By Mary Catherine Driese | Impact and Development Officer
May 2022 GlobalGiving Update: Investing in Rural Women & Girls to Build Safer Communities
Since January, the Women’s Justice Initiative has continued to make strides towards strengthening women’s knowledge of their rights, shifting attitudes about violence against women and girls, and increasing access to comprehensive legal services. WJI imparted the skills needed for 52 women to reduce early unions and child marriage in their families in Tecpán, began to train the next group of Community Advocates in San Martín Jilotepeque and San José Poaquil, and provided workshops to women entrepreneurs in Honduras through the Women’s Economic Empowerment (WEE) Initiative. We are so excited to share the exciting progress we have made.
Adolescent Girls Program
In addition to WJI’s programming offered to adolescent girls,mothers attend workshops for the same six-month period as their daughters. The mothers learn strategies to prevent violence in their families and early unions of their daughters. In May 2022, 52 mothers graduated from the program, excited to implement their knowledge in their families and create a brighter future for their daughters. If you’d like to check out some of the ways mothers take action to end cycles of violence in their families, we invite you to watch this video featuring the mothers who participated in the program in Tecpán.
Community Advocates Begin Training in San Martín Jilotepeque and San José Poaquil
After a detailed selection process, WJI has selected 48 women from San Martín Jilotepeque and San José Poaquil to begin training as Community Advocates. These women, who are selected based on their leadership potential, language skills in both Spanish and Kaqchikel ( a local Mayan language), and strong desire to help other women in their communities, attend bi-monthly trainings. In these trainings, they learn how to provide grassroots legal support to women in their rural communities, how to become leaders and advocates to prevent gender-based violence in their communities, and how to facilitate workshops, teaching other local women to know and exercise their rights. This group of 48 women is unique because of their rapidly developing skills in workshop facilitation–some women are already independently leading their own workshops, even after just a few months of intensive training.
WJI Successfully Trains Honduran Women Entrepreneurs
As part of WJI’s activities in the Women’s Economic Empowerment Initiative, two members of WJI’s team flew to Honduras to train women entrepreneurs. Women entrepreneurs in the artisanal chocolate and coffee industries, both historically dominated by men, learned the skills to defend their rights, gain confidence, become active decision-makers, and become more powerful economic forces in their communities through female solidarity. Through this initiative, WJI is contributing to a stronger network of female entrepreneurs and leaders.
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