazer chegar ao
povo noes bsicas sobre o direito vigente e a legislao, desencastelando o saber jurdico ou
socializando o conhecimento jurdico. Reconhecendo que o direito ainda uma linguagem utilizada para a dominao, os grupos que realizam esse tipo de formao tentam essa popularizao do direito ptrio atravs de programas como o juristas leigos organizado pela Associao
de Advogados de Trabalhadores Rurais (AATR), promotores legais populares (Grupo de Apoio
e Preveno AIDS) e Juristas Populares da Fundao Margarida Maria Alves, Paraba, entre
outros. Esse tipo de formao segue pelo menos quatro princpios bsicos segundo a AATR:
I) A socializao do saber jurdico: mais do que oferecer informaes sobre normas e
leis como se tratassem de verdades incontestveis, procuramos discutir o Direito de
maneira crtica, refletindo a sua prpria origem e seus fundamentos sociais, econmicos, polticos e culturais.
II) O desencastelamento do monoplio jurdico: desencastelar o saber jurdico
significa retir-lo do mbito exclusivo das universidades e dos bacharis em Direito,
legitimando seu uso pelo cidado comum. Significa tambm desmistificar a linguagem
jurdica, tradicionalmente usada como mecanismo de distanciamento, poder e dominao. Assim, buscamos investir no Direito uma linguagem mais comum, simples,
cotidiana, que possa ser apropriada pelos grupos populares e assim compreendida, refletida, questionada.
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III) A formao poltica: a reflexo poltica sobre o Direito busca desmascarar a pretensa imparcialidade e verdade do Direito, destacando-o como espao de disputa de
interesses diversos, determinado por fatores histricos, sociais e culturais, que pode
servir tanto quanto instrumento de manuteno das relaes de dominao quanto
instrumento das lutas emancipatrias;
IV) A emancipao popular: a informao e a reflexo sobre o Direito torna-se uma
possibilidade para que os movimentos e as comunidades possam, se assim quiserem,
desenvolver as aes polticas e jurdicas necessrias satisfao dos anseios, ao
reconhecimento de novos pleitos (novos direitos) e no aplicao de normas opressoras (direito de resistncia).
(Disponvel em http://www.aatr.org.br acesso em
04.03.2014.
5.
A ideia de Responsabilidade Social Universitria (RSU) vem no bojo de um novo e necessrio contrato social entre universidade e sociedade, hoje em dia comum o debate sobre
reforma universitria, especialmente tendo em conta sua responsabilidade social, a tica do
conhecimento e a necessidade de novos paradigmas para enfrentar a crescente complexidade
das problemticas global e local. Essa urgncia est associada ao compromisso de uma
educao superior comprometida e crtica de suas instituies, relao saber x poder e de sua
misso cidado na produo e difuso do conhecimento.
7.
Concluso
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BRASIL, Plano Nacional de Educao em Direitos Humanos (PNEDH). In ROCHA, Jos Cludio.
Guia da Educao em Direitos Humanos. UNEB:Camaari, 2009.
BRASIL, Ministrio da Educao. Coordenao de Aperfeioamento de Pessoal de Nvel Superior
(CAPES). Plano Nacional de Ps-Graduao PNPG 2011 a 2020. CAPES:Braslia, DF, 2010.
CEMUSA, Centro de Estudios de la Mujer. Disponvel em cemusa, usal.es utilizado em 04.03.2014.
DEMO, Pedro. Pobreza poltica, direitos humanos e educao. In: Educando para os direitos humanos
pautas pedaggicas para a cidadania na universidade. Jos Geraldo de Sousa Junior [et. Al.] (organizadores). Sntese: Porto Alegre, 2004.
FRADES, Valentina Maya. Mujeres rurales: estdios multidisciplinares de gnero. Ediciones
Universidad de Salamanca: Salamanca, Espanha, 2008.
FREIRE, Paulo. Que fazer: teoria e prtica em educao popular. Vozes: Petrpolis, 2000.
ROCHA, Jos Cludio. A participao popular na gesto pblica no Brasil. Jus Navigandi,
Teresina, ano 16, n. 2886, 27 maio 2011. Disponvel em: <http://jus.com.br/artigos/19205>. Acesso
em: 3 mar. 2014.
Observatrio de Derechos Humanos da Universidad de Valadolid. Disponvel em Disponvel em
http://www5.uva.es/observatorioderechoshumanos)
_____. Guia da educao em direitos humanos. UNEB:Camaari, 2009.
_____, A Reinveno Solidria e Participativa da Universidade: um estudo sobre redes de extenso no
Brasil. EDUNEB: Salvador, 2008.
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Katy Orell
Green Cross International
e-mail: communication@gci.ch
web: www.gcint.org
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We realized the diary program would target a niche market and we tried to organize
it so participants would be moved toward taking ecological action during the diary writing
period, said Mr. Kawamoto.
The Green Lane Diary falls in line with ideas laid out in the United Nations Agenda
21 plan of action for sustainable development. In Agenda 21, Article 5.e. states that schools
should involve school children in local and regional studies on environmental health and
that along with various UN branches, non-governmental organizations should help
implement and support this
education (Chapter 36, 1992).
The Green Cross Japan
team focused on two concepts
they felt were critical to Green
Lane Diarys success: the length
of time children were engaged
and how the project could create
an army of environmental
champions and equip them with
messages and means to influence
green change at home and in their
communities.
Green Lane Diary is a 12week long program. Mr. Kawamoto found that 12 weeks offered
enough time to impress
environmental education on
students and have it stick.
However, there were still initial
worries whether three months of
writing would be too demanding
for 10- and 12-year-old students.
But we underestimated the energy and enthusiasm children had for the project and
found many of them were able overcome the difficulty and make it fun, Mr. Kawamoto
said.
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As for turning students into positive agents of environmental change, Mr. Kawamoto
explained: There are many examples of this program being inherited from brothers and
sisters, or from teachers. As we gain larger distribution networks, the message travels about
Green Lane Diary, acquiring more interest from not only schools, but surrounding
businesses which recognize the value of the program as well.
Green Lane Diaries are composed of two main parts: a guidebook and the diary itself.
The guidebook gives children background information about the environmental concept
they will work on. Topics include
issues ranging from global
warming, renewable energy and
recycling, to name a few. The
guidebook also displays the latest
environmental activities of
governments, businesses and nong o v e r n m e n t a l o rg a n i z a t i o n s .
Finally, the diary section is a space
where children write their everyday
activities and thoughts related to
the environment for the duration of
the program.
As Green Lane Diary began
taking form, Green Cross Japan had
to think of ways to introduce the
program into Japanese schools. The
projects success depends heavily
on cooperation between educators,
governments and dedicated Green
Cross members.
As Mr. Kawamoto explained: In
Japan, there are 47 prefectures and each prefecture has its own education board. We
contacted all of them, asking that they inform the superintendent of each school district
about Green Lane Diary.
In an effort to encourage more schools to participate in the program, several years
after its start, Green Cross Japan received donations from major companies of various
industries, permitting the diary and course materials to be printed and distributed in larger
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numbers. Green Lane Diary also followed core environmental education already embedded
in schools curricula.
theatrical competition, a poster competition was created, in which students designed artwork
based upon a theme celebrating World Water Day.
In the 15 years that Green Lane Diary has been operating in Japan, it has reached over
1 million children in 8,000 schools. In 1999, initial circulation of the Diary was 25,000.
From 2006 on, the average number of distributed diaries was 100,000 per year and 60% of
Japanese schools repeated their participation in Green Lane Diary.
Green Cross Sri Lanka hopes to translate Green Lane Diary into predominantly-Tamil
areas after witnessing its success in Sinhala speaking regions.
In 2004, after Green Lane Diary had already been in successful operation for five
years, the third largest earthquake in recorded history released a tsunami, devastating
communities in many nations in the Indian Ocean, including Sri Lanka. Mr. Kawamoto
visited the country, believing instituting a Green Cross office in Sri Lanka would help it
rebuild a greener future.
We used funds from Green Cross Japan to build a small library for a Sri Lankan
school and created the basis for an operational Green Lane Diary program for 5th grade
school children, said Mr. Kawamoto. The diaries were initially handmade textbooks. We
also had to translate the diaries from Japanese into Sinhala, the most widely spoken language
in Sri Lanka.
For four years, Green Cross Japan supported their Sri Lankan sister organizations
edition of the Green Lane Diary program, which is now funded by Mitsubishi Corporation.
The program has reached over 7,000 Sri Lankan students in
50 schools since it began in 2005.
Green Cross Sri Lankas version of the Green Lane
Diary focuses on climate change and water conservation, as
well as how to protect the environment from tsunami
damage.
As Hasitha Walpola of Green Cross Sri Lanka
explained: There is little knowledge of the environment
and how to protect it in Sri Lanka. This environmental
program helps children understand the importance of
conservation, sustainability and protection.
In 2009, Green Cross Sri Lanka organized a short
drama competition among schools already participating in
the Green Lane Diary program. Students became actors and
portrayed issues facing the environment through dramatic interpretation. In addition to the
The link between Green Lane Diary programs in Japan and Sri Lanka is best observed
during the Childrens Award Ceremony and Environment Symposium, held every year in
Tokyo, Japan. This event was created to highlight achievements of the most engaged
environmental students. Award winners are chosen based on how well their journal reflects
environmental consciousness, knowledge, action, practice, sustainability and passion.
In 2013 four Sri Lankan students and a teacher were flown to Japan for the ceremony
to commend their extraordinary participation in the program. The Childrens Award
Ceremony adds value to the diary and offers children an opportunity to not only exchange
information, but also present their own environmental activities, explained Mr. Kawamoto.
As Ms. Walpola said, We are extremely thankful that Green Cross Japan introduced
the Green Lane Program to Green Cross Sri Lanka. It has made such an impact in our
communities already and we hope to continue for many years to come.
In 2010, Green Cross Australia introduced the first English-language version of Green
Lane Diary, guided by the framework of the Japanese model. The project was so well funded
that for two years, the diaries were printed and distributed
for free. In 2013, Green Cross rolled out the first e-version
of Green Lane Diary.
This is Australias largest environmental education
program. We have won so many awards for Green Lane
Diaries. It is really awesome how its making young
Australians think about sustainability for the future, said
Green Cross Australia Chief Executive Officer, Mara Bun.
The Australian diary program has reached a total of 116,000
students in over 600 schools.
Green Cross Australia is planning on launching a Green
Lane Diary fundraising campaign using kickstarter.com this
February. The initiative Down Under has evolved to include
partnerships with other green organizations to engage
students in activities like cleaning up beaches or learning about sustainable agriculture, the
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theme for the 2014 Green Lane Diary. They have even created a system to rate how clean and
green schools are.
The diary supports learning and showcases the actions of children leading the charge
to inspire their peers, Rebecca Edmonds, Green Lane Diary Project Leader for Green Cross
Australia. These diaries that change the world encourage children to be the change and lead
projects in their homes, schools or communities to inspire and educate others.
The most recent addition to Green Lane Diarys international curriculum comes from
Green Cross Korea. When deciding to implement an environmental education program, the
organization based in Seoul wanted to ensure maximum outreach, and it found Green Lane
Diarys success in three separate countries, three distinct languages and three different school
systems a good fit.
In his initial research into environmental education initiatives, Kui-ho Moon, Chief
Operating Officer for Green Cross Korea, discovered that students were interested in
engaging in environmental activities, but found there was a lack of established programs to
guide them. Green Lane Diary was the most effective environmental education program we
found, he said.
Mr. Moon engaged ink and paper companies to donate time and materials to print the
Green Lane Diaries while convincing other businesses to help with distribution. The South
Korean Ministry of Special Affairs also granted funds for the Green Lane Diary project in
2012. Since 2013, the Ministry of Security and Public Administration has granted and
continues to support Green Cross and the Green Lane Diary in Korea.
In 2011, its first year, 100,000 copies of the Green Lane Diary were printed and
distributed to 230 schools in South Korea, with 7,700 students enrolled in the Green Lane
Diary contest, the awards of which were handed out by the Chairman of the National
Assembly.
Students love the program, because it provides incentives to continue with their green
missions. South Korean student, Jun-ho Kwak, who won the grand prize for his Green Lane
Diary, said: People say that it is hard to break old habits, but I was lucky to have the good
ones and that is why I was given a big present. Make good habits like I did, then you will get
a big present, too!
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Green Lane Diary is continually expanding in South Korea with support from the
government and private businesses, which see the diaries as valuable and effective means to
educate future generations on the importance of making environmental change now.
Xavier Guijarro, Director for Green Cross Internationals Value Change program,
which promotes youth environmental education, said the success of Green Lane Diary is due,
in large part, to the children who are not just the recipients of this education, but are also the
influencers.
Mr. Guijarro said expansion of Green Lane Diary into the Middle East as well as
Europe and the Americas would be a great next step, but coming up with the funding
necessary to support printing, translation and distribution can be tricky.
As he explained, Innovative education models like Green Lane Diary have proven to
be successful in the countries where they are functioning. But to expand into new countries
and settings, resources are vital to help reaching out to schools, translating the materials and
covering distribution costs.
After spending the past 15 years growing Green Lane Diarys global reach to over one
million students in four countries, Mr. Kawamoto retains his belief in the positive influence
that these diaries can have on children.
Green Lane Diarys continued relevancy is grounded in its approach, which promotes
an independency to learn more about ecology and nature, to be considerate toward the
environment and to use this knowledge and power to execute these convictions. Perhaps most
important is the belief that the fate of earth and humanity rests with children and it is with
them that change should begin.
Works Cited:
"Chapter 36." Agenda 21. Proc. of United Nations Conference on Environment & Development,
B r a z i l , R i o D e J a n e i r o . N . p . : n . p . , n . d . 3 2 2 + . We b .
<http://sustainabledevelopment.un.org/content/documents/Agenda21.pdf>.
McKeown, Rosalyn, Charles A. Hopkins, Regina Rizzi, and Marianne Chrystalbridge. Education for
Sustainable Development Toolkit. Rep. Waste Management Research and Education Institution, July
2002. Web.
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Once, women were honored as strong, beautiful, creative, sensual beings. In those
ancient times, we humans were keenly attuned to the heartbeat of the planet. Life was lived
on the edge. Women have done a remarkable service to literature and culture. Vedic
scriptures asserted that women and men both are two sides of the same coin. No one is
superior to the other in the materialistic world. Rigved & upnishads mention several names
of women sages and seers notably Gargi & Maitrey. Woman is the manifested divine form of
the same absolute energy, say, masculine energy as is stated by Samkhyas. Seeing divinity
even in a small insect is the core teaching of Hindu scriptures. This idea is reflected in
Bhagavadgita at 16.28. Looking upon all things as uniformly pervaded by the lord, he does
not try to injure self by self and this attains to the highest goal (3).
Our survival as a species depended on our ability to live in harmony with the world.
The feminine aspect of life was necessary for our very survival, and the sacred feminine was
honored by ancient around the world as bringer of life, growth, decline, death and rebirth.
Woman was life itself. The power of women in those ancient times was undeniable
without women, we humans would not be here now. The world changed. We grew apart from
the primal rhythms native to us and we abandoned our old ways to explore human life
through a masculine-centric lens of action and movement. Gifts inherent to women were lost
or set aside. Gifts of the masculine focus, action, physical strength were revered and
made central. The balance shifted.
The divine nature and value of a woman
Rashmi Chandran
Founder & Chairperson, Natural Health and Environmental Research,
Coimbatore, Tamil Nadu, India
E-mail: rashmichandran@gmail.com /
https://www.facebook.com/NHEROrg
What does it mean when you see a man get down on his knee, get out his ring, and
propose to a woman? It means that in that act the man recognizes your supreme value. For a
man to get down on his knee, with honor and respect, indicates that you are so valuable. He
wants you to come to him; he wants you to give yourself to him, so he will act in a way to
make you give yourself. But a man should never have you just to have you! Hes got to be
worthy of you, or hes not worth having you! And there is hardly a man out here today thats
worthy of you giving away yourself to him. Culture is the back bone of any civilized country.
Customs, behaviour etc., ordain the very culture. Indian culture is one of the most ancient
that has been accepted by all historians and scholars of all streams. Even centuries ago,
mother India had witnessed all material and philosophical prosperity in a continuous flux.
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The status of womanhood reached its pinnacle in vedic times for which extant sanskrit
literature is the evidence (11).
Where such fee is not taken (but may be given out of affection by the grooms side), that is
not selling, but worshiping/respecting and showing affection to the woman [3.54].
Swami Vivekananda said, In India the mother is the centre of the family and our
highest ideal. She is to us the representative of God, as God is the mother of the Universe. It
was a female sage who first found the unity of God, and laid down this doctrine in one of the
first hymns of the vedas. Our God is both personal and absolute; the absolute is male, the
personal, female. And thus it comes that we now say: The first manifestation of God is the
hand that rocks the cradle. In Sanskrit treatises, two prominent aspects of respect to women
as mother and wife are glorified. This entire world is the union of prakrti and purusha
according to Samkhya school that stood on the edifice of vedic scriptures (11) (12). Prakrti is
the feminine energy and the Purusha is the masculine form of a single absolute entity. The
salvation and progress of any country depends on its women.
If desiring more prosperity in life, father, brother, husband, husbands younger brother (older
is considered as father only) they all should respect the bride and adorn her (with ornaments)
[3.55].
The divine are extremely happy where women are respected (worshiped, figuratively), where
they are not, all actions (projects) are fruitless [3.56].
The family in which the daughters or newlywed brides mourn, that family suffers a quick
destruction; and where they dont it surely prospers [3.57].
Those homes that these disrespected women (daughters, daughters-in-laws) cast curse upon,
they are eradicated as if destroyed by (the tantric deity of black magic) Kity (%&) [3.58].
Hence, men who seek prosperity should always respect women, (and) on solemn occasions
and festivals, adorn with ornaments, clothes and food [3.59].
The family in which the husband is content with the wife and the wife is content with the
husband, is certain to have divine blessings. [this doesn't mean only sexual contentment but
how the two perform their duties to the home, family, their conduct, etc. like how a wife manages the whole house, relations, children, finances etc. or how the husband protects, earns,
has social reputation, standing and circle etc.] [3.60].
If the wife is not attractive (and/or doesnt attempt to attract with makeup etc.) and/or the
husband is not attracted; the husbands progeny is not possible on that account of lack of
attraction [3.61].
When the women look beautiful (adorn jewelry, do makeup, dress up) the whole family looks
good, and when they dont everything looks insipid. [3.62]
As against the propaganda over Manus statement on the liberation of women, it is crystal
clear that women were given a highest position not only in Manusmriti but also in sanskrit
literature (11). Moreover, It is unfair to judge the status of women in the east by the standard
of the west. In this article, an effort is done to show that women were attributed highest
position in Hindu scriptures and their role as a mother and wife is very crucial in nurturing
the inherited values passed on to us since time immemorial. And to women all over
mothers, sisters, wives, daughters, friends, in whatever form they meet us, they bring the
divine energy with them. Now this doesnt at all mean to throw the relation off-balance by
thinking it is only the woman who is divine. But it is to emphasize that they too are divine,
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and not property, slave or object. This also doesnt mean that all women are always right and
good, just like not all men are right or good (6) (8).
A marriage is always of respect, and is not just for lust, it is family building, providing
a happy, safe trusting environment, where both husband and wife have to be happy to
complete the picture. If the husband is called pati-parameshavara i.e. husband is ultimate
god, then the wife is also called giha-lakhm i.e. prosperity of the home. Only a balanced,
respectful relationship will give any meaning to it. All individuals inherently possesses male
and female attributes, otherwise there is no balance in the society. A married woman is as
revered as ones own mother, since mother is the incarnated form of the supreme self. There
might be a belief that male dominated society did not encourage the woman writers in Indian
context. In the medieval period, Buddhism duly encouraged women to write the Vinaya
Pithakasand Sutta Pithakas in Pali language. But this itself is not the cause of emergence of
women writers in India. Sri Sankaracharya (8th AD) when visited the city of Mahishmati to
debate with a great scholar Mandana Mishra, he enquires about his house address with some
women carrying water. They guide him by replying in a poetic way in Sanskrit. Also, Ubhaya
Bharati, the wife of Mandana Mishra is a great scholar in Sanskrit and philosophy, who could
not be defeated in debate by Sankaracharya (11).
Henry Steele Commager, an American historian wrote of the late nineteenth century
American woman. In all matters of church and school, women took the lead. Women not
only controlled education and religion but largely dictated the standards of literature and art
and clothed culture so ostentatiously in feminine garb that the term itself came to have
connotations. The present status of women is no different than that of the vedic ideals
transferred over times. There are warriors, politicians, writers, scientists, astronauts,
administrators, teachers who perfectly render their job while outdoing a male compatriot. At
the same time masculinity devoid of union with feminity is incomplete in society. It is not out
of context to consider Ms. Suzanne Broggers opinion. It is in her words If a woman can
only succeeded by emulating men, I think it is a great loss and not a success. The aim is not
only for a woman to succeed, but to keep her womanhood and let her womanhood influence
society.
The Role of Women in Society
Our women are not incredible because they have managed to avoid the difficulties of
lifequite the opposite. They are incredible because of the way they face the trials of life.
Despite the challenges and tests life has to offerfrom marriage or lack of marriage,
childrens choices, poor health, lack of opportunities, and many other problemsthey remain
remarkably strong and immovable and true to the faith. Since the creation of the world,
women have played a very important role in shaping the civilization and culture of people.
The role of women in society may change from time to time, but the influence of women has
always been significant. Its a chance for so many people to move beyond celebrating and
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take action to create meaningful and sustainable change for women and girls. International
Womens Day has been observed since in the early 1900s, a time of great expansion and
turbulence in the industrialized world that saw booming population growth and the rise of
radical ideologies. We do have female astronauts and prime ministers, school girls are
welcomed into university, women can work and have a family, women have real choices. With
more women in the boardroom, greater equality in legislative rights, and an increased critical
mass of womens visibility as impressive role models in every aspect of life, one could think
that women have gained true equality. The unfortunate fact is that women are still not paid
equally to that of their male counterparts, women still are not present in equal numbers in
business or politics, and globally womens education, health and the violence against them is
worse than that of men. The United States even designates the whole month of March as
Womens History Month.
The Role of Men in Women Empowerment
There are many good reasons to engage men in building gender equality, especially
given that some mens practices, identities, and relations can sustain inequalities. Across the
globe, there is growing interest in the question of mens roles in fostering gender equality (1).
The impetus for male inclusion in gender-related work is associated with an important shift in
how gender issues are conceived and addressed. Men have always been part of the policies
and practices of development work, for example, but they have traditionally been treated as
generic and ungendered representatives of all humanity. Men are unavoidably involved in
gender issues. Most immediately, men (or more accurately, specific groups of men) control
the resources required to implement womens claims for justice. But, more broadly, gender
inequalities are based in gender relations, in the complex webs of relationships that exist at
every level of human experience. Men are as implicated in gender is sues as women, and
addressing mens attitudes and roles is a crucial element in reconstructing gender relations and
equality. Men often play a crucial role as gatekeepers of the current gender order through
their responsibilities as decision-makers and leaders within their families and communities.
They may participate in sexist practices and maintain unjust gender relations by perpetrating
violence against women, controlling womens reproductive and familial decision making,
limiting womens access to community resources and political power, or espousing patriarchal
beliefs and norms that allow other men to engage in such actions. Gender work with men has
also been fueled by the more hopeful insight that men have a positive role to play in fostering
gender equality (1). There is growing recognition that gender inequality is an issue of concern
to women and men alike and that men have a stake in fostering gender equality. Some men are
already living in gender-just ways: they respect and care for the women and girls in their lives,
and they reject traditional, sexist norms of manhood. And some men are already playing a role
in fostering gender equality. Experiences in conflict and post-conflict societies also provide
powerful examples of how gender disparities harm men and progress toward gender equality
benefits them. Finally, excluding men from work on gender relations can provoke male
hostility and retaliation. It can intensify gender inequalities and thus leave women with yet
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more work to do among unsympathetic men and patriarchal power relations. Given that
women already interact with men on a daily basis in their households and public lives,
involving men in the re negotiation of gender relations can make interventions more relevant
and workable and create lasting change. Male inclusion increases mens responsibility for
change and their belief that they too will gain from gender equality, and can address many
mens sense of anxiety and fear as traditional masculinities are undermined (10). Many men
receive formal and informal benefits from gender inequalities, including material rewards and
interpersonal power. At the same time, men also pay significant costs, particularly to their emotional and physical health. More widely, men can be and are motivated by interests other than
those associated with maintaining gender privilege. Men live in social relationships with
women and girlstheir wives and girl friends, sisters, daughters, mothers, aunts, friends,
colleagues, neighbors, and so onand the quality of every mans life depends to a large
extent on the quality of those relationships. Many men hold high hopes for their daughters
futures, care for their sisters, value their mothers, and disapproveat least privatelyof male
peers abusive treatment of their wives and girlfriends. Men may support gender equality
because of their ethical, political, or spiritual commitments. Male human rights activists have
advocated for gender equality because of their commitment to ideals of liberation and social
justice, while male religious leaders have promoted faith-based beliefs in ideals of compassion
and justice for women (9) (10). Thus, some men have embraced a moral imperative that men
share their rights and responsibilities with women.
What principles then should inform efforts to engage men in gender-related policies and
practices?
Three interrelated principles guide the positive involvement of men in gender issues:
mens involvement must have a pro-feminist purpose, interventions must be sensitive to diversities among men, and we must acknowledge and support mens positive contributions. In
addition, to be effective, the interventions chosen must be culturally appropriate and theoretically informe While it is important to understand these three principles for male involvement
in gender-related work, it is equally important to be able to translate them into effective
interventions. It is clear, for example, that effective interventions must be culturally appropriatethey must be grounded in the realities of mens lives and relations and local gender
cultures (5). There is no doubt that involving men in efforts toward gender equality has the
potential to greatly enhance the impact and reach of this work, but whether it does so or not
will depend on the play of political and cultural forces. Still, building a gender-just world will
bring benefits to both women and men, and the reconstruction of gender relations will require
their shared commitment and involvement.
The Role of Women in Women Empowerment
A womans level of empowerment will vary, sometimes enormously, according to other
criteria such as her class or caste, ethnicity, relative wealth, age, family position etc. and any
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analysis of womens power or lack of it must appreciate these other contributory dimensions.
We have to relate empowerment at three levels: empowerment on the individual, group, and
societal/community level and the interaction between these. The individual level deals with
individual womens abilities to take control over their lives, their perceptions about their own
value and abilities, their abilities to identify a goal and work towards this goal. The group level
deals with the collective action and sense of agency that woman experience together, in a
group. The societal level deals with the permissiveness of the political and social climate, the
societal norms and the public discourse on what is possible and impossible for women to do,
how women should behave etc (8) (9). The different levels are seen as interconnected and
mutually reinforcing, e.g. when empowerment on individual level occurs, this will have effect
on the group and societal level. Women who are empowered on an individual level will most
likely go on and affect the other levels. Empowerment on a group level e.g. women organizing
around a particular need is likely to have effect on the individual empowerment of the women
in the form of increased self esteem and sense of agency (2).
Globalization has presented new challenges for the realization of the goal of womens
equality, the gender impact of which has not been systematically evaluated fully. However,
from the micro-level studies that were commissioned by the Department of Women & Child
Development, it is evident that there is a need for re-framing policies for access to employment
and quality of employment. Benefits of the growing global economy have been unevenly
distributed leading to wider economic disparities, the feminization of poverty, increased gender
inequality through often deteriorating working conditions and unsafe working environment
especially in the informal economy and rural areas. Education is a powerful tool of social
transformation. Hence, education for women has to be paid special attention. Greater access
for women to education must be ensured in the educational system. Gender sensitivity must be
developed (4) (8). Governmental Organizations are formal agencies working for the
empowerment of women. But this work requires multidimensional approach and hence a large
number of voluntary organizations / NGOs have gained increased attention in the field from
grass root level to national & international level. Their role is so impressive because they
work with missionary zeal and commitment. Promotion of equality between women & men
and the empowerment of women is central to the work of United Nations. The UN actively
promotes womens human rights and works to eradicate, discourage of violence against
women, including in armed conflict and through trafficking (13). The popular UNESCO slogan should come in handy: Educate a man and you educate an individual; educate a woman
and you educate a family.
Feel and Experience the Challenge to Survive the Practical Real Life
No woman is ordinary. We are each a unique expression of the feminine. Each one of
us, male and female, carries within our psyche both Divine Masculine and Divine Feminine
archetype energies. From these archetypal energies come all our conscious thoughts, plans, desires, goals and agendas. These energies intertwine and cooperate to produce a uniquely
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personal expression and experience of life. The new divine feminine is modern womans way
of connecting to ancient ways of being a woman. Personally as a woman I feel, both women
and men needs to get empowered in their own way as they are equally to be respected and to be
valued as a human. The status of women would improve only if they educate themselves and
grab every opportunity to become stronger and more powerful than before. Its the totality
speaks not either women alone or men alone as critical half. In this context, the significant details to be practiced which is a real challenge in this fast paced life of 21st century by the
human with all his/her divinity should be as follows:
1. Update your consciousness, clarity, freedom, courage and discipline.
2. Free yourself from false beliefs and assumptions.
3. Uproot dysfunctional patterns of thinking, feeling & behaving.
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As a woman I feel proud and grateful to be the part of this world with humble lessons
and experiences learned from my personal life as well as from knowledgeable personalities
directly and indirectly which reflects to practice and preach for a constructive healthier natural
life style within the family as well as for the society, to be followed by the human of all genders
to maintain and balance the integrity, peace and purpose of the divine life and natural way of
living with all its simplicity, values and strength.
References:
1.Connell, R.W. The Role of Men and Boys in Achieving Gender Equality. Consultants paper for an
United Nations Expert Group Meeting on the theme of The Role of Men and Boys in Achieving
Gender Equality, organized by the United Nations Division for the Advancement of Women (UNDAW) in collaboration with the International Labor Organization, the Joint United Nations Program on
HIV/AIDS, and tions Development Program held in Brasilia, Brazil, October 21-24, 2003.
2. Dr. J.S.R.A. Prasad, THE PLACE OF WOMEN IN SANSKRIT LITERATURE. A paper presented
at the national conference on Women Empowerment in Sanskrit, Telugu and Hindi Literatures, VSM
College, Ramachandrapuram 27-28 October, 2010.
5. Kaufman, Michael. The AIM Framework: Addressing and InvolvingMen and Boys to Promote
Gender Equality and End Gender Discriminationand Violence. Paper prepared for UNICEF, 2003.
6. Liddle, J., & Joshi, R. (1986). Daughters of Independence. Gender, Caste and Class in India. New
Delhi: Kali for Women & London: Zed Books.
Much of humanity has lost connection with our feminine qualities. There is a deep disconnection with the Earth, with our bodies, and with the very essence of life. And as a result,
for many people, life has lost its deeper sense of soul purpose or meaning. When we are starved
of this connection, we quite literally wither and dry up inside. We can feel isolated and alone.
As a result, there is a deep healing needed for our collective planetary soul. And we are called
to now offer a place where we can come together in sacred space and undertake a soul retrieval
of the feminine, both for ourselves and our larger community. In doing so, we have an
opportunity to reconnect with the ancient feminine wisdom that lives both inside our bodies
and in the layers of the collective unconscious.
In developing increased awareness, you get more in touch with your relationships, your
finances, and your creative expression. As you become more aware, more at peace, you
develop more confidence, which automatically brings out your skills. The time is changing, not
to create a world of inequality, but to express balance, hope, wisdom, and the unique gifts that
both men and women share with one another and with the world. Women today tap into ancient
feminine energy making it their own. To safeguard your own freedom, divinity and strength,
you need to have a strong sense of yourself, one has to be confident, have a clear vision, take
efforts, do workouts, because if you dont; you will get distracted by other peoples perceptions.
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How does an idea become knowledge and understanding? Which are the factors that
propel us to move our ideas to certainties? During the very busy life of a teacher, we are
often asked to help students share their ideas; and it is our task to assist them with
hypothesizing, experimenting, and ultimately concluding. But what of our humanity can be
certain? What of an individuals interaction with self and with the world do we want to
promote in our classrooms?
In an article titled: A Morally Defensible Mission for Schools in the 21st Century,
Stanford University Lee Jacks Professor Emeritus, Nel Noddings asks: What is it that we
want for our children? In work patterns, in residential stability, in style of housing, in sexual
habits, in dress, in manners, in language, in music, in entertainment, and perhaps most
important of all, in family arrangements schools as an entity have not led us effectively.
Karen Melaas
Curriculum/Teacher Leadership Development in Oxford, Michigan, USA
E-mail: KWMelaas@comcast.net
http://kwmelaas.wix.com/plant-karma
Maybe to a plethora of high stakes tests and other assessments that already exist
across our planet we can consider including questions that ask students: How might you
plan to spend the next 24 to 36 hours of your life? How do you address the dimensions of
your own wellness? How can you assist others around you in realizing their own best selves?
Maybe preceding such questions, we can add a dozen years of school curricula, delivered in
places where the walls that so often exist between and among the disciplines have been
folded. Perhaps we develop schools where teachers and administrators give students
permission, understanding, and encouragement toward collaboratively and thoughtfully
discussing twenty-first century issues from differing intellectual and social perspectives. We
are ready to sow now, in this century of extraordinary connective tissue created by the worldwide access of the internet the seeds of schools in which students learn to examine and
practice a sort of personal sustainable development. This sustainable development is one that
might later help to inspire yet another Nelson Mandela, another Martin Luther King, another
Mulalla Yousafzai, the likes of which we know are already growing within children who
reside in our communities.
As a teacher whose reach is global connection and collaboration, maybe you have
entertained a few similar thoughts from your line of global latitude, while thousands of miles
away, that resemble thoughts being pondered by another teacher, and somewhere else, yet
another still. Every teacher in every place we teach across the globe must be certain of their
ability to bring a voice to the most pivotal thoughts that we share about teaching and
learning, and to help each of our students realize their greatest potentials. I am grateful to
have the opportunity to here share some of my own thoughts and experiences.
The National Wellness Institute in Minneapolis, Minnesota, USA is one among a
number of institutions around the globe that places a viable option on the table for a
refreshing option for education in the twenty-first century, that of teaching children a
systematic and scaffolded approach toward fully addressing their own personal well-being. If
as educators, we can first begin to understand our own dimensions of well-being, then we
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can learn to approach underpinning the curricular objectives of our schools, anywhere and
everywhere that we might wish to. Our study, our understanding, our own practice, and our
sharing with students of the Six Dimensions of Wellness (National Wellness Institute:
intellectual, social, emotional, spiritual, physical, and occupational) offer us a clear formula
for imparting the life-long practice and the great triumverate of mind-body-spirit well-being.
A curriculum that is underpinned by teaching personal well-being is a prescription that will
help to support all of humanity, that will support each and every one of us, both in and out of
our schools. The Six Dimensions of Wellness (NWI) show no particular bias for language,
race, creed, or faith. Rather, they offer us a platform that is pluralistic, one that has the
potential to unite us toward developing, actualizing, and yes, even ultimately healing our
world.
As each of us realize our capacity for developing and managing our well-being, a
wonderful new excitement stirs, and it deserves to be shared. Using the Six Dimensions of
Wellness (NWI), educators, parents. . . in fact all adults may work together to forge our
collective ability not to divide, but rather to work toward folding down the walls that
continue to separate us in varying environments.
The Six Dimensions of Wellness, as created by the NWI offer a format for effortlessly
crossing boundaries in subject matters or disciplines, in order to creatively approach complex
problems, explore healthy and empathic leadership, and to address language as a core of
human existence. The Six Dimensions of Wellness, offer us an approach toward the
internationalizing of education in a way that is quite profound. Practice of the Six
Dimensions of Wellness allow each of us, young and old, to bring our healthiest, and most
unique and independent learner talents and skills to our living, to our education, and to our
work.
The following are three examples of how examining the Central Idea (International
Baccalaureate Organization) of well-being can be useful in a school setting in a sequential
fashion. Example #1 describes how aspects of well-being can be examined and encouraged in
the elementary grades, Example #2 shares an experience during middle school years, and
Example #3 shares an example that is occurring right now in a Washington DC high school.
These are not what if examples. Each of the experiences I will describe have actually taken
place in schools in North America. The first two were in suburban Detroit, Michigan.
Example #1:
At a K-8 International Baccalaureate-Primary Years Programme school in Oak Park,
Michigan, USA, 63 second graders recently explored Key Concepts (IBO) of community,
production, consumption, awareness, balance, and connection. Classroom teacher Stephanie
Sulaka invited me in to participate in the investigations for two days. During our time
together, students were asked what they believe a balanced community might look, sound,
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feel, smell, and taste like. Numbers of students initially shared stories of meals enjoyed
among families and with neighbors. They reflected on feelings of love and support they felt
from parents and siblings. Students went on to agree that an odor of trash, a sight of
overgrown weeds in a yard, an absence of any children in a neighborhood park might be
signs of imbalance, thereby effecting the well-being of the community. Students further
discussed how an awareness of imbalance might encourage them to contribute to the wellbeing of their own community.
Each of the students paid five dollars to decorate a four-inch clay pot. In the pots
they planted flower bulbs. While the pots would later be used for annotating scientific
observations, they would ultimately become gifts for family and friends. The three groups of
second graders spent time researching agencies in their community that might be
beneficiaries of profits generated by their funds, after covering material costs. Pots, paints,
bulbs, and soil had been purchased for less that two dollars per student. With a profit margin
of more than three dollars for each potted plant, students chose to donate close to $200 to the
childrens ward at an area hospital, so that other youngsters whose emotional or physical
well-being had kept them from the playground might sooner have a chance at re-inhabiting
local swing-sets and monkey bars.
In this example, students were just beginning to explore Key Concepts (IBO) such of
awareness, balance, and connection and how those concepts could be applied within their
communities. The lesson was part of a larger unit within the International Baccalaureates
Primary Years Programme, where core planning includes research and inquiry. Opportunities
for students for formative and summative assessments are built into lessons.
Example #2
In 2010, while 33 South Americans were trapped deep in a mine in the southern
hemisphere, five middle school teachers and I created with students an opportunity to explore
the challenges and potential solutions for the miners, as the men lingered deep below the
earths surface in San Jose, Chile. As most middle school students had been studying Spanish
for some time, it was possible to add a strong bilingual element to this investigation.
During the study, the schools math teacher helped students to use ratios to try to recreate the size of the space in which the miners were trapped. Discussions ensued about how
to limit the height of the ceiling in the classroom to most realistically emulate the size of the
area. The science and social studies teacher explored the topography and geologic formations
of the area of Chile where the accident had occurred, in order to start a conversation about
how it might even be possible for an underground rescue effort to ensue. In language arts
class, students journaled and practiced public speaking skills as they shared their concerns
about the unfolding crisis.
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programs like these could rapidly spread across the globe, including in USA schools. It would
also help address America's most pressing problems: Education that is relevant, and real
twenty-first century economic opportunities for our youth -- all the while providing
international business experience for all.
At the ground level, students and faculty in the DC school are exploring and discussing
the aspects of achieving well-being that are most challenging for Maasai women, including
their emotional, intellectual, and physical wellness. This is in part a result of strains placed on
Maasai communities by the absence of the fathers of their children.
In Example #1 well-being is as examined as it relates to communities. In Example #2,
students example well-being as it relates to human kind. In Example #3, students are using
their personal strengths, such as computer repair and website creation to help effect change in
the life of another human being. They are indeed attempting to help others to achieve wellbeing in a remote part of the developing world. Through awareness, balance, and connection,
a Central Idea (IBO) of well-being becomes a transdisciplinary idea across communities,
across disciplines and across continents.
As teachers, it is among our many callings to help our students to develop awareness,
seek balance, and look for ways to connect. That we undertake the endeavor alongside our
students is one of the many gifts of a constructivist and transdisciplinary education. In
Spanish, it is said, Aun Aprendemos-- We are still learning. The National Institute of
Wellness Six Dimensions of Wellness offer us a place to begin to explore, to learn about, and
to practice our capacity to care for ourselves, to grow ourselves, and to heal ourselves, all of
which are paramount for the greater collective productivity that we want our world to
experience. There is an approach to teaching and learning, an approach that begins with
personal sustainable development that is fully available to each of us, simply because we
human. Using the Six Dimensions of Wellness is just one road we can travel with students that
helps all of us to realize our true purpose and what we are fully capable of accomplishing, as
we first learn to care for ourselves and then ultimately help others to do the same.
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Abstract: Whether we fail in school or life exams, suicide is not an answer. What is
the meaning of education? How to heal the pain within us, which one day might result
in divisions and conflicts at large?
Sometimes we find ourselves at the edge of darkness, uncertain and lost. And sometimes,
some of us, take an irreversible step plunging into shadows.
Youth suicide has been a serious problem in many countries over the past four decades; with
school counselors, school personnel, psychologists and social workers attempting to prevent,
detect and secure assistance for the students.
Statistics show that every year circa 200 000 teenagers worldwide commit suicide while
about 4 million adolescents attempts it. We have been noticing a rising suicidal trend since
some years.
According to WHO statistics (2011) in some countries such as Lithuania figures are
relatively high, with the example of Russia having the highest underage suicide rate in
Europe.
In other countries, such as Australia, statistics show lower figures.
In USA, ranking among the highest in suicide rate worldwide, about 10% of adolescents
attempts to suicide
An interesting fact is that about 56% of all female suicides worldwide takes place in China.
The meaning of suicide in China differs from other cultures; namely it is perceived as a
legitimate means of conveying a message.
Some surveys in South Korea show about 20% of middle and high school students feel
tempted to suicide.
In India about 20 students kill themselves every day due to the stress related to exams,
wanting to secure seats in prestigious schools, according to the National Crime Records
Bureau. South India is considered the worlds suicide capital; especially Kerala, the first fully
literate Indian state, has the highest number of suicides committed daily about 32.
According to the Bangalore psychologists from the Indian Southern Medical Centre,
(children) are under pressure to deliver at school, () to appear for competitive
examinations, no one gives them any advice about the meaning of life.
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It is widely disputed whether the statistics can be trusted and whether they reflect indeed the
real situation due to the fact that suicidal behaviours are illegal in some countries; they are
also opposed by the major religions and philosophies, thus there is to be expected a certain
degree of under-reporting.
What is the meaning of education? Sometimes, despite we gain every day more knowledge
and experience, we feel so helpless.
A survey done in UK on 6020 students (2002) has shown that 70% of self-harming teenagers
with suicidal thoughts have admitted that the cause was their concerns about the school
performance and exams.
There have been several reports in Hong Kong, China, Japan and other Asian countries
related to the exam-induced psychological problems, suicidal feelings and fear of exams
according to publications by Suen & Yu (2006), Hesketh, Ding & Jenkins (2002), Zeng & Le
Tendre (1998).
French sociologist, Durkheim, was one of the first to notice that there is a higher rate of
suicide in case of the individuals who are socially not integrated and cannot count on social
support (1897).
In order to address and tackle the problem different suicide prevention efforts have been
implemented by different stakeholders: governments, academic institutions, NGOs; realizing
the importance of the community support.
In the last 30 years several school based programmes have been conducted worldwide at
schools for the purpose of the improvement of the mental and emotional health as well as the
improvement of the knowledge on suicide; being part of a prevention and postvention strategy.
Yet, the effectiveness of such programmes has been questioned and sparks a lot of
controversy as apparently no drop in suicide rate has been noticed among the participants and
even it has been stated that it might prompt in young people what it is supposed to prevent.
There have been even accusations saying that such programmes defeat their very purpose and
normalize suicidal behaviour by stating the latter occurs as a result of examination and
school stress and pressures.
News around the world reporting every day new cases of suicide are concerning and there is
a noticeably rising tendency to point out the correlation between the academic stress and the
suicidal ideation.
What is the meaning of life? Sometimes, despite all the beauty and wonder in the world, our
life seems so hopeless.
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Conclusions
Ive been working with abandoned children and teenagers in Thailand, noting that their main
problem is an overwhelming and persisting feeling of hopelessness, lack of meaning in life.
Ive been working with orphaned and HIV-positive children and teenagers in South Africa,
realizing their difficulties in coping with death and grief as well as their suicidal inclinations.
On the level of Countries, Government and politics, such an education shall help
understanding each other better, building dialogs and bridges, and gradually evolving towards
the concept of unity in diversity, unity without borders, where differences in language,
religion, culture, skin-tone or sex would not cast any shadow on our profound and wholly
human identity.
In my opinion, education shall be not only about gaining more knowledge and information,
but rather about understanding better the meaning of life.
Peace cannot be achieved through any ideology or treaty, it takes an aware mind and a united
heart. The first thing to be overcome is separateness.
It shall produce not only excellent professionals and workers, but also individuals free of
fears and hate, hence able to give and receive love.
My humble proposal would be to call to life a special Task Force, comprised of individuals
with different backgrounds and competencies, among them experts in education area, in
charge of developing curricula and policies for fostering education for life programmes for
children and adults, efficiently addressing our aspiration to become truly human beings, and
to create a civilized civilization.
Whats the use of education if it becomes a weapon to destroy others through armed conflicts,
technology and desire to control and dominate; as well as a weapon to destroy ourselves
and I mean not just through suicidal attempts.
Education is the most powerful weapon which can change the world, as Nelson Mandela used
to say. It shall serve humanity addressing its problems and concerns at each and every level of
human life.
The teenager suicides are, according to me, like the tip of an iceberg, bearing the profound
discontent and hopelessness a large portion of our society is living inside. Until we admit
that, and we act upon it, our life will be nothing else than a continuos fight for something,
fight with others and fight within ourselves.
On the level of a common man, education for life shall help us overcoming fears and misery,
showing us how tremendously beautiful and worth living our life is, with all its lights and
shadows.
During our lifetime we encounter victories and defeats, love and separation. Are we ready to
face all these without becoming inhumane, cruel, fearful and apathetic? Neither school nor
parents usually show us this, thus we are also unable to show it to our children.
Diekstra eds., Suicide Prevention: A Holistic Approach. Boston: Kluwer Academic Publishers, 1998.
Durkheim, E. (1966) Suicide. Macmillan: New York.
Garfinkel, Barry D., Art Froese, and Jane Hood. Suicide Attempts in Children and Adolescents. American
Journal of Psychiatry 139 (1982):12571261.
Hesketh, T., Ding, Q.J. & Jenkins, R. (2002). Suicide ideation in Chinese adolescents.
Mishara, Brian L. Childhood Conceptions of Death and Suicide: Empirical Investigations and Implications for Suicide Prevention. In Diego De Leo, Armi N. Schmidtke, and Rene F. W.
Patton, GC., Coffey, C., Sawyer, SM, et al. (2009). Global patterns of mortality in young people: a
systematic analysis of population health data.
Nowadays money is strongly affecting all aspects of our lives, our education, our wellbeing
and our opportunities. The entire system characterized by the illusion of an unlimited growth
and consumption is not sustainable in a finite world and the economic and social crises we are
seeing in the last years are, undoubtedly, worrying signs of crumbling perspectives.
Ren F. W. Diekstra, C. W. M. Kienhorst, and E. J. de Wilde (1995). Suicide and Suicidal Behaviour
among Adolescents. Psychosocial Disorders in Young People: Time Trends and Their Causes.
Life education on the level of business and economics shall help us being guided by more
aware and higher pursuits than greed and selfishness; teaching us balance and principles of
working for people and not just for money. It shall teach us becoming humble and
overcoming our ego.
World Health Organization (2012). Suicide Country Reports. Accessed December 2012
http://www.who.int/mental_health/prevention/suicide/country_rep orts/en/
Shaffer, David, and Madeline Gould. Suicide Prevention in Schools. In Keith Hawton and Kees an Heeringen eds., The International Handbook of Suicide and Attempted Suicide. Chichester: John Wiley & Sons,
2000.
Zeng, K. & G. Le Tendre (1998). Adolescent suicide and academic competition in East Asia.
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20th December
International Human Solidarity Day
Submission Deadline November 20
Con el apoyo de la
Oficina de
Santiago
Organizacin
de las Naciones Unidas
para la Educacin,
la Ciencia y la Cultura
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El mbito pblico siempre se constituy por el conflicto. (Nancy Fraser).
Un kilmetro de luz,
un gramo de pensamiento...
(De noche el reloj que late
es el corazn del tiempo...)
(Dulce Mara Loynaz).
Ento meu mito cyborg se refere a fronteiras violadas, fuses potentes e possibilidades perigosas que as pessoas progressistas poderiam explorar como uma parte do trabalho poltico
necessrio. (Donna Haraway).
E-mail: sociologymara@gmail.com
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Una definicin tradicional del mbito privado, abarca en palabras de Agnes Heller,
las emociones domsticas, que se transcriben como sinnimos de relaciones familiares,
matrimonio, trabajo domstico y cuidado de los nios. Haciendo de lo privado el pequeo
mundo de la mujer, una esfera femenina sobre la cual los representantes hombres del
Patriarcado ejercen el sentido de propiedad, protegindola de las interferencias pblicas.
Otra perspectiva que debemos tomar en cuenta sobre lo pblico/privado es la que est
inmersa en el concepto de derechos. Al tiempo que refuerza los principios liberales subyacentes de la libertad individual y la igualdad formal, establece correspondencias entre los
derechos individuales y la nocin de un mbito de libertad privado, separado y distinto del
pblico en el cual el estado no puede interferir legtimamente. Enfatizando la proteccin de
aspectos privados e individuales.
Es el reconocimiento del mito, de su posible funcin desestabilizadora lo que me conduce a formular las siguientes preguntas directrices: Qu es lo personal? Continuar
teniendo el mismo efecto la frase: lo personal es poltico del feminismo radical en una
poca de descentramientos, vaciamientos, post-estructuralismo, post-modernismo, globalizacin neoliberal? Tendr sentido ensayar como una repuesta posible que lo personal es lo privado? Cmo afectarn estas preguntas las nociones de poltica y de poder?
Una de las situaciones histricas que provoc un cmulo de impactos negativos para
las mujeres fue la forma en que se reprodujo la categora moderna de individuo. Ya que la
misma postula la existencia de un pblico universalista y homogneo, relegando todas las
particularidades y diferencias para el mbito privado.
Las mujeres que haban pasado por situaciones de violencia referenciaban no tener un
tiempo propio, un espacio, sentan que su tiempo era controlado, lo narraban, como parte de
una vigilancia interna, conocemos las frases comunes: l quera saber lo que yo haca
siempre, si llegaba a la casa y no estaba hecha la comida se enojaba, quera mandar en
mi persona. Una de las ms llamativas en mi opinin relata: Un da llegu a sentir que yo
no era yo, que nunca haba tenido la oportunidad de serlo, porque no tuve tiempo para m.
Qu lmites no reconocidos funcionan para identificar la falta ese personal, para quienes
son obligadas a desdoblarse para los otros?
1.1-
Hecho que quizs permita corroborar la tesis que mantienen algunas autoras sobre la
mayor dependencia de las mujeres de la poltica de los Estados en comparacin con los hombres. Entre las razones por ellas descritas se apunta al proceso de reproduccin que contina
integrando a las mujeres tanto en la familia como fuera de esta, de forma que se encuentren
extendiendo constantemente las actividades domsticas y del cuidado en los espacios pblicos como una extensin de sus tareas de la esfera privada.
El trabajo asalariado, numerosas veces, lleva las marcas del trabajo domstico, con
horarios sumamente elsticos en funcin de los pedidos- debido a la existencia de fenmenos como la subcontratacin, falta de cualificacin, la subordinacin a capataces masculinos,
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confusin entre servicios laborales con sexuales o los llamados especficamente femeninos
y se encuentran en su inmensa mayora al margen de los derechos laborales por ser los denominados trabajadores genricos.
Eso explica las miles de mujeres que realizan trabajos en sectores invisibles, mal remuneradas, y explotadas, casi siempre inmigrantes, entre las que se destacan las que trabajan de
costureras, en condiciones de explotacin y sometidas a una violencia que les impide ver la
luz del da, para no llamar la atencin de las autoridades en los pases de Amrica Latina.
Ejemplos como estos generan un proceso continuo de distincin que nos permite explicar como reconoce Nancy Fraser, la exacerbacin del sexismo caracterstico del mbito
pblico liberal y podemos aadir neoliberalista:
Este proceso de distincin ayuda a explicar la exacerbacin del sexismo caracterstico del mbito pblico liberal, las nuevas normas de gnero que
prescriban la domesticidad femenina y una marcada separacin entre los
mbitos pblico y privado funcionaban como signos clave de la diferencia
entre la burguesa y las clases tanto altas como bajas. (FRASER, 1993, p.29).
Lo cual nos conduce a incorporar una perspectiva interseccional del asunto desde la
cual podamos entender como la exclusin y difcil absorcin de lo femenino en el mbito
pblico, resulta de una ideologa con prejuicios de raza y clase. Este anlisis interseccional
ayuda a repensar lo pblico y lo privado de forma que podamos percibir las posiciones de
hombres y mujeres en estos mbitos no solo de manera espacial.
La forma fsica como los cuerpos ocupan el espacio no condiciona el empoderamiento
que desarrollan en dichas posiciones. Lo pblico parece retroceder o alejarse como un horizonte, una lnea imaginaria que no se alcanza cuando los cuerpos femeninos entran en sus
instituciones. Hay un marco institucional, que parece tener el arte de recrear lo privado/
domstico para acogerlas, mantenerlas, en la extensin y repeticin de los roles del cuidado o
tareas estereotipadas como cosas de mujeres, de manera que no puedan experimentar lo
pblico en carne propia. Esto demuestra una complejidad que implica estar imbuido de ambas
dimensiones: privadas y pblicas al mismo tiempo, creando la sensacin de estar en un intermedio, un entre-lugar y entre-tiempo que se dinamiza de acuerdo a las lecturas de gnero, raza
y clase.
Uno de los procesos claves en la disolucin de barreras para estos dos mbitos fue el
de comprender lo poltico desde una ptica alternativa a los centros de poder tradicionales. Al
interior de la misma ganaron legitimidad tanto lo micro-social como las construcciones discursivas.
Por ser mi temtica de estudio la preocupacin por mujeres escritoras y ser consciente
de las condiciones en que consiguen realizar su oficio: en la mesa de la cocina, en el espacio
que ocupan el resto de las personas de la casa para otros fines, me pareci plausible incluir un
enlace dirigido hacia la mujer escritora, una interpretacin del asunto desde la perspectiva de
la mujer que escribe.
1.2-
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Ser mujer es una decisin, no depende de menstruaciones, vestuarios, tareas, u orientacin sexual, es una identificacin, un sentirse, un querer ser, un no saber definirse, a veces, y
sobre todo: una relacin social. Dicha relacin fue inscrita y clasificada por diversas autoras,
dentro de parmetros de comprensin de esferas pblicas y privadas, retratadas en dismiles
ejemplos literarios, reforzadas por mitos y preocupadas con reinterpretar lo que entendemos
por poltica.
La mitologa del espacio se hace evidente en las narrativas tanto orales como escritas. Lo literario se transforma en un contexto poltico de poder, accesible a los anlisis de los/
las feministas. Como se puede entrever en el ttulo del artculo, lo pblico/privado tambin es
una relacin que se narra, la ficcin sirve aqu para distinguir posibles disoluciones de la dicotoma:
Antgona uma pessoa poltica (ou seja, nem uma mulher privada nem
um homem pblico). Transcende a diviso entre o pblico e o privado
porque encarna o pessoal fato poltico. Atravs de seu discurso e de suas
aes transforma uma questo de interesse privado em um assunto
pblico. (DIETZ, 2001a, p.62).
Uno de los ejemplos literarios utilizados por una de las tericas de la dicotoma pblico/
privado es el de Antgona, la herona de Sfocles. Donde el rey de Antgona representa el estado. Antgona desafa las obligaciones abstractas del Estado y rechaza la vida pblica representada por Creonte, el rey, segn la interpretacin de Elshtain. Sin embargo, para Mary
Dietz, Creonte no es simplemente un hombre, un rey del mbito pblico que mancha la honra
de una familia y trivializa las lealtades privadas. l es la manifestacin de un tipo particular
de poltica, el gobierno autoritario, al cual Antgona, como ciudadana, se opone. (DIETZ,
2001a, p.61). Lo mismo ocurre con el personaje de Scherezada, la narradora que consigue
gracias al arte de tejer historias conservar la vida, y parar, de este modo, la secuencia de
muertes de las esposas del Califa (smbolo de Estado), en Vozes do Deserto, un romance de la
escritora brasilea Nlida Pin.
Scherezade no teme a morte. No acredita que o poder do mundo,
representado pelo Califa, a quem o pai serve, decrete por meio de sua
morte o extermnio da sua imaginao. (PIN, 2004, p. 7).
La autora se detiene en exponer los detalles de la dificultad de narrar, del oficio de la
mujer que narra, y del empoderamiento que ofrece el arte de manipular la palabra. Juega con
la inversin del signo que fue la prohibicin de la escrita femenina, en el arte de contar, de la
oralidad que se desdobla ante nosotros, los lectores, en un doble juego: la mujer que escribe
sobre la mujer que narra, como queriendo extender exponencialmente los enraizamientos microfsicos del poder.
merc de Scherezade, o soberano testa um poder que naquelas circunstncias de nada lhe serve. (...) Intui que seu poder frente ao imprio narrativo
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manifestacin con carteles. Todas cantaban Yo mat a la Reina, lo que produca una gran confusin. (PRINGLE, WATSON, 2002, p.67).
Para una definicin de poltica vale recordar que en el sentido de un modelo cvico republicano esta alude a un conjunto de personas que razonan juntas para promover el bien
comn y que no se trata de la simple suma de preferencias individuales. No obstante, prefer
tomar otros dos conceptos los cuales agrup en una pequea sntesis por considerarlos pertinentes a ambos, se trata de la visin de Mary G. Dietz, que alude al acto de involucrarse en el
debate pblico y de compartir la responsabilidad del autogobierno. (DIETZ, 2001, p. 23),
junto a la concepcin de Millet de una poltica que no se refiere al limitado mundo de las
reuniones, los presidentes y los partidos, sino por el contrario, al conjunto de relaciones y compromisos estructurados de acuerdo con el poder, en virtud de los cuales un grupo de personas
queda bajo el control de otro grupo. (MILLET, 1995, p.68).
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intenta transmitirnos como la prdida de un espacio implica la prdida del otro, hasta ahora
considerado su contrario. Ocurriendo las prdidas de espacios privados y pblicos simultneamente.
Ahora, una vez ms, el capital global redefine la divisin entre lo pblico/
privado para los nuevos pases del tercer mundo, privilegiando el mercado
sobre la intensiva domesticidad del trabajo del hogar y un estado ausente.
Mientras tanto la desindustrializacin en los pases del primer mundo produce
una nueva divisin de la creciente privatizacin. Lo que una vez fue la esfera
pblica del estado ahora es privatizado por los neoconservadores, de tal forma
que cada individuo debe cuidar de s mismo. (EISENSTEIN, 1997, p.232).
Su insistencia en lo econmico viene dada por su idea de que la privatizacin del
mundo pblico ha creado una crisis para ambos mundos, y que cuanto ms se haga en lo privado- la importancia de la privacidad individual y libertad de eleccin y de mercados- lo
pblico se va haciendo pedazos. Ella pregunta: qu puede significar la privacidad cuando lo
pblico ya no existe? Si desaparece la nocin de pblico cmo es que uno puede vivir fuera
de s? Es valioso recuperar la visin de que lo privado siempre existe en relacin a lo pblico,
y que ellos se intercambian y se conflictan uno con otro simultneamente.
Aunque concuerdo con su postulado de que el capital transnacional necesita de la privatizacin de muchas cosas pblicas, y agrego de numerosos bienes pblicos en general, desprotegidos por la carencia o debilidad de polticas de bienestar social casi inexistentes. Me
pregunto si Zillah Eisenstein se estar refiriendo a la privatizacin de un espacio y/o mbito; si
su visin alude a prcticas comercializadoras y de publicitacin de aspectos familiares. Ya que
el imaginario cientfico social considera a la familia como menos privada que en otros
contextos anteriores en trminos de control pblico, de ayuda y de intervencin.
Ella prosigue diciendo que las polticas sexuales y lo definido por el poder encubierto como los momentos privados, son comercializados masivamente. Refirindose, de este
modo, no nicamente a un espacio, sino tambin a un tiempo, que pasa por las cuestiones de
identidad y de lenguaje.
La comercializacin masiva absorbe, publicita, normaliza y disciplina, todo a
la vez. La comercializacin redefine los lmites entre lo privado y lo pblico,
adentro y afuera, poltica convencional y cultura de masas, lenguaje feminista
e identidades de las mujeres. Las polticas feministas radicales quedan fuera
de las renegociadas fronteras, mientras que el estatus de vctima de las
mujeres se convierte en el nuevo voyeurismo. (EISENSTEIN, 1997, p.217).
Retomamos la cuestin del discurso, unida a las identidades de las mujeres, que se presentan
cada vez ms como identidades fragmentarias, transitorias. La aparente disolucin de ambos
mbitos, comporta segn mi punto de vista, una situacin en la que sean tomados en cuenta, la
transitoriedad, los entretiempos y entre-lugares, la permeabilidad que afectan notoriamente la
realidad postmoderna, desde un punto de vista post-estructuralista y que juega con las revisiones crticas de la categora identidad.
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Podemos caracterizar la situacin de vida que experimentamos actualmente como dirigida por
principios de desdiferenciacin de la organizacin del espacio y el tiempo en un contexto de
eventos no solo complejos sino tambin acelerados.
Termos como entrelugar, entremeio e entretempo () circunscrevem fenmenos e vidas oscilantes situados em espaos fronteirios, numa esfera do alm,
formulada por Bhaba como momento de trnsito em que espao e tempo se
cruzem para produzir figuras complexas de diferena e identidade. (OLINTO,
2010, p.28).
1.3- Un par de ideas finales.
As como lo personal fue comprendido como un campo abierto, permeable y transitorio, la poltica presenta connotaciones difusas, porque las relaciones de poder no son inmutables, y se resignifican, ms en un contexto de vaciamientos, donde las identidades se fragmentan y pluralizan. Decir que lo personal es poltico merece un voto a favor y en contra al mismo
tiempo, dentro de una dialctica oscilatoria que permite entender la desestabilizacin de lo
personal por lo pblico, la privatizacin de lo privado, la impronta de lo discursivo y la aparicin de entre-lugares y entre-tiempos.
NOTAS
1 Existe un reconocimiento acerca de la ausencia de lo femenino en cuanto sujeto de derechos y ciudadana
dentro del pensamiento poltico tradicional. Adems como parte de la obsesin por los orgenes se ha colocado
como posible punto de partida para esta cuestin, la distincin entre dos esferas: la pblica y la privada, consideradas tambin como mbitos y/o espacios, dentro de los cuales se identifican de forma dicotomizada, por
ende, opuesta, a lo masculino con la primera y lo femenino con la segunda. Y este proceso de identificacin se
torn una especie de base para el pensamiento poltico patriarcal.
2 Este punto de vista ser desarrollado en prximos trabajos.
3 Que se interesa por el discurso y me resulta til para aprehender aspectos del lenguaje, narracin, y la literatura.
4Colaboracin con el proyecto de investigacin de la Dr. Clotilde Proveyer Cervantes del Dpto de Sociologa
(Universidad de la Habana): Violencia de gnero en Cuba: Los TTIB en La Habana y la atencin a la
violencia contra las mujeres: Una propuesta de acompaamiento a actores locales para su atencin. (2011).
5Proyecto en andamiento: Nuevas formas de consumo cultural: jvenes creadores y contrahegemona.6 Para
el liberalismo, en el pasado, este mbito privado abarc casi siempre, en palabras de Agnes Heller, las emociones domsticas, es decir, matrimonio, familia, trabajo domstico, y cuidado de los nios. En suma, la nocin
liberal de lo privado ha abarcado lo que se ha denominado esfera de la mujer como propiedad del varn
y no solo ha tratado de defenderlo de la interferencia del mbito pblico, sino que tambin ha mantenido
aparte de la vida de lo pblico a quienes pertenecen a esa esfera: las mujeres. (DIETZ, 2001, p.8).
7 El concepto de derechos no slo refuerza los principios liberales subyacentes de la libertad individual y la
igualdad formal, sino que establece tambin la distincin entre privado y pblico que inspira gran parte de
la perspectiva liberal sobre la familia y las instituciones sociales. Los derechos individuales corresponden a la
nocin de un mbito de libertad privado, separado y distinto del pblico. Pese a que los tericos liberales no
coinciden con respecto al carcter y grado de intervencin estatal en el mbito pblico- y ni siquiera acerca de
lo que cuenta como pblico- aceptan no obstante la idea de que determinados derechos son inviolables y
existen en un mbito privado en el que el estado no puede interferir legtimamente. (DIETZ, 2001, p.8).
8 Volveremos a esto con algunas formulaciones de Nancy Fraser sobre Habermas.
9 a moderna categoria de indivduo foi construda de uma forma que postula um pblico universalista e
homogneo, relegando toda a particularidade e toda a diferena para o privado, o que tem conseqncias
extremamente negativas para as mulheres. (MOUFFE, 1993, p.111).
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10 Si uno repasa la historia reciente de las definiciones de los intereses de las mujeres, sus demandas han
sido planteadas mucho ms para ganar control sobre su propio destino dentro del espacio privado que para
la creacin de nuevas instituciones. (HERNES, sa, p.29).
11 El colapso de la familia hombre mantenedor-ama de casa ha aumentado la independencia de las mujeres
en relacin a su marido y a la vez ha hecho a las mujeres ms dependientes del Estado como empleadas,
clientes y consumidoras de los servicios pblicos. (BORCHORST, 1987, p.161).
12 En el caso de las mujeres (), su trabajo asalariado an desempeado fuera del hogar, lleva todas las
marcas de su trabajo domstico, con horarios sumamente elsticos en funcin de los pedidos ya que
prevalece por doquier la frmula de la subcontratacin- , con un aprovechamiento de sus verstiles
habilidades a la vez que no se les reconoce cualificacin alguna, con una subordinacin a capataces masculinos que confunden sus servicios laborales con los que eventualmente podran ser servicios sexuales o especficamente femeninos, etc. Como son percibidas como sirvientas ms que como sujetos de derechos
laborales, sirven tanto para un roto como para un descocido: son los trabajadores genricos por antonomasia. Son tan invisibles, tan sustituibles, tan indiscernibles, tan genricas, en suma, que, a veces, aunque desaparezcan en buen nmero, como ha ocurrido recientemente en ciudad Jurez, lo hacen, al parecer, ante la
indiferencia de las instituciones. (AMORS, 2007, p.327).
13 Uma conceituao do problema que busca capturar as conseqncias estruturais e dinmicas da interao entre dois ou mais eixos da subordinao. Ela trata especificamente da forma pela qual o racismo, o
patriarcalismo, a opresso de classe e outros sistemas discriminatrios criam desigualdades bsicas que estruturam as posies relativas das mulheres, raas, etnias, classes e outras. (CRENSHAW, Kimberl, 2002,
pp.171-188).
14 Hombres, mujeres y otros que no se reconocen dentro de estas categoras.
15 En este sentido fue relevante la obra de Foucault.
16 A cidadania no apenas uma identidade entre outras, como sucede no liberalismo, nem to-pouco a
identidade dominante que elimina todas as outras, como acontece no republicanismo cvico. Pelo contrrio,
um principio articulador que afeta as diferentes posies de sujeito do agente social, ao mesmo tempo que
permite uma pluralidade de filiaes especficas e o respeito da liberdade individual. Nesta concepo, a
distino pblico/privado no abandonada, mas sim concebida de forma diferente. A distino no corresponde a esferas discretas, separadas; cada situao um encontro entre o privado e o pblico, porque
todos os empreendimentos so privados, embora nunca isentos das condies pblicas prescritas pelos
princpios da cidadania. Os desejos, escolhas e decises so privados, porque so da responsabilidade de
cada indivduo, mas os desempenhos so pblicos, porque tm de sujeitar-se s condies especificadas por
um determinado entendimento dos princpios tico-polticos do regime, que faculta a gramtica da conduta do cidado. (MOUFFE, 1993, p.114).
17 En pocas palabras, el modelo cvico republicano destaca una visin de la poltica como un grupo de
personas que razonan juntas para promover un bien comn que trasciende la simple suma de preferencias
individuales. (FRASER, 1993, p.49).
18 Al mismo tiempo el concepto de democracia es conceptualizado como un sistema poltico supeditado a
la economa en el que los sujetos desarrollan y amplan sus derechos como consumidores. La democracia
neoliberal tiene una dimensin fuertemente mercantil en la que los ciudadanos son definidos como meros
consumidores, pues en la eleccin del objeto a consumir se concreta la libertad. (COBO, 2007, p.280).
19 Finalmente, las defensoras de los derechos de las mujeres combatan pblicamente tanto la exclusin de
la mujer del mbito pblico oficial como la privatizacin de la poltica por gnero. (FRASER, 1993, p.31).
20 Parece que estamos transcendiendo la divisin de lo pblico y lo privado, pero en una forma inconsistente y contradictoria. La prdida del espacio pblico se da, muchas veces, paralelamente con la prdida del
espacio privado. (EISENSTEIN, 1997, p.201).
21 Porque lo privado siempre existe en relacin a lo pblico, y porque ellos se intercambian y se conflictan uno con otro simultneamente, la privatizacin del mundo pblico ha creado una crisis para ambos
mundos. Cuanto ms se haga en lo privado- la importancia de la privacidad individual y libertad de eleccin
y de mercados- lo pblico se va haciendo pedazos. Qu puede significar la privacidad cuando lo pblico ya
no existe? Si ya no existe la nocin de lo pblico cmo es que uno puede vivir fuera de s? El capital transnacional necesita de la privatizacin de muchas cosas pblicas. (EISENSTEIN, 1997, p.202).
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Bibliografa.
AMORS, Clia. Globalizacin y orden de gnero. In.AMORS, C. e MIGUEL, A. Teoria Feminista: de
La Ilustracin a La globalizacin. Madrid: Minerva, Ed. 2007, pp. 301-332.
BACHELARD Gaston. La potica del espacio. Fondo de Cultura Econmica. Mxico, 1992.
BORCHORST, Anette. Las mujeres y el Estado del bienestar avanzado. Una nueva forma de poder patriarcal? In. SASSOON, Anne (org) Las mujeres y el Estado.Madrid: Vindicacin Feminista. 1987. pp 151-162.
COBO, Rosa. Globalizacin y nuevas servindumbre de las mujeres. In. AMORS, C. e MIGUEL, A. Teoria
Feminista: de La Ilustracin a La globalizacin. Madrid: Minerva, Ed. 2007, pp. 265-300.
DIETZ, Mary G. El contexto es lo que cuenta. Feminismo y teorias de la ciudadania. Debate Feminista (n
especial). Mxico. 2001 pp. 3-32.
DIETZ, Mary G. Cidadania com cara feminista. Debate Feminista (n especial). Mxico. 2001 pp. 55-78.
EISENSTEIN, Zillah. Lo pblico de las mujeres y la bsqueda de nuevas democracias. Debate
Feminista (Ano 8, Vol.15) Mxico. 1997. Pp.198-243.
FRASER, Nancy. Repensar el mbito pblico: una contribucin a la crtica de la democracia realmente
existente. Debate Feminista (Ano 4, vol.7) Mxico: 1993. Pp.23-58.
HARAWAY, Donna. Um manifesto para os cyborgs: cincia, tecnologia e feminismo socialista na dcada de
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cultura. Rio de Janeiro: Rocco, 1994. p. 243-288.
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LAURETIS, Teresa de. A tecnologia do gnero. In: HOLLANDA, Heloisa Buarque de. Tendncias e impasses: o feminismo como crtica da cultura. Rio de Janeiro: Rocco, 1994. p. 206-242.
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MOUFFE, Chantal. O regressso do poltico. Lisboa: Gradiva. 1993 (Cap. 5 Feminismo, cidadania e
poltica democrtica radical). Pp.: 101- 120.
OLINTO, HeidrumKrieger. Construoidentitria na tica da transdiferena. In MOITA LOPES, Luiz
Paulo da. BASTOS, Liliana Cabral. (Org.). Para alm da identidade; fluxos, movimentos e trnsitos. Belo
Horizonte: Editora UFMG, 2010. p.25-48.
PHILLIPS, Anne. Las pretenciones universales del pensamiento poltico. In. BARRET, M e PHILLIPS, A.
(Comp.) Desestabilizar la teora. Debates feministas contemporneos. Mxico: PUEG/UNAM. 2002. pp.
203-222.
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contemporneos. Mxico: PUEG/UNAM. 2002.. Pp. 203-222.
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Abstract: This article examines and analyzes the controversial issue of Female Genital
Mutilation (FGM). With goal to find the truths and the lies around the issue, this article provides
a description and an analysis of important factual information regarding the practices of FGM
and its (FGMs) relation to the cultural and religious norms of a society. In addition, it offers an
interesting theoretical discussion on the issue within the frame of two core theories, Universalism
and Cultural relativism. Aim of this paper is not only to condemn the FGM practices around the
world but also inform the readers properly on its harmful consequences on womens/girls health
and rights. Based on the factual data and the discussion on FGMs origins, it becomes obvious
that FGM does not have any actual religious basis. Although it is referred to as a societys
cultural or religious custom through the study of the relevant academic literature, I reached the
conclusion that FGM derives mostly from outdated beliefs of individuals. These beliefs have
been passed and preserved over the years in many civilizations and as a result have become an
integral part of people's lives and cultural traditions. In many cases, the refusal of a woman to be
subjected to FGM is the reason why she can be refused the chance to be educated, get married
and finds a job as FGM practices have been associated with a woman's purity, cleanliness,
maturity and absolute obedience to her husband. Even though international human rights laws as
well as some domestic treaties have promoted and prohibited these practices against women, it is
a fact that FGM is still apparent in many countries of the contemporary world.
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Keywords: FGM, Culture, Religion, Womens Rights, Human Rights, Universalism, Cultural
Relativism, International Human Rights Law
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Athanasia Zagorianou
Strathclyde University, Glasgow.
Master in Human Rights Law.
e-mail: nassia_izago@yahoo.gr
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Introduction
Womens rights have been globally established as human rights through the signatory
and ratification of numerous important International and domestic human rights treaties,
agreements, conventions and declarations. International and regional legal documents have
covered and concentrated on the various aspects of womens rights such as domestic abuse,
gender inequality, discrimination etc.
Culture, an important factor for every state's operation around the world, can easily
affect and inspire the masses. A fact that sometimes might have serious consequences on
individuals' physical and mental health, as many cultures have their own philosophies and
strong views on issues such as health, illness, healing etc.
In some cultures, the role of women in the society is very limited and the compliance
with social standards can be extremely oppressive and detrimental to the mental and physical
health of women. It is not unusual for cultural norms and traditions to be linked with
sexuality, alcohol or nutrition. The status of women, which has been an everlasting issue, has
given rise to a variety of controversial situations as the broadly known issue of Female
Genital Mutilation/Cutting (FGM/C).
FGM is an issue that has been intensively criticized by the international community
since the reason that it is practiced is not medical and the girls and women that are subjected
to it do not receive proper medical care (WHO, Fact sheet N241).
Female Genital Mutilation
According to the World Health Organization (WHO), Female Genital Mutilation
(FGM/C) is defined as every procedure that involves a part or total removal of the external
female genitalia for non-medical reasons.(WHO, Fact sheet N241).
Based on the study of the publication of Royal College of Nursing (RCN), Middle
East, South East Africa as well as twenty-eight countries of Africa are some of the most
common areas where FGM takes place (RCN, 2006, p.5). Moreover, women and girls are
also subjected to FGM due to immigration of individuals in Europe, Canada, Australia and
the United States (RCN, 2006, p.5)
According to WHO, FGM has been classified into four types, the first type is
Clitoridectomy (utter or partial amputation of the clitoris), the second is excision (utter or
partial amputation of external female genital organs i.e. clitoris and labia majora), the third is
called infibulation (the removal of all outer female genitalia organs i.e. clitoris labia majora
and labia minora) and sewing or tightening the vaginal hole and the fourth and last type has
been characterized as any-other non-medical, hurtful method on the female genitalia (e.g.
piercing, stretching, cauterization of some genital parts etc.) that can endanger the physical
health of a girl or a woman(WHO, Fact sheet N241).
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The 2005 United Nations Childrens Fund (UNICEF) Innocenti underlines that the
number of girls and women that have been subjected to FGM reaches [the] 130 million
worldwide [while] three million women annually [are] exposed to these practices. (Unicef
Digest Innocenti, 2005, p. vii)
The biggest issue with FGM is the dramatic and disastrous consequences of these
practices on womens health and rights. During the conduction of FGM many young women
and female children have died from profuse blood loss, insufferable pain or shock (WHO,
2008 p.11). FGM is mainly conducted by traditional circumcisors that in most cases do not
have any surgical or even medical skills (Castledine, 2006). Most importantly it has been
noted that the surgical instruments used during the FGM procedure are not sterilized, a fact
that can cause serious and sometimes even fatal infections and diseases such as septicemia
and HIV (human immunodeficiency virus) (Alston, et al, 2007 p.547).
Women usually confront the dangerous consequences of this procedure during
pregnancy and childbirth. However, the practices of FGM do not only irreversibly hurt the
psychical health of women and girls but also their mental health as the traumas suffered in
childhood (due to the FGM procedure) are in a lot of cases one of the most important reasons
for psychological issues that appear later in their lives (Unicef Digest Innocenti, 2005, p.17).
It has been noticed that many of these women face problems manifested in the form of
depression, lower self-esteem, issues with their sexual life, a constantly compulsive need to
urine etc. (Royal Australian College of Obstetricians and Gynaecologists, 1997, p. 38).
Although the age of the girls that are subjected to FGM hinges on the customs of
every country, the most common age is between five and puberty. Countries as Eritrea,
Nigeria, and Mauritania are some of the countries that practice FGM on girls that are less
than five years old, while in countries such as Central African Republic, Somalia and Egypt
FGM is practiced on girls most commonly between five and fourteen years old.(UNICEF,
2013, p.50) Based on the above information regarding the age that FGM takes place, it is
obvious that the issue does not only revolve around the rights of women but also around the
rights of female children.
The practices of FGM violate some of the most important human rights treaties
regarding childrens and womens protection against violation and maltreatment. Gender
equality, which is covered in Article 2 of the Convention on the Rights of the Child (CRC),
the right of children to the highest attainable standard of health (Article 24(1), CRC), the
prohibition of all forms of mental and physical violence and maltreatment (Article 19(1),
CRC) and the prohibition of torture or inhuman or degrading treatment (Article 5 of the
Universal Declaration of Human Rights (UDHR)) are only a small sample of fundamental
rights that have been deprived from female children and women through the years due to
FGM.
Some of the major reasons that these harmful practices are still taking place during
the 21st century are high poverty, lack of education, lack of medical care and proper
information on the issue. Although the consequences of FGM as I have already noted above
are irreversibly harmful for women, a lot of them choose and support FGM as it is known
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that their disobedience can deprive them from their right to primary education and can
stigmatize them in their local society.
Culture - Religion and FGM
It has been claimed that FGM has its origins in a number of different religious,
cultural and social perspectives that have been endorsed, maintained and practiced by
families and societies for non-medical reasons through the years. However, based on the
study of different academic sources and researches it has been proven that FGM does not
have any specific origin.
The little data that helps with tracing the origins of FGM claim that the third type of
FGM, infibulation which is also considered one of the most extreme types in relation to the
others, derives from the Egyptian Pharoah, while it has been recorded that clitoridectomy (the
first type of FGM) was taken into practice in the Western world during the 50s' as a therapy
for women that have been diagnosed with hysteria, nymphomania etc. (Royal Australian
College of Obstetricians and Gynaecologists, 1997, p.16 & Castledine, 2006).
In many societies, the practice of FGM is required for the acceptance of women in the
society and prepares them for adulthood, parenthood and marriage while it also gives them
more chances to have access to a better marriage and educational perspectives (Alston et al,
pp.550-551). In other societies, FGM has been related to the sexuality of a woman. In
particular, FGM has been used as a limitation to a womans sexuality in order to supposedly
keep her away from her intense sexual tenses. In these occasions FGM symbolizes a womans
purity or her absolute obedience to her future husband (Bourdanne, 2005).
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Charter on the Rights and Welfare of the Child (Article 21), the CRC (Article 37(1)), the
Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination against Women (CEDAW) and
many others. According to these articles, member-states of these treaties are required to adjust
or remove traditions that endanger an individuals life.
In order to adequately comprehend the issue it would be interesting at this point to
have a careful look at the relevant article of CEDAW. Particularly, Article 5(a) of CEDAW
requires the states-member of the Convention
(1) to modify the social and cultural patterns of conduct of men and
women, with a view to achieving the elimination of prejudices and customary
and all other practices which are based on the idea of the inferiority or
superiority of either of the sexes or on stereotyped roles for men and
women.(Article 5(a), CEDAW).
At least half of the African countries have adopted legislation against female genital
mutilation. Serious concerns have been expressed that these criminal practices have been
transferred to European countries through immigration. Among other states, Britain and
Sweden are the two states that have passed legislation for the prohibition of these cruel
cultural practices. Particularly, in the UK FGM became a criminal offence under the
protection of the Female Genital Mutilation Act 2003 and Prohibition of Female Genital
Mutilation (Scotland) Act 2005, Acts that have been replaced the previous Prohibition of
Female Circumcision Act 1985 (Kathy French, 2009, p. 198).
FGM - Universalism and Cultural Relativism
Although the practices of FGM have been preserved and promoted as part of a
societys predominant culture and religion, it is a fact that there are not religious documents
or holy books referring to any kind of obligation of a woman to be subjected to FGM (Preston
D. Mitchum, 1993, p.593). According to the article Female Genital Mutilation by Nahid
Toubia, FGM is not related to the religion of Islam or any other religion but [it] was spread
by dominant tribes and civilizations, often as a result of tribal, ethnic and cultural allegiances
(Julie Peters, Andrea Wolper, 1995 p.230).
The issue of FGM and its cultural or religious dimensions has also been discussed
within the frame of the known debate between cultural relativists and universalists.
Following from this point, one can see that the practices of FGM have their origins in
a complicated and wide system of beliefs and ideas that have been embraced by societies
throughout the years. From my point of view, the relation of the issue to culture or religion
could not justify FGMs heinous effects that are irreversibly dangerous for a womans
physical and mental health. It would be at least negatively challenging and scandalous to try
to defend these harmful practices relying on a societys anachronistic religious and cultural
beliefs and theories. Even if the practices of FGM were grounded on actual and commonly
accepted religious or cultural basis, this could certainly not be used as a form of excuse or
justification for this customs (FGMs) acceptance and integration in a society.
The idea of cultural relativism is mostly based on the respect of cultural diversity
among the states (Sandra Danial, 2013 pp. 4-5). For this reason, I have to point out that even
though cultural relativists support and promote cultural determination and diversity of
individuals, they have held a neutral position on the issue of FGM (Sandra Danial, 2013 pp.
4-5). However, I consider it really interesting to try to shoot down some of the arguments that
could be used support FGM within the idea of cultural relativism.
The obligation of the states to protect women and female children from these hurtful
practices has been legally covered by numerous human rights treaties such as The African
Without any intention to misinform or mislead the readers regarding the idea of these
theories and their values and with only aim to examine the issue of FGM within this longterm debate, I have to mention at this point that the general theory of cultural relativism is not
essentially consistent with customs or ideas that constitute a violation of human rights.
In order to discuss the issue of FGM in the frame of these two theories (Universalism
and Cultural Relativism) it would be necessary to write a few words for the principles that
they represent. Based on the theory of universalism, all human rights are universal,
indivisible and interdependent and interrelated. Principally, human rights are applicable to
all people, irrespective of location, gender, ethnicity, race, culture, political system or any
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other type of diversity (Alston et al, 2007, p 517-518). For this reason, every international
human rights treaty uses in its transcripts the universal terms as everyone or no one refer
to individuals instead of the word citizens (Alston et al, 2007, p 517-518).
On the other hand, the theory of cultural relativism is based on the idea that there are
no objective criteria by which people with different social and religious norms and
perspectives can be distinguished. The basic principle of cultural relativism is the respect of
diverse culture and traditions (Sandra Danial, 2013 pp.2-3). Every society has its own internal
system of values which often are in conflict with the universal values of human rights. For
these reasons, it (cultural relativism) supports the local autonomy and opposes against the
global imposition of the western model.
Objections regarding the idea of universalism have not been raised only from relativist
philosophers but also from social scientists and governmental representatives in international
conferences such as the Viennas Conference in 1993 where the issues of culture and women
rights within the frame of the two theories (cultural relativism and universalism) were
discussed (Sciolino, 1993). Although the idea of universalism has been intensively criticized
by the advocates of cultural relativism as a western idea that represents only the western
perspectives and not the universal ones, it is a fact that the theory of universalism has worthily
promoted and protected humanity through the years.
While it is important to recognize the cultural determination of many women around
the world regarding different human rights issues that have been subjects of debate between
universalism and cultural relativism such as the issue of Islamic veil (e.g. jihad) in the
Western world, I consider it necessary to note that FGM practices are nothing alike. Even
though FGM has been parallelized to male circumcision or other cosmetic surgeries that
women have undergone in the Western World, it is a fact that in contrast to cosmetic surgeries,
FGM is not a womans choice but a decision that is taken by her family, community in
accordance with the cultural and social standards of her society. Additionally, women
subjected to FGM are usually less than fourteen years old which means that they are still
children or teenagers that in most cases are not properly aware for the procedure and its
consequences on their health, an important factor that significantly contributes to their
vulnerability.
It is my firm belief that human rights representatives should respect and take into
account the diversity of cultures and religions on every human right issue that comes up. But
what happens when culture becomes the reason for womens health violations? FGM has to
come to an end and this should not be negotiable even within the frame of cultural relativism
and universalism. FGM practices should be an issue that concerns not only the women
subjected to it but also all of us as it constitutes an important violation of human rights and a
serious threat against public health and human dignity.
Conclusion
During the writing of this article my belief that religion has nothing to do with harmful
practices against female children and women was enhanced significantly. I believe that FGM
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is mostly related to deep anachronistic perceptions of individuals among states. Although the
law has made some progress in the effort to eradicate the spread and existence of this custom,
it is obvious that the impunity of these traditional practices is still intensively apparent. It
seems that in this case prejudices and cultural norms are stronger than laws.
At this point, as far as I am concerned, proper information and counseling to families
and children regarding the dangers of FGM would be more useful than the observation of
laws.I would propose the operation of free institutions, coordination of campaigns and
obligatory seminars at schools that would be sponsored by the government of every state in
the world. Their purpose would be to appropriately inform and advise families and girls on the
practices of FGM and its harmful dimensions.
To conclude, some ideas for future analysis could be the financial factors behind
FGM, discussion of cultural-religious norms of non-Western countries within the debate of
cultural relativism and universalism, the practices of FGM and their spread in the Western
World through immigration and others. Most importantly I consider that this article gives rise
for further analysis not only on the issue of FGM and its dimensions but also on other
violations against women's and children rights.
References
Alston, Goodman, Steiner, (2007), International Human Rights in Context, Law, Politics, Morals (3rd,
Oxford University Press)
Castledine J, (2006). Female Genital Mutilation: An Issue Cultural Relativism or Human Rights? Mount
Holyoke College, International Relations Program
Dr Bourdanne H, (2005). Excision Tearfund International Learning Zone(TILZ) Retrieved from:
http://tilz.tearfund.org/Publications/Footsteps+21-30/Footsteps+24/Excision.htm
French K, (2009). Sexual Health Essential Clinical Skills Nurses series, 1st ed. Wiley-Blackwel
Mitchum D, P, (2013). Slapping the Hand of Cultural Relativism: Female Genital Mutilation, Male, Dominance, and Health as a Human Rights Framework, 19 Wm. & Mary J. Women & L. 585
Peters J, Wolper A, (1995). Women's Rights, Human Rights: International Feminist Perspectives,
Psychology Press
Royal Australian College of Obstetricians and Gynaecologists, (1997), Female Genital Mutilation
Sandra Danial S, (Spring, 2013).Cultural Relativism vs. Universalism: Female Genital Mutilation,
Pragmatic Remedies, Prandium - The Journal of Historical Studies, Vol. 2, No. 1,The Department of
Historical Studies, University of Toronto Mississauga
Sciolino E, (1993).U.S. Rejects Notion That Human Rights Vary With Culture, The New York Times, Retrieved
from:http://www.nytimes.com/1993/06/15/world/us-rejects-notion-that-human-rights-vary-with-culture.ht
ml?src=pm
UNICEF, (2005). Changing a Harmful Social Convention: Female Genital Mutilation/Cutting, Digest Innocenti, Retrieved from: http://www.unicef-irc.org/publications/pdf/fgm_eng.pdf
UNICEF, (2013). Female Genital Mutilation/Cutting: A statistical overview and exploration of the
dynamics of change, Retrieved from: http://www.unicef.org/media/files/FGCM_Lo_res.pdf
WHO, (2008). Eliminating female genital mutilation, An inter-agency statement OHCHR, UNDAIS,
UNDP, UNECA, UNESCO, UNFPA, UNHCR, UNICEF, UNIFEM, WHO
WHO, (2012).Female genital mutilation, Fact sheet N241 Official Website Retrieved from:
http://www.who.int/gender/genderandhealth/en/index.html
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Abstract: Our study consists of a reflective look at native women in South America.
They find themselves in a situation of great poverty and subordination; they live in a
double rejected context because they are indigenous and women. However, we do not
want to imply that this exclusively concerns chauvinist societies, bur certain sectors
must demonstrate a more respectful attitude with native women. Furthermore, another
factor must be kept in mind; we are situated in a geographical area as vast and as
diverse as Latin America. Thus, not everything can be commented from a general
point of view.
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mente se trata de sociedades en las cuales la mujer queda relegada a un segundo plano. De
acuerdo con un testimonio de primera mano:
La mayor parte, si no es que todas las mujeres indgenas que han logrado
participar en el espacio pblico, las que han desplegado su capacidad organizativa en procesos sociales, las que los encabezan, sea la instalacin de un
molino de nixtamal o la procuracin de justicia en la comunidad, han conocido en carne propia o de cerca y de manera directa, muy diversas formas de
violencia contra las mujeres: violencia fsica, golpes y torturas; sexual,
violaciones; psicolgica, desprestigio, descalificacin y amenaza; de Estado,
intimidacin o muerte; sus verdugos han sido generalmente varones, sean sus
compaeros de vida; sus compaeros de lucha dentro de organizaciones mixtas; sus enemigos polticos y de clase. La violencia se halla entre los recuerdos y experiencias primarias y se vive tambin en el presente, no es algo aledao o perifrico de sus vidas [](5).
En este sentido, se debera intentar buscar una alternativa que fomente el equilibrio y
la igualdad. Sin embargo, la problemtica que nos surge es: cmo intentar hacer compatible
el comportamiento sociolgico de las comunidades indgenas en referencia al tratamiento de
la mujer con el estado de derecho de los pases que integran a estas comunidades? Realmente si intentamos mejorar la situacin de la mujer indgena dentro de su comunidad
estamos alterando gravemente sus estructuras organizativas? Al respecto y desde una
perspectiva de desacralizacin de las culturas indgenas en cuanto al tratamiento de la mujer
se refiere, consideramos que una mejora de la situacin de la mujer indgena dentro de su
comunidad no implica daos a las estructuras y comportamientos sociolgicos de la
comunidad. Al contrario, la construccin hacia un camino igualitario que deje de lado la humillacin y discriminacin femeninas aportara un enriquecimiento cultural. Debe destacarse
que las indgenas estn luchando en el interior de sus organizaciones y comunidades (y no
slo en el mbito de las polticas pblicas) por cambiar o eliminar aquellos elementos de la
tradicin que las discriminan y las oprimen (6). Comprenden que tienen una serie de
derechos por el mero hecho de ser indgenas y mujeres, manifestando su oposicin a aquellos
hbitos tradicionales que atenten contra su dignidad y derechos, en especial la violencia
domstica. No obstante, son conscientes que deben reforzarse y recrearse para mantener vivas las tradiciones, pues, al fin y al cabo, son ellas las transmisoras de los valores en la
comunidad (7).
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Asimismo, las mujeres indgenas han sido valoradas por algunos gobiernos y agencias
de desarrollo como elementos retardatorios de la modernizacin, consideran que las realidades de extrema pobreza que presentan la gran mayora de los pases con altas tasas de indigenismo se debe, en parte, a las elevadas tasas de natalidad indgena por lo que contribuyen a
incrementar la pobreza nacional (9).
No pretendemos romper con las estructuras indgenas
incluyndolas en lo que podramos denominar una especie de
integracin nacional en la que las mujeres padeceran una
situacin de inferioridad ms exacerbada sino lo que se
pretende es un intento por crear conciencia a gran escala en la
mentalidad de la mujer indgena sobre sus derechos con el
objetivo de mejorar sus condiciones de vida para lo que deberamos tener en cuenta sus preocupaciones cotidianas y plantear
alternativas reales.
PROBLEMTICA EDUCATIVA
En el mbito de la educacin podemos observar de
nuevo esa marginacin. Entre la poblacin indgena se observan bajos niveles de logro escolar y altos niveles de monolingismo, desercin escolar y bajo rendimiento acadmico que
para el caso de las mujeres se agudiza puesto que cerca de la
mitad de las mujeres indgenas no cuenta con educacin
primaria, sea por inasistencia o abandono. Histricamente han
sido marginadas lo que se traduce en una menor oportunidad de
acceder a la educacin. De hecho, con relacin a los hombres, existe un mayor nmero de
mujeres son analfabetas y monolinges. Asimismo, sus niveles de escolarizacin son inferiores, tienen altos niveles de fecundidad y reportan un alto riesgo de muerte por complicaciones derivadas del embarazo y parto (10).
(12)
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NOTAS:
1Discurso de la Comandante Esther del EZLN ante el Congreso de la Unin, Mxico, 27 de febrero de 2001.
2 Zolla, Carlos y Emiliano Zolla (2008): Los pueblos indgenas de Mxico: 100 preguntas, Mxico D.F: Universidad Autnoma de
Mxico, p.24.
3 MUJER/FEMPRESS, La mujer indgena (edicin especial), Chile apud Hernndez, Teresita y Murguialday Clara, Mujeres indgenas, ayer y hoy: aportes para la discusin desde una perspectiva de gnero, Talasa Ediciones, 1992, Madrid, p.89.
4 Hernndez, Teresita y Murguialday Clara (1992): Mujeres indgenas, ayer y hoy: aportes para la discusin desde una perspectiva
de gnero, Madrid: Talasa Ediciones, p.91.
5 Testimonio de Martha Snchez Nstor, amuzga de Xochistlahuaca y una de las principales lderes de la CGMI y del movimiento
de mujeres indgenas en Mxico apud ESPINOSA, Gisela (2009): Liderazgo y violencia de gnero en el guerrero indgena, Revista Venezolana de Estudios de la Mujer, n32.
6 PARDO, Rodrigo (2008): Profesin de fe de Mara Sabina: Lectura y recreacin del mito de la mujer indgena, Mxico: Fomento
Editorial, p.21.
CONCLUSIONES
Lo que hemos pretendido en este artculo es ayudar a configurarnos una idea de la
realidad de las mujeres indgenas, de los abusos e injusticias que padecen diariamente. En este
sentido, son vistas como madres, bocas que alimentar, cargas incmodas que no aportan beneficio al ncleo familiar aunque trabajen tanto, o ms, que los propios hombres. Sin embargo,
como hemos comentado, ellas mismas se han movilizado en organizaciones que contribuyen a
la defensa de sus derechos y que, de forma paulatina pero efectiva, van adquiriendo mayor
importancia tanto en el interior de la sociedad latinoamericana como a nivel mundial. An as,
basta decir que no se trata de un camino fcil por lo que se debera fomentar y apoyar con
mayor fuerza las iniciativas llevadas a cabo por las mujeres indgenas as como la elaboracin
de proyectos que siten a la mujer como elemento principal de desarrollo, de cooperacin con
las mismas mediante talleres o debates en las que participen mujeres tanto indgenas como no
indgenas de diferentes edades para que puedan compartir e intercambiar conocimientos, visiones que les permitan enriquecerse mutuamente y contribuir a este mundo pluricultural en el
que nos encontramos. Para finalizar vase el siguiente vdeo que ejemplifica en primera persona todo lo comentado anteriormente:
7 Ibidem.
8 Hernndez, Teresita y Murguialday Clara (1992): Mujeres indgenas, ayer y hoy: aportes para la discusin desde una perspectiva
de gnero, Madrid: Talasa Ediciones, p.100.
9 Hernndez, Teresita y Murguialday Clara (1992): Mujeres indgenas, ayer y hoy: aportes para la discusin desde una perspectiva
de gnero, Madrid: Talasa Ediciones, p.100-102.
10 Plan Nacional de Desarrollo para Pueblos
Indgenas apud http://pnd.calderon.presidencia.gob.mx/igualdad-de-oportunidades/pueblos-indigenas.html [consulta: 02-2014].
11 Testimonio de Ketty Snchez apud http://interculturalidad.org/numero01/b/arti/b_dfo_040404.htm [consulta: 02-2014].
12 Ministerio de Educacin y Ciencia de Espaa (2006): Educacin de mujeres y nias en Iberoamrcia: I Jornadas de Cooperacin
Educativa sobre Gnero y Educacin, Antigua, p.26.
13 Testimonio de Hermelinda Tiburcio, mixteca de la Costa Chica-Montaa, cuenta el hecho y destaca el vnculo entre ste y la
lucha de las mujeres apud ESPINOSA, Gisela (2009): Liderazgo y violencia de gnero en el guerrero indgena, Revista Venezolana de Estudios de la Mujer, n32.
14https://www.justassociates.org/sites/justassociates.org/files/los_derechos_de_las_mujeres_en_el_movimiento_indigena_latinoam
ericano.pdf [02-2014].
15 Bonfil, Paloma (2012): Mujeres indgenas y derechos en el marco de las sociedades multitnicas y pluriculturales de Amrica
Latina, Revista Ra Ximhai, n1, p.164.
16Tierra de Mujeres. Dir. Adriana Estrada, prod. Programa de Investigacin Desarrollo Humano en Chiapas UAM, Instituto de
Investigaciones Antropolgicas UNAM, Programa de Participacin Ciudadana Universidad de Sussex Inglaterra, 2003.
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Summary: The timbre is the more complex sounds attributes and its characterized
by the harmonics components of a sound. In the present paper we investigate the
harmonic contribution of a fragment of the Italian Concert-971 of Bach. This
fragment was taken in consideration because it represents the peak point of the music.
To study the harmonic contributions was applied Fast Fourier Transform. The curves
marked contribution highlight fundamentally bands 5, 4 and 1 frequency. In this
sense, we can verify the harmonic contribution curves are coherent with featured the
fifth harmonic of piano with regard to the range of harmonic frequencies for musical
instruments.
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1.
Introduo.
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Vale argumentar que o timbre, dos atributos do som, Loureiro e Bastos (2006), o
que maior complexidade apresenta, pois no est associado unicamente a uma dimenso
fsica, portanto, no pode ser especificado quantitativamente no sistema de notao musical.
Neste sentido, estes autores defendem a idia do timbre ser percebido devido interao de
propriedades dinmicas e estticas que influenciam aspectos psicolgicos e musicais a partir
de um complexo conjunto de entes auditivos.
E a vivncia da audio timbrstica sempre teve e tem ainda hoje nas
obras de Bartk, a funo de fazer com que a alma vibre internamente
com ela (...) O timbre como tal caracteriza no apenas uma reao do
ouvinte, e sim tambm em si mesmo um importante elemento
estilstico e formal da msica ocidental. (Hamel, p. 169, 1976)
Um corpo sonoro Calvo-Manzano(1991), ou seja, um corpo que emita som pode produzir vrios sons em dependncia das condies em que este vibre. Por exemplo, uma corda
de violo produz um som perto da ponte e outros distintos se esta fosse pulsada na boca da
caixa sonora ou acima do brao do instrumento. O mais grave destes sons chamado de
Por outro lado, existem duas limitaes Calvo-Manzano (1991) que impossibilitam ao
ser humano, em teoria, a percepo de infinitos harmnicos produzidos por um som
complexo segundo o teorema de Fourier. Aqueles harmnicos cuja freqncia est no limite
superior da audio humana, ou seja, acima dos 20 k no so perceptveis para o nosso ouvido e tampouco o sero aqueles cujo nvel de intensidade esteja abaixo do umbral audvel 20
Hz. Estas limitaes fazem com que o nmero de harmnicos que o ouvido humano percebe
seja relativamente reduzido e so denominados harmnicos presentes.
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1.1
Espectro Acstico.
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inicialmente do martelo corda e logo em sentido oposto, neste processo o feltro de comprimir e se expandir respectivamente. Se a velocidade do martelo elevada maior ser a excitao dos parciais superiores e conseqentemente as notas que sofram indicaes de
fortssimo tero uma melhor qualidade sonora, Burred (1999) na parte alta do espectro do que
as notas pianssimo. Tais compresses e expanses ocorrem de forma diferente em dependncia da altura da nota que ative, ou seja, para notas mais graves a deformao do martelo
maior. A figura 4 apresenta o efeito da no-linearidade ao qual fazamos referncia acima para
as notas LA0, LA3 e LA6.
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Assim tambm, outro fator que influencia o timbre a longitude da superfcie do martelo que faz contato com a corda. Uma forma de que os parciais de maior freqncia (agudos)
sejam afetados que a longitude da superfcie do martelo que golpeia a corda seja maior do
que a longitude de onda de um modo especfico o qual ser atenuado devido a esta questo.
Dessa maneira, os martelos pequenos do registro agudo provocaram um melhor som no que se
refere a parciais superiores. Diferentemente do que acontece com os martelos do registro de
menor freqncia (os graves).
1.4 Aspectos gerais do timbre.
A figura 5, a seguir mostra que para o LA0 no se tem contato entre a corda e o martelo permitindo que o feltro se expanda o que indica a linha em pontos da figura em questo.
Esta perda do contato, Burred (1999) aparece devida s primeiras reflexes da onda que se
gera pela ao do martelo sobre a corda.
No piano o fato da corda ser percutida faz
com que o tempo de contato seja pequeno,
mas suficiente para que se formem ondas
estacionrias harmnicas numa frao
curta da corda. Imaginemos que tal
contato entre o martelo e a corda acontece
num stimo da corda, as ondas estacionrias que se originariam, Burred
(1999) constituiro a srie harmnica de
uma nota de freqncia sete vezes
superior da corda em todo o seu comprimento que seriam os harmnicos 7, 14,
21, 28, etc os quais se supem eliminados.
No momento em que o martelo deixa de fazer contato com a corda todos estes harmnicos
apareceram na corda e assim todos os modos de vibrao estaro presentes na corda. aqui
onde o timbre se v afetado pelo tempo de contato. Na medida em que este seja maior quanto
menor ser a amplitude dos harmnicos mltiplos de 7 devido perda de energia das ondas
estacionrias nessa parte afetada da corda antes destes se propagarem.
A especificao do timbre no sistema musical aparece quando considerada a sua complexidade e a contribuio dos outros atributos sonoros, entre os que se encontra a altura
(freqncia), ritmo (tempo) e do volume (Intensidade). Neste sentido, o timbre tem sido
muito utilizado para o reconhecimento de diferentes instrumentos assim como no
reconhecimento de tcnicas de escalonamento multidimensional as quais so determinadas por
pequenas variaes ao longo de trs dimenses as quais so denominadas de: attack time, spectral centroid e spectral flux. Um exemplo do dito at aqui se pode evidenciar nas mudanas
(indicaes) de intensidade na partitura e combinaes de alturas que induzem no ouvinte
manifestaes psicolgicas relativas s variaes timbrsticas. Para autores como Le Groux e
Verschure (2010) os sons podem ser descritos principalmente por cinco componentes perceptuais, quatro deles foram mencionados acima e adicionam a estes a espacializao. Esta devida
relao destes elementos no espao timbrstico, se manifestando assim, tambm, a sua multidimensionalidade. Outros estudos, segundo estes mesmos autores, tm relatado as dimenses
perceptuais do som atravs de descries acsticas. Tais descries podem levar em
considerao o elemento espectral, temporal e o elemento espectral-temporal e assim gerar um
espao timbrstico. O espao timbrstico determinado utilizando a anlise multidimensional
derivada da experimentao, na qual ouvintes estimam a disparidade entre pares de sons com
diferentes caractersticas timbrsticas.
Para autores como Grey (1977); Risset (1991) e Loureiro e Bastos (2006) est claro
que na percepo do timbre participam elementos como a evoluo da intensidade global. Denominada por estes dois ltimos pesquisadores como envelope de amplitude; outros fatores
como as flutuaes de volume e altura; a distribuio espectral (amplitudes das freqncias
dos componentes espectrais) e a prpria evoluo temporal intervm na percepo timbrstica
no s dos instrumentos musicais, mas tambm da voz humana. De forma que, a anlise que
se faz desta msica estar permeada da utilizao de uma metodologia quantitativa que possibilite analisar e interpretar o comportamento harmnico da mesma.
1.5
Efeitos de freqncias.
A seguir apresentamos uma descrio dos efeitos psicolgicos provocados por valores
de freqncia durante a execuo de instrumentos musicais e a voz. Nesse sentido, temos que
de 31 a 63 Hz encontram-se as freqncias fundamentais de bumbo, tuba, baixos de 6 cordas e
pedal do rgo. Essas freqncias do ao som a sensao de "potncia". Se enfatizadas, fazem
o som ficar "emplastado". Na voz, do sensao de poder de alcance de cantores excepcionais
(baixo). De 80 a 125 Hz, o reforo destas freqncias causa o efeito de "boom" pronunciado.
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O corte de 120 Hz ajuda na rejeio do rudo de rede eltrica (1 harmnico) isto porque a
rede eltrica tem uma freqncia de 60 Hz e seus harmnicos esto nos 120, 180, 240 Hz, etc.
De 160 a 250 Hz esto situadas as freqncias fundamentais de tambores e baixos
(fundamentais da voz, tambm). Se reforadas, podem causar o "boom". O corte em 180 Hz
ajuda a eliminar rudos de rede eltrica (2 harmnico). De 315 a 500 Hz as freqncias
fundamentais de cordas e percusso em geral e constituem um intervalo de freqncia
importante para a qualidade de vocal. De 630 a 1000 Hz esto as freqncias fundamentais e
harmnicas de cordas, teclados e percusso. Embora tenhamos declarado anteriormente que o
nosso estudo no aborda a voz humana, vale a pena assinalar que este intervalo importante
para a "naturalidade" da voz, ou seja, o momento que em no existem variaes tonais ou de
outro tipo sejam quais forem as causas da mudana. O reforo excessivo causa aos instrumentos o som de "corneta de lata" e na voz aquele som de "telefone". De 1,25 a 4 K Hz so encontradas as freqncias fundamentais da bateria, guitarra, acentuao de vocais, cordas e contrabaixo. O excesso de reforo nestas freqncias tambm causa a "fadiga sonora", que cansam o
ouvinte aps cerca de 30 min.
Vocais podem ter mais brilho reforando freqncias em torno de 3 kHz, mas necessrio ao mesmo tempo atenuar um pouco a mesma faixa para os instrumentos. De 5 a 8
kHz temos freqncias que acentuam a percusso, como por exemplo, pratos e caixa de bateria, acentuao de voz feminina e falsetes. Redues a partir de 5 kHz tornam o som mais "distante e transparente", pois o mesmo se dispersa no local. Atenuaes nessa faixa auxiliam a
reduo de chiados. A faixa de 1,25 kHz at 8 kHz governa a claridade e definio do som,
tanto para voz como para instrumentos. De 10 a 16 kHz esto as freqncias de pratos e agudos em geral. Tendo como base as informaes expostas acima, foi possvel determinar a contribuio harmnica, a qual apresentada na seguinte seo.
2.
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Fourier Rpida (FFT Fast Fourier Transform) com o intuito de identificar os harmnicos
associados a pontos especficos (discretos) de cada teste em estudo e a correspondncia de
cada um deles (os pontos) com valores de freqncia e amplitude.
A Transformada de Fourier Rpida permite colocar um sinal que est no domnio do
tempo no domnio da freqncia; a utilizao desta no nosso estudo encontra subsdio, pois a
nossa sensibilidade auditiva tem uma relao explcita com a freqncia e implcita com o
tempo. A transformada foi aplicada aos diferentes fragmentos, isto levando em considerao o
espectro de freqncia e equalizao para instrumentos musicais e de udio. De forma tal que
os intervalos de freqncia a seguir so apresentados relativos aos instrumentos caractersticos
e os provveis efeitos que podem induzir no ouvinte; tendo em vista a descrio feita no item
1.5. Foi a partir desta caracterizao que fixamos valores de freqncia (faixas de freqncia)
sobre as quais foram determinadas as contribuies harmnicas de cada segmento (fragmento)
musical: 32, 64, 125, 250, 500, 1k250, 2k500, 5k, 7k500, 10k, 16kHz.
3.
Resultados obtidos.
Metodologia.
Uma vez definida a msica alvo do nosso estudo foi feito um reconhecimento daquele
fragmento em que se ressalta a intencionalidade do autor. O trecho que identifica este estado
cume utilizado em vrias ocasies marcando uma dinmica diferente em cada uma das repeties; insistindo desse modo na chegada da msica ao seu clmax. O fragmento de destaque
ao qual dirigimos o nosso estudo, foi identificado como Teste2 (ConI)-piano e compreende o
intervalo de 34 s da msica original. Este foi segmentado em outros trs momentos os quais
chamamos de Testes, com o objetivo de facilitar o estudo quanto ao elevado nmero de dados
associados a cada ponto em anlise da msica em questo. O primeiro dos testes chamado de
Frag 1_1, Frag1_2 e Frag 1_3. Por sua vez, estes foram submetidos a uma segunda segmentao agora considerando os
trechos peridicos, embora estes possam variar de um teste
para outro, mas esta segmentao permitiu que um mesmo
trecho peridico no fosse analisado duas vezes por estes estarem presentes mais de uma vez nos diferentes segmentos.
Figura 6. Exemplo de fragmento perodo na segunda segmentao
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resultado o que chamamos de Piano. Devido a este processo obtivemos a curva de contribuies para o instrumento analisado a qual apresentada na figura 3.
3.1
Na anlise dos resultados foi considerado o destaque das bandas de freqncia nas
quais se tem a maior contribuio harmnica dentre os fragmentos estudados. Nesse sentido,
foi possvel de identificar as bandas 5, 4 e 1 correspondentes aos intervalos de freqncia
(500-1k250 Hz), (250-500 Hz) e (32-64 Hz) respectivamente. A tabela 2, a qual mostramos
a seguir, apresenta os intervalos de freqncias associados fundamental e aos harmnicos
de um conjunto de instrumentos musicais. Analisando esta, pode-se ver que a freqncia
fundamental do piano se encontra entre 28- 4k196 Hz o que corrobora o nosso resultado.
Como vimos anteriormente referindo-nos aos primeiros harmnicos a intensidade
destes vai diminuindo com a freqncia o que possvel comprovar tambm na figura 3
curva de contribuies harmnicas. Neste caso existe uma diminuio considervel para a
oitava faixa de freqncias (5k-7k500 Hz). Intervalo de freqncias onde segundo a tabela 2
est situada a faixa de freqncias harmnicas para o piano.
Vale chamar a ateno na faixa de freqncia fundamental (quinta banda) que o
piano pode atingir e conferindo na tabela 2 vemos que dentro desse intervalo encontramos
tambm as fundamentais de: fagote, trompete, trombone, tuba, baixo acstico e eltrico, sax
soprano, violino, violo e guitarra eltrica,
viola e cello. No que diz respeito faixa de
freqncias harmnicas ainda que a
fundamental do piano contemple a destes
instrumentos, so estas freqncias as que
conseguem marcar a diferena perceptiva
que nos permite distinguir o piano do resto
dos instrumentos. Por exemplo, para o limite
superior de freqncias harmnicas do piano
(8 kHz), segundo a tabela 2 encontramos
harmnicos, superiores no violino, na viola,
no violo e no sax soprano. Harmnicos inferiores ao limite inferior do piano (5 kHz) no
prprio violo, no cello, na viola, no violino
e na tuba. So estas freqncias componentes (harmnicos) as que nos permitem identificar a fonte sonora. A forma como estas so
produzidas pelo interprete no instrumento,
seja atravs do dedilhado, da percusso ou
pela frico, no caso de um instrumento de
cordas friccionadas por arco, provocar
variao no nmero de harmnicos que acompanhe a fundamental e conseqentemente no
seu timbre.
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4.Consideraes finais.
As figuras 1a, 1b e 1c as quais correspondem a fragmentos analisados para cravo,
piano e violino respectivamente amostram a complexidade do som emitido por estes instrumentos, os quais em confronto entre eles mesmos e com a figura 2 permitem visualizar a
diferena existente entre cada um levando em considerao as freqncias fundamentais e os
seus respectivos valores de amplitude (Intensidade). No caso do piano, instrumento ao qual
enfocamos o nosso estudo, se v que entorno dos 600 Hz h um pico sbito que caracteriza a
freqncia fundamental enquanto que na medida em que esta aumenta h uma diminuio
das amplitudes, ver figura 1b e analogamente comprovaremos a diminuio da amplitude
dos harmnicos superiores.
No caso das contribuies harmnicas dos Frag1_1 piano (SCP), Frag1_2piano
(SCP) e Frag1_3 piano (SCP) os quais representam o total das contribuies por faixa (trecho) se tem, respectivamente, os valores: 3293,17; 2270, 95 e 7386,23 os quais representam
o cociente da soma dos valores de freqncia por cada faixa de medida e a amplitude entre
cada uma das faixas antes mencionadas as quais tributaram ao pico quinta faixa.
As contribuies das faixas 4 e 1, ainda que com menor amplitude, tambm aportam
estrutura sonora (timbre) do piano executado nesta pea. Chama-nos a ateno que
segundo a metodologia utilizada obtivemos resultados conflitantes com o intervalo de
freqncias harmnicas para o piano apresentado na tabela 2, entre (5-8 kHz). Neste sentido,
supomos que tal disposio harmnica se deva ampla banda de freqncias que abrange
este instrumento.
REFERNCIAS
BURRED, Juan. La acstica del piano. Conservatorio profesional de msica. Madrid, octu. 1999
CALVO-MANZANO, Antonio. Acstica fsico-musical. Real musical, Madrid, p.122, 1991
GABRIELSON, Alf; JUSLIN, Patrik. Emotional expression in music performance: Between the performers
intetion and the listeners experience. In psychology of music, vol. 24, p.68-91, 1996
GREY, John. Multidimensional perceptual scaling of musical timbres. J. Acoust. Soc., 1977
________ Na exploration of musical timbre. Rep. STAN-M-2, Stanford University, 1975
________An exploration of musical timbre using computer based techniques for analysis, synthesis and
perceptual scaling. Department of psychology, Stanford University, 1975
HAMEL, Peter. O autoconhecimento atravs da msica: uma nova maneira de sentir e viver a msica. CULTRIX. So Paulo, p. 169, 1995
Le GROUX, Sylvain; Verschure, Manzolli. Situated interative music system: connecting mind and body
through musical interation. Mc Gill University, Montral, 2009
________Perceptsynth: mapping perceptual musical features to sound synthesis parameters, Las Vegas,
April 2008
________Emotional responses to the perceptual dimensions of timbre: a pilot study using physically informed sound synthesis. SPECS, Barcelona, 2010
LOUREIRO, Maurcio; PAULA, Hugo. Timbre de um instrumento musical. Per Musi, Belo Horizonte, n.14,
p.57-81, 2006
RISSET, Jean-Claude. Computer music: why? Laboratoire de Mcanique et d Acoustique. CNRS, Marseille, 1991
87
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Nevena Milosevic
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Celebrating Woman!
Rita Eluwade
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We a r e e x i t i n g t h e P i s c e a n
experience, which was marked by division,
separateness and war. On the other hand
however, we saw great accomplishments in
education, the development of the mind, and
a deep desire for peace, made poignant by
two world wars and many cultural religious
and racial conflicts.
We are embarking on a new
adventure in which science will penetrate the
depth of matter to reveal to humanity the
presence of Spirit that it holds. Likewise the
spiritual world will unveil its secret mystery
which in turn will help mankind remember
its origin and purpose here. All this will be
facilitated by the power and rulership of
Uranus the planet of occultism and absolute
unity of all humanity and all life. The
mystery of fire, air water, sound, color and
light will be uncovered and this knowledge
will help humanity to understand our true
nature and our divine essence (1)
The female power on this planet, so
necessary for humanity to achieve harmony
peace and balance, has not gained the same
empowerments as has the male force. The
empowerment of females to an equal
balance with males is the true key to evolve
as one humanity; to the stage of everlasting
world peace.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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Our world and its citizens must
now transform, to defeat an army of
problems which are escalating wildly
beyond our efforts to rein them in -- a
side-effect of the mental discord we
have accepted as 'normal', by seeking
undue profit on return [ie. beyond the
basic requirements we need for
continuance] -- at a time of rapidly
increasing global survival crisis.
Instead, let us maximize
philanthropy' i.e. provide maximum
social assistance where needed, by
sharing excess. Such dramatic shift in
the economy due to a greater personal
and global social responsibility will
maximize our personal to global
transformation. By such inner
realignment we will achieve greater
personal responsibility and discover
the joy of being able to outreach to
help save Earth from a vast array of
planetary future nightmares - beyond
all control.
Through personal giving ~
largesse ~ we provide sufficient
momentum for all to enjoy normal,
h e a l t h y, m a t u r e a n d e t h i c a l l y
responsible lives. In short, we must
adopt a magnanimous and ethical
planetary culture - to accept our vital
personal role in helping to balance all
imbalances, and reach out to help the
mass of individuals already caught in
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burning', i.e. heart-centered living -the ideal lifestyle for our futures, as it
gives back to Earth our individual
respect and joy for the gift of being
born as a member of this remarkable
planet.
Sending Love, Peace, SelfTransformation! Goodwill Wishes To
Y ( o u r ) W o r l d ,
Melcir Erskine-Richmond
CEO: First the Earth ~
HEAVEN-on-EARTH
Planner Holistic Circular model
Eco-University Cities & Tallship
Ocean-Earthcare Network
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The Statesman
Gandhiji My Greatest Hero
In many ways yes. Mahatma Gandhi's nonviolence philosophy influenced our urban
youth. As for me, Gandhiji remains my greatest
hero.
What are your thoughts about India, its
democracy and its current situation?
When one looks at India, this vast country with
1 billion people, one cannot but admire its
founding fathers and subsequent leaders who
have kept the country together; we have
difficulties managing our country of 1 million;
compare this with India's 1 billion! India's
democracy has survived decades of test and has
proven to be resilient, vibrant and chaotic. But
it is better to have a chaotic, vibrant democracy
than have a one party rule! There is still a long
way to go to eliminate extreme poverty, to
bring more sustainable development, more
equitable, closing the deep gap between rich
and poor. India can invest much, much more in
salvaging its environment, its forests, lakes,
rivers, seas. The 1 billion people of India
extract much from Mother Earth; you have to
help replenish our common Planet.
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