[Note: This particular blog post was specifically written for the YCI blog.]
Travelling alone. As a girl. In East Africa.
If you want a genuine reaction when you are informing people about your upcoming travel plans, open with some arrangement of the above.
This week I facilitated my first Gender Training workshop
with the MYCN staff. This training
session was a general introduction to gender and gender issues, and was meant
to act as a standardized foundation for all staff members, as well as an open
forum for staff members to discuss their questions and hesitations with regards
to gender equality in Tanzania. There is a common misconception that discussions
on gender only relate to women, so one of my primary goals in the training was
to clear this up and explain how incorporating gender into MYCN’s programming
will benefit boys and girls, men and women.
The session was very enlightening for me, and I did my best to approach it with an open mind.
Tanzania is a much more conservative country than Canada, so I knew
going into the training that cultural sensitivity would be very important. Between preparatory research and informal
discussion, I have learned a lot about the extreme challenges that gender roles
and expectations pose for both men and women in Tanzania.
At the end of the training, one of the MYCN staff members
raised their hands and stated the obvious:
adjusting social norms to accommodate gender equality in Tanzania will
be extremely challenging.
“Yes,” I replied, “Absolutely it will be a challenge. But
that’s half the fun.”
No comments:
Post a Comment