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#Women Shero's Training
katekelton · 1 year
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https://gallery30south.com/kelton-phoenix/
Kate Kelton: PHOENIX
JANUARY 2023
Seeking to elevate brave Silence Breakers who’ve come forward during the #MeToo movement, Kate Kelton’s portraiture combines their oft familiar faces with elements of her family’s Czech architecture. Her portraits are cloaked in the garb of statues that Ladislav Šaloun sculpted onto the central train station that her great- grandfather, Josef Fanta, designed for Prague between 1901 – 1909. Sampling and mixing her own lineage, Kate has transformed a historical body of work, itself a thing of lasting beauty, exchanging granite for graphite; plaster for paint.
Headdresses and crowns deify Kate Kelton’s subjects. She uplifts the Unsung Sheroes & Heroes, Patriarchy Smashers, Warrior Survivors, Silence Breakers, Philosophers, Truth-Tellers, Whistle Blowers and Thought Giants. She paints portraits cloaked in the garb of statues Ladislav Šaloun sculpted onto the train station that her great-grandfather, Josef Fanta, designed for Prague in 1901 – 1909.
Apotheosis through a reclaimed, reapplied Art Nouveau.
Kate’s recent work is a matter of expansion through contrast – she is as ephemeral as her subjects are concrete architecture; she is structural when her subjects should slip through your fingers like too-fine sand. Taken as a whole, the works in her magnificent series Phoenix are incredibly intelligent, but when looked at individually, you come to understand that these are statements of life beyond themselves. The series take embellishments of a Prague train station designed by her great-grandfather, Josef Fanta, and combines these with portraits of men and women who have stood against the sexual harassment and assault rampant in Hollywood –particularly those who have testified against Harvey Weinstein, R. Kelly, and Bill Cosby, and made allegations against Franco Zeffirelli, Donald Trump, Russell Simmons, Max Landis, Michael Jackson, Nick Carter, Luc Besson, and others. These women, like Kate herself, have suffered in the era where powerful men, every bit as immovable as the train station, wielded their power without check. The portraits emblazoned on architectural elements, they are marked against the edifice, every bit as permanent, and perhaps even more defining. If you approach those as portraits, you’re taking the moment but missing the permanence. If you take them as statuary, you’re missing the fact that they are, in fact, alive within those gazes. It’s really incredible how much a shift of the light, a dart of the eye, can turn each of them from a memorial into a promise. This is not an exhibition about tragedy. This is a monument to courage, survival and empowerment.
ABOUT THE ARTIST
Kate Kelton was born in the south of Germany, after her parents escaped Czechoslovakia. Her early years were spent in a VW bus traveling Europe with her mother, an abstract painter. Settling in Toronto, Canada at age seven, Kelton attended the Etobicoke School of the Arts as a Visual Arts Major, and received a Bachelor of Applied Arts in Film, from Ryerson University. Her father was an architect. His grandfather, and namesake, was Josef Fanta: renowned Art Nouveau architect, engineer and sculptor, who worked closely with Alphonse Mucha. Photographer Dagmar Hochová is Kelton’s great aunt, on her mother’s side. Kelton also had a recurring role on Stephen King’s Haven on the Syfy Channel. When the illustrated re- edition of the book it’s based on, The Colorado Kid, was published, she illustrated the front and back inside covers. Her first lead role on tv was opposite Eric Roberts and Eddie Izzard, in the Independent Film Channel’s Bullet In The Face. Alex Maleev illustrated her for the poster. Her first feature film, Deepa Mehta’s The Republic of Love, debuted at the Toronto International Film Festival. Her film credits include cult classics, Harold & Kumar Go to White Castle and American Psycho II. Did you also spot her in music videos, like Shaggy’s “It Wasn’t Me?” Almost as good as googling her as “the Tic Tac girl.” ;} Kate has exhibited her artwork internationally for decades, at, among others: the Skirball Cultural Center in Los Angeles, the New Walk Museum & Art Gallery in the UK; Gallery 1988 in New York, Venice, and West Hollywood; Gabba Gallery, La Luz de Jesus Gallery, and Durden & Ray in Los Angeles; Art On Scene in Beverly Hills; Galerie F in Chicago; Lawless Concept in Montreal; and The Sony Centre for the Performing Arts in Toronto. Her work has toured with Yoko Ono’s Group Show Arising from Zurich, to Portugal, to the UK and Germany.
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entrepreneurstreet · 11 months
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Ms Jayashree Thilagarasu, Founder & CPO, Shero Home Food
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About
In a world where Entrepreneurships are meant only for Business. Here’s a story of a lady who is striving for a change in Society through business
Ms Jayashree, an MBA graduate found her way toward Hospitality & Food. Being sprouted from an Entrepreneurial family. Ms Jayashree was always fascinated by Entrepreneurship. Through her 15+ Years of Journey, across many other businesses, she enjoys and tackles challenges without a smirk on her face. A composed and compassionate woman who loves leadership and food.
Currently, with Shero Home Food She has and is transforming the lives of a simple homemakers not just financially but socially and culturally.
Moment of Inspiration
In 2014, Jayashree shook hands with her husband in the pulses business. From there, a D2C opportunity aroused, The Concept of “Farm to Fork” which paved the way to produce fresh food from fresh ingredients produced through their pulses business. Seeing the enormous success of the pilot project, immediately expanded to 6 other restaurants. As a true businesswoman, her thirst did not pause there, she continued to explore other divisions of the Hotel Industry, which is fine dining. The Concept of “Leaf Meal” was a hit.
Unfortunately with the evolution of trends and consumers, operations & sustainability were questioned. But, it was just the business which had to fall, not the heart and mind behind it. Within a couple of months, Ms Jayashree witnessed the market gap in the home food industry. That thats the beginning of Shero Home Food.
Shero Home Food was conceptualized starting in 2019. The idea of giving home food from the homemakers itself was the foundation of what everything is today.
Notable Success
Shero is a stage for the humble homemakers that would help them to transform their entire family’s lifestyle for the better. It's a platform for housewives who are waiting for an earning opportunity from the home.
Shero home food is the world's first-ever branded Home Food platform. Initiated in August 2020, from Chennai. With Shero, now 500+ Home Makers, across South India, are cooking and earning just from their Kitchen every single week.
Shero is a simple home food marketplace. But unlike other home food platforms, Shero does not go with whatever menu item the homemakers cook. Instead, Shero trains the homemakers with a standard set of Shero Menu. This is the Shero Food Technology which helps homemakers to become super chefs. Shero’s Food Technology is a revolution in the home kitchen industry.
Shero Food Technology has been crafted in such a way that its built from 20+ years of experience of the founders ( Ms Jayashree Thilagarasu ) along with the versatile touch to adapt to the “Instant Lifestyle”
The homemakers require no big qualifications or experience to become a Super Chef or the Shero. The Kitchen partners of Shero are enriched with skills that will help them to do a business of their own. The Homemakers are making up to Rs. 30,000 per week. Shero has helped so many women and their families to transfigure their lifestyles.
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Shero also brings a cultural change in the mindset of the people. Being in a society, that still Women is dominated and looked down upon in all aspects. Shero changes the situation of a family through the homemaker. After Shero, there are many homemakers who become the highest earning member of the family and their spouses also become the strongest support for the homemakers. This helps the women to come out louder and stronger than ever.
Shero Awards
Shero Awards is Unique. It is not yet another fancy or fascinating award show. It an award from the sheer hard work, dedication and determination. It’s a recognition for the silent pillars of every home. Its a new identity for the women of our homes.
Shero Awards is distinctive and has a beautiful story behind it. Its always said that “Nala saapadu senja kaiku thanga valayal podalam” - The Shero Icon represents the same. And we are in a society where cooking is not part of a prestigious profession irrespective of the gender though we all love to explore food. Its always looked down or unaccepted. In order to change that, the most used and important equipment of the kitchen is designed part of the award.
When it comes to awards, its always based on the skills that an individual owns and when they excel in a particular field, then the necessary award has been give. But at Shero, Shero is the one who teaches and trains the kitchen partner in the culinary skills and also teaches about how to do a business, the entrepreneurial skills. And shero enables each and every one to earn through various venues. And now the purpose is fulfilled when the sheros are also being recognized for their hardwork.
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vihaan-digitals · 1 year
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5 Women who are Excelling in the Digital Marketing Game
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Many women have advanced to become influential thought leaders and trailblazers in the last few decades. However, this is just the tip of the iceberg. Women still have a long way to go before they are represented in diverse industries as males are. According to the Digital Marketing Institute's "Digital Skills Gap" Report, women make up only 30% of the whole digital marketing workforce despite having an 11% higher level of digital proficiency than men. But there are more women in digital marketing today than ever taking on senior marketing responsibilities, and the number is at an all-time high.
4% of Fortune 500 businesses have female CEOs, while women hold 19% of senior management positions. Although the total is not large, much time and effort were put into compiling this data.
Therefore, even though there are still issues facing women in the industry, there has been significant progress as many women in digital marketing continue to push the envelope.
You're sure to be inspired by and have space to improve after reading this compilation of the female top digital marketers in India. 
Priya Florence Shah
Priya Florence Shah, the founder and CEO of Blog Brandz, is at the top of our list as the first female influencer in digital marketing.
Another digital market1ing firm in Pune is called Brandz. Additionally, she collaborates with SHEROES in editing and Naree.com.
Priya is a fantastic example of a professional in digital marketing who has followed her passion despite not having a bachelor's degree. She left her molecular biology PhD programme and pursued She later pursued numerous courses in advertising and digital marketing, developed a passion for remote work, and became an author, blogger, podcaster, and digital marketer.
She is one of the top digital marketers in India and has progressed from biotechnology to the field. Her experience inspires the women in us. She shows us that there is no ideal moment to begin a quest.
Nidhi Singh
We are all familiar with Quora! A distinctive place to display your writing abilities is Quora. Nidhi Singh is a well-known Quora author.
With over 65K followers on social media and writing credits in publications like Inc., HuffPost, and others, she is one of the top digital marketers in India. She represents what many millennials hope to achieve.
Nidhi holds an MBA in marketing and has worked in the field of digital marketing for more than 7 years. With her amazing expertise in digital channels, she shines in lead generation and establishing lead funnels.
She is currently the team lead of marketing communications at Edu Pristine, a prestigious provider of professional education training. Before joining EduPristine, Nidhi supported four significant product launches and two international summits utilising digital and conventional marketing channels while working for Abacus. 
Sneh Sharma
Sneh Sharma is the founder and CEO of Ittisa at the age of 23, the first digital media company founded by a woman.
Sneh was named one of Cosmopolitan magazine's "Fearless 50 - top 50 Indian entrepreneurs" and iiGlobal's "Top Digital Entrepreneur. One of India's most reputable design and digital marketing firms is ittisa. Sneh is renowned for her originality, neutrality, and an unwavering pursuit of excellence. 
She has used technology throughout her marketing career to producing effective campaigns and outstanding consumer experiences. Her analytical mind drives her to cut and dice the data to make her tactics and products more meaningful.
In an interview, she stated that her success was due to her confidence and ability to make sound decisions, and she has been an inspirational women in digital marketing careers.
Kanchan Shahdadpuri 
Kanchan Shahdadpuri began her professional career with Convonix Inc. after receiving her Bachelor of Engineering in Computers. She is a young woman with an unrivalled drive to manage various brands. She is passionate about digital landscaping.
The adventure of Kanchan Shahdadpur began 14 years ago. She has won countless accolades in digital marketing, enabling her to make the list of the top digital marketers in India. Her erratic performance and constant commitment to the success of her client companies have earned her admiration and acclaim.
A well-known name in the field of digital marketing is Kanchan Shahdadpuri. She has also managed a team of over 30 people across all of India and produced outstanding results. Her notable clientele included Myntra, Apollo doc, and Thomas Cook India. 
Neha Kulwal
Neha Kulwal, a prestigious award recipient, is the driving force of Admitad Affiliate India.
Her five-year relationship with Admitad has been as successful as her career route. Neha was honoured in 2017 as one of the "50 Most Influential Digital Marketing Leaders" by CMO and the World Marketing Congress (WMC). She has also received further honours from "the APEA," in addition.
Additionally, she won the "Women Entrepreneurship Award."And she is one of the top digital marketers in India. Neha Kulwal has a track record of success in the online business and has a firm grasp on market research, customer relationship management (CRM), and search engine optimisation (SEO). She also consistently hit the mark when making an impression on her clientele because of her exceptional team management skills and creative marketing ideas. 
Nutshell
Women are currently revolutionising the internet industry and gaining widespread respect and recognition. It is also clear that many businesses now prioritise females for digital marketing. Additionally, women make up 30% of the Irish workforce in digital marketing.
The field of digital marketing is one that is thriving. Being a pioneer in this sector requires keeping up with the most recent trends, happenings, and current advancements.
I've done my best to highlight outstanding top digital marketers in India who are women for you in this blog. These folks are prepared to modernise and digitise the nation in order to make it a market for the upcoming generation.
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BIPOC Mental Health
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Content Warning: Racism
According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), Mental Health Equity is the state in which everyone has a fair and just opportunity to reach their highest level of mental health and emotional well-being. Increased awareness of societal and environmental factors that impact mental health can result in increased social support, normalizing treatment for mental health concerns, and improving mental health equity.
In an effort to increase Mental Health Equity, we want to shine light on societal and environmental factors that negatively impact mental health for BIPOC communities. We are also sharing mental health resources at the bottom of this email with the hopes of increasing normalization of mental health treatment.
Contributing Factors for Mental Health Concerns
Racism, Racial and Implicit Bias, and Discrimination
Racial Profiling. Many people who have been profiled have developed symptoms of anxiety and post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD).
Institutional Racism and Social Determinants of Mental Health. This includes socioeconomic status, history of housing segregation, and mass incarceration.
Trauma including individual, complex, collective, historical, microagression, and cultural trauma
Barriers BIPOC experience when seeking Mental Health Treatment
Socioeconomic Disparities. Including exclusion from health, educational, social and economic resources
Stigma
Provider Bias and Inequality of Care. Conscious and unconscious provider bias and a lack of cultural competency can lead to misdiagnosis and inadequate treatment. In the long-run this can result in mistrust of mental health professionals.
Disparities in Access to Care and Treatment
Resources that Aim to Eliminate Barriers for Mental Health Treatment
The Confess Project
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The Confess Project has the first and largest organization committed to building a culture of mental health for Black boys, men, and their families. The Confess Project focuses on empowering frontline heroes and sheroes in communities across America. More specifically, they train barbers to be mental health advocates. The Confess Project website includes: Trainings for Barbers, Events, Find a Therapist Function
Black Emotional and Mental Health Collective(BEAM)
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“BEAM’s mission is to remove the barriers that Black people experience getting access to or staying connected with emotional health care and healing through education, training, advocacy, and the creative arts.” The BEAM website includes: Educational Tools, Journal Prompts, Reflection Questions, Wellness Directory, Trainings, Community and Support Programs
Therapy for Black Girls
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“So often the stigma surrounding mental health issues and therapy prevents Black women from taking the step of seeing a therapist. This space was developed to present mental health topics in a way that feels more accessible and relevant.” The Therapy for Black Girls website includes: Podcast, Blog, Find a Therapist Function
Brother, You’re on My Mind
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“Brother, You’re on My Mind is a partnership between NIMHD and the Omega Psi Phi Fraternity, Inc. The initiative is intended to raise awareness of the mental health challenges associated with depression and stress that affect African American men and their families” The Brother, You’re on My Mind website toolkit includes: Psychoeducation, Scripts for talking about mental health with others, Resources
Check out some of the resources to use for BIOPIC Mental Health HERE.
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thegleamwithin · 2 years
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Musings Of The Day: (Penned by Yours-truly in response to a post shared on Sheroes, a women-only Social-network..)
Our ancient varsities like Nalanda, Takshshila had incorporated some very practical and progressive methods of teaching and training.. Then, great teachers like Samartha Ramadasa, Swami Ramakrishna Paramhansa, helped in creating age-defying leaders like Shivaji Bhosle, Swami Vivekananda, respectively.. Today, we have broken the patterns of pandering to colonial vestiges, such as Macaulay's designed Education System, and we are churning out such workforce that's making waves across the globe.. The plus is not just that little kids of today have started software development, but also that we are able to vest our faith in their calibre and in our relevance in today's age of YouTube, FaceBook, WhatsApp, with the last one having become indispensable and a super-useful tool for contacting any person, no matter where you or he/she are.. Now, smartphones are quadrupling as tutors, textbooks and even as trading-agents (in shares and debentures), and I am glad that we Indians have embraced this wave of transformational technology.. While some businesses like Amazon have given us lessons in disruptive business-practices, they are in essence contributing to the globalization that we are aiming at, and to the market-competition scenario that has undergone a sea change.. To cut long story short, our educational system is in for major overhaul and our students, for a truly world-class education experience.. The road to Self-reliance is paved with the five Is of innovation, inventiveness, initiative, inspiration and ingenuity, of our taskforce, comprising all the sections of the society and made more efficient and effective with contribution from personalities from all walks of life.. We must express our interest in and dedication to this cause, that can serve (has agelessly served) as the ultimate game-changer.. Today, even the kind of data packs (daily quota) and their options that Indians enjoy is also one of a kind as compared to developed countries, and we have to give it to the industrialization and the quality-control that our cellular industry eco-system is exhibiting.. All of this is adding to our employability, helping in tapping our potential as job-givers, and as assets (not a liability) in the youngest country of the world (in terms of demography).. No doubting this revolutionary and visionary wave and the capability of those (who are) riding on it successfully and with hard-core ethics and morale-boosting professionalism.. Amen to many such changes to follow, as we are on course to enhance our reputation of a 'force to reckon with', as termed by foreigners who are studying and mentoring India and its edge in the 21st Century..
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ghinanotlinetti · 3 years
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WandaVision (2021) is Excellent!
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So I watched the WandaVision (2021) episodes as it came out weekly on DisneyPlus, it’s been a while nonetheless I still would like to gush and express my adoration towards this series because wow was I blown away!
The first 2-3 episodes were slow but it’s understandable as they’re warming up towards the plot. Then things really pick up after episode 3, it gets so exciting and brilliantly done. LOVE the sitcom references and aesthetic, this is a TV show that knows and loves TV, a very well done homage! The finale was rushed for me and was like ehhhhh though I guess cov*d was partly to blame. I thought the final showdown scene between Agatha and Wanda needed to be more intense, I know we all know Wanda survives and it’s THAT kind of superhero story where good triumphs, but usually those showdown scenes have the hero save the world in the nick of time, like they’re doing everything they can and we as a viewer are tricked into believing they could be done for - but of course they win! So it wasn’t that for me, and needed to be fleshed out to have the perfect build up.
The characters... phenomenal! Acting on point! Everyone deserves flowers and more. And Wanda... girl... I’m rooting for you! This was the female superhero story that centered her and her journey. This show was the perfect way to trick the fanboys into watching a show about a woman’s journey with grief, mourning, and love. We love to see it! We love to see Wanda’s story coming into her own as THEE Scarlet Witch. I literally only care about the female characters in the MCU, they’re all that matters to me, so I was really thrilled by how much I enjoyed this show. I can rant all day long about how annoying females representation in the superhero genre of movies and TV, they’re always the liable one, the tragic hero, never the leader, so it’s not lost on me this show got people (men) upset and it’s one of the few that centres a female character. Wanda Maximoff is a complex character, she grapples with her powers, emotions, and doing what’s right. Great storytelling! The writing in this show is 10/10 for sure. I can definitely see Marvel stirring her character towards the morally grey anti-hero, and I can’t wait to keep rooting for her! I want more Wanda! Also, can’t wait to see Captain Marvel, Valkyrie take the lead in the next MCU movies, it’s their time!
I recently found time to watch The Legend of Korra (2014), I’m a huge ATLA fan, and at the time Korra came out I hadn’t watched it for reasons I can’t remember, but now I thank my younger self for saving this series for my twenty-something self to watch for the first time. Makes me feel like a kid again! Now this show... perfect female hero depiction! Not only is Korra the most powerful one as the Avatar, she also embodies the role of leader gradually. I love that! Loved watching her journey as an Avatar in training to Avatar, and as just Korra the Southern Water Tribe girl, the girl who’s been through a lot, and dealing with traumas. Great storytelling of grief, hope, and more! And the Avatar creators really know how to make the perfect final showdown scenes, they really will have you thinking it’s the end for our heroes but of course it’s not that kind of story! I definitely saw similar themes in WandaVision when I watched Korra, even if it might be a reach to others. It's refreshing to see superhero stories and the-chosen-one tropes centre a female character, even if they don't challenge the story/trope at the core, they still followed the formula that works but is a bit shallow. More powerful, multifaceted female superheroes as rightful leaders, please!
4.5/5 stars overall for WandaVision! Only because I was slightly disappointed by the finale, but very excited for what’s next. Last edited: 12th June 2021
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2021ya · 3 years
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CODE NAME BADASS
THE TRUE STORY OF VIRGINIA HALL
​by Heather Demetrios
(Atheneum, 9/7/21)
9781534431874
Add to Goodreads
Purchase from Bookshop
Code Name Verity meets Inglourious Basterds in this riotous, spirited biography of the most dangerous of all Allied spies, courageous and kickass Virginia Hall. When James Bond was still in diapers, Virginia Hall was behind enemy lines, playing a dangerous game of cat and mouse with Hitler’s henchmen. Did this shero have second thoughts after a terrible accident left her needing a wooden leg? Please. Virginia Hall was the baddest broad in any room she walked into. When the State Department proved to be a sexist boys’ club that wouldn’t allow her in, she gave the finger to society’s expectations of women and became a spy for the British. This boss lady helped arm and train the French Resistance and organized sabotage missions. There was just one problem: The Butcher of Lyon, a notorious Gestapo commander, was after her. But, hey—Virginia’s classmates didn’t call her the Fighting Blade for nothing. So how does a girl who was a pirate in the school play, spent her childhood summers milking goats, and rocked it on the hockey field end up becoming the Gestapo’s most wanted spy? Audacious, irreverent, and fiercely feminist, Code Name Badass is for anyone who doesn’t take no for an answer.
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gadgetgirl71 · 4 years
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Amazon First Reads for May 2020
It’s that time yet again, to choose one of eight books that Amazon First Reads lets Amazon Prime Members download for free. I always look forward to the beginning of each month to see what is on offer.
This months books are:
Contemporary Fiction
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If You Must Know by Jamie Beck  Pages: 362, Publication Date: 1 June 2020
Synopsis: Life turns upside down for two sisters in Wall Street Journal bestselling author Jamie Beck’s emotional novel about how secrets and differences can break—or bind—a family.
Sisters Amanda Foster and Erin Turner have little in common except the childhood bedroom they once shared and the certainty each feels that her way of life is best. Amanda follows the rules—at the school where she works; in her community; and as a picture-perfect daughter, wife, and mother-to-be. Erin follows her heart—in love and otherwise—living a bohemian lifestyle on a shoestring budget and honouring her late father’s memory with a passion for music and her fledgling bath-products business.
The sisters are content leading separate but happy lives in their hometown of Potomac Point until everything is upended by lies that force them to confront unsettling truths about their family, themselves, and each other. For sisters as different as these two, building trust doesn’t come easily—especially with one secret still between them—but it may be the only way to save their family.
Thriller
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Don’t Make a Sound by T R Ragan, Pages: 285, Publication Date: 1 June 2020
Synopsis: Her own past could be a reporter’s biggest story in this twisting thriller about murder and family secrets by the New York Times bestselling author T.R. Ragan.
Plagued by traumatic childhood memories, crime reporter Sawyer Brooks still struggles to gain control of her rage, her paranoia, and her life. Now, after finally getting promoted at work, she is forced to return home and face her past.
River Rock is where she’d been abandoned by her two older sisters to suffer alone, and in silence, the unspeakable abuses of her family. It’s also where Sawyer’s best friend disappeared and two teenage girls were murdered. Three cold cases dead and buried with the rest of the town’s secrets.
When another girl is slain in a familiar grisly fashion, Sawyer is determined to put an end to the crimes. Pulled back into the horrors of her family history, Sawyer must reconcile with her estranged sisters, who both have shattering memories of their own. As Sawyer’s investigation leads to River Rock’s darkest corners, what will prove more dangerous—what she knows of the past or what she has yet to discover?
Biography
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Gender Rebels by Anneka Harry, Pages: 277, Publication Date: 1 June 2020
Synopsis: Meet the unsung sheroes of history: the diverse, defiant and daring (wo)men who changed the rules, and their identities, to get sh*t done.
You’ll encounter Kit Cavanagh, the swaggering Irish dragoon who was the first woman to be buried in London with full military honours; marauding eighteenth-century pirates Mary Read and Anne Bonny, who collided on the high seas after swapping their petticoats for pantaloons; Ellen Craft, an escaped slave who masqueraded as a white master to spirit her husband-to-be to freedom; and Billy Tipton, the swinging jazz musician, who led a double life as an adult, taking five wives along the way. Then there are the women who still have to dress like men to live their best lives, like the inspirational football-lovers in Iran, who risk everything to take their place in the stands.
A call to action for the modern world, this book celebrates the #GenderRebels who paved the way for women everywhere to be soldiers and spies; kings and queens; firefighters, doctors, pilots; and a Swiss Army knife’s-worth more. These superbly spirited (wo)men all had one thing in common: they defied the rules to progress in a man’s world.
Book Club Fiction
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Sorry I Missed You by Suzy Krause, Pages: 315, Publication Date: 1 June 2020
Synopsis: A poignant and heartwarming novel about friendship, ghosting, and searching for answers to life’s mysteries.
When Mackenzie, Sunna, and Maude move into a converted rental house, they are strangers with only one thing in common—important people in their lives have “ghosted” them. Mackenzie’s sister, Sunna’s best friend, and Maude’s fiancé—all gone with no explanation.
So when a mangled, near-indecipherable letter arrives in their shared mailbox—hinting at long-awaited answers—each tenant assumes it’s for her. The mismatched trio decides to stake out the coffee shop named in the letter—the only clue they have—and in the process, a bizarre kinship forms. But the more they learn about each other, the more questions (and suspicions) they begin to have. All the while, creepy sounds and strange happenings around the property suggest that the ghosts from their pasts might not be all that’s haunting them…
Will any of the housemates find the closure they are looking for? Or are some doors meant to remain closed?
Quirky, humorous, and utterly original, Sorry I Missed You is the perfect read for anyone who has ever felt haunted by their past (or by anything else).
Historical Fiction
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Golden Poppies by Laila Ibrahim, Pages: 297, Publication Date: 1 June 2020
Synopsis: From the bestselling author of Yellow Crocus and Mustard Seed comes the empowering novel of two generations of American women connected by the past and fighting for a brighter future.
It’s 1894. Jordan Wallace and Sadie Wagner appear to have little in common. Jordan, a middle-aged black teacher, lives in segregated Chicago. Two thousand miles away, Sadie, the white wife of an ambitious German businessman, lives in more tolerant Oakland, California. But years ago, their families intertwined on a plantation in Virginia. There, Jordan’s and Sadie’s mothers developed a bond stronger than blood, despite the fact that one was enslaved and the other was the privileged daughter of the plantation’s owner.
With Jordan’s mother on her deathbed, Sadie leaves her disapproving husband to make the arduous train journey with her mother to Chicago. But the reunion between two families is soon fraught with personal and political challenges.
As the harsh realities of racial divides and the injustices of the Gilded Age conspire to hold them back, the women find they need each other more than ever. Their courage, their loyalty, and the ties that bind their families will be tested. Amid the tumult of a quickly changing nation, their destiny depends on what they’re willing to risk for liberation.
Legal Thriller
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Legacy of Lies by Robert Bailey, Pages: 329, Publication Date: 1 June 2020
Synopsis: A small-town attorney takes on prejudice and corruption in this powerful legal thriller.
Small-town lawyer Bocephus Haynes comes home late one night to find District Attorney General Helen Lewis waiting for him. Her ex-husband has just been killed. She’s about to be arrested for his murder. And she wants Bo to represent her.
There’s a lot working against them. Just before his death, Helen’s ex-husband threatened to reveal a dark secret from her past. Bo has been in a tailspin since his wife’s death. What’s more, his whole life has been defined by a crime committed against his family, and he continues to face prejudice as the only African American litigator in Pulaski, Tennessee.
Bo’s back is against the wall, and Helen resigns herself to a dismal fate—but a stunning discovery throws everything into chaos. There’s a chance for justice, but to achieve it, the cost might be too much for Bo to bear.
Family Saga
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A Decent Family by Rosa Ventrella, Pages: 251, Publication Date: 1 June 2020
Synopsis: For fans of Elena Ferrante’s Neapolitan series comes a captivating family saga focused on a willful young woman’s struggles against her oppressive small town by acclaimed Italian author Rosa Ventrella.
In old Bari, everyone knows Maria De Santis as “Malacarne,” the bad seed. Nicknamed for her dark features, volcanic temperament, and resistance to rules, the headstrong girl can only imagine the possibilities that lie outside her poverty-stricken neighborhood.
Growing up with her mother, two brothers, and a tyrannical father, Maria must abide. She does—amid the squalid life to which she was born, the cruelties of her small-minded neighbors, and violence in a constant threat of eruption. As she reconciles her need for escape with the allegiance she feels toward her family, Maria has her salvations: her secret friend, Michele, son of a rival family and every bit the outsider she is, and her passion for books, which may someday take her far, far away.
In this exquisitely rendered and sensory-rich novel, Rosa Ventrella explores the limits of loyalty, the redeeming power of friendship and love, and the fire in the soul of one woman who was born to break free.
Literary Fiction
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A Man by Keiichiro Hirano, Pages: 295, Publication Date: 1 June 2020
Synopsis: A man follows another man’s trail of lies in a compelling psychological story about the search for identity, by Japan’s award-winning literary sensation Keiichiro Hirano in his first novel to be translated into English.
Akira Kido is a divorce attorney whose own marriage is in danger of being destroyed by emotional disconnect. With a midlife crisis looming, Kido’s life is upended by the reemergence of a former client, Rié Takemoto. She wants Kido to investigate a dead man—her recently deceased husband, Daisuké. Upon his death she discovered that he’d been living a lie. His name, his past, his entire identity belonged to someone else, a total stranger. The investigation draws Kido into two intriguing mysteries: finding out who Rié’s husband really was and discovering more about the man he pretended to be. Soon, with each new revelation, Kido will come to share the obsession with—and the lure of—erasing one life to create a new one.
In A Man, winner of Japan’s prestigious Yomiuri Prize for Literature, Keiichiro Hirano explores the search for identity, the ambiguity of memory, the legacies with which we live and die, and the reconciliation of who you hoped to be with who you’ve actually become.
***Which book will you choose? I can’t make up my mind between: “If You Must Know and Sorry I Missed You”. Let me know which book you think I should choose.***
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katgbirmelin · 5 years
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Today's #matriarchymarch is the amazing Hannah Szenes. Hannah was a special ops executive and paratrooper of Mandate Palestine for the British Army during WWII. The group was comprised of Jewish volunteers whose mission was to organize resistance against the German forces, and to aid in the rescue of allied personnel. Hannah was a Hungarian who immigrated to Nahalal and joined a paramilitary group that would later lay the foundation for the Israeli Defense Forces. In 1943 she enlisted in the British Army's Women's Auxiliary Air Force and began her training in Egypt. A year later she and her colleagues parachuted into Yugoslavia to join a partisan group (communist led resistance), to aid in the rescue of Hungarian Jews being deported to Auschwitz. However it was discovered that the Germans now occupied Hungary, and it was deemed too dangerous to continue with the rescue. Despite this, Hannah and her colleagues decided to continue on alone. They were arrested at the Hungarian border, and her British transmitter was discovered. She was taken to a prison, stripped and beaten for three days, loosing several teeth in the process. Her captors wanted the codes for the transmitter in order to find out who these three prisoners were and how they could find and trap others like them. Hannah was resolute, and so was sent to a prison in Budapest where she would continue to be interrogated and beaten for information. She only revealed her name. In October of 1944 she was charged and convicted of treason, and on November 7th she was executed by firing squad. In 1946 her diary was published in Hebrew. In 1950 her remains were brought to Israel and burried in Jerusalem. After the Cold War she was officially exonerated by the Hungarian military court. Hannah is considered to be a national heroine in Israel. #matriarch #matriarchy #herstory #history #shero #heroine #mightygirl #womenempoweringwomen #femalewarrior #servicebeforeself #jewishheroine #womenshistorymonth #womenshistory #solider #airman #wwiihero #portrait #womenpaintingwomen https://www.instagram.com/p/Buzu1KVlxeE/?utm_source=ig_tumblr_share&igshid=1ugohg0ekjl3l
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kayprism · 2 years
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Most of my Sheroes come from #mississippi This is just one. #idabwells is #americanhistory so many do not know. I had never heard of her until this image was on a US postal stamp in 1990 when I was at Howard. When I read her biography by (Howard alum) #paulagiddings published in 2008, I was forever changed. The book not only told Ida's story but America's as well. Ironically enough the Tea Party was just starting up when I read the book in 2010.. Now that the #antilynchingbill is FINALLY law the world needs to know her name and her story.. Ida was first arrested for not sitting in the colored section on a train. Sound familiar? Ida was a journalist who used her words to dispel the myth that lynchings were not taking place.. Ida traveled overseas to England and Scotland with her children (husband stayed in the states) showing photos of the atrocities going on... (No women traveled alone during this time period! Mr. Barnett was a feminist before his time!) There was a massive campaign filled with propaganda denying the fact that lynching was happening all over this country... She faced numerous death threats but somehow lived until 1931. (@dorothyknows was born the year after.) And she and her husband helped migrants get housing work in Chicago until their last days.. This is the type of #americanhistory AKA #criticalracetheory missing from our classrooms... #idabwells is am #americanshero Learn Her Name. https://www.instagram.com/p/CbuwmP9OQHr/?utm_medium=tumblr
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International Women’s Day! Dr. Mae C. Jeminson. • This is a #repost from CuriosityStream via @PhotoAroundApp 👩🏾‍🚀Dr. Mae C. Jemison is an #astronaut and #physician who became the first African American woman to be admitted into @NASA’s astronaut training program and ultimately the first African American woman in space. Jemison is the epitome of the American dream. The youngest child of Charlie Jemison, a roofer and carpenter, and Dorothy, an elementary school teacher, she graduated at the top of her high school class and attended @Stanford on a National Achievement Scholarship. There, she was the head of the Black Student Union and received a BS in chemical engineering. Next, she entered @CornellUniversity Medical College and went on to teach medical research overseas as part of the Peace Corps. Upon returning, she changed courses and applied to NASA's astronaut training program and the rest, as the saying goes, is history. 🚀 - #CuriosityStream #CivilRights #MaeJemison #NASA #peacecorps #doctorsofinstagram #doctor #BlackHistoryMonth #BHM #BlackHistory #history #blackgirlmagic #herstory #girlpower #shero #equality #STEM #WomenInSTEM #WomenInScience #WomenInScienceDay #femaleastronauts #space #imagination #famousquotes #StayCurious https://www.instagram.com/p/CMJwmMzFVgg/?igshid=1ty8cmx9dvmzq
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She may be a child of immigrants living the American Dream, but Kamala Harris is not the role model of interracial solidarity that many South Asian and South Asian-American women want her to be.
Being a woman of color in Trump’s America is exhausting.
This year marks the centennial of the constitutional amendment that let American women (functionally, white American women) vote. It is a bittersweet milestone for many African-American women. On the one hand it is time to celebrate the crucial political and intellectual labors of Black women like Sojourner Truth, Ida B. Wells, Frances Watkin Harper, and Mary Church Terrell who are too often left out of the narrative of American women’s history. On the other hand, the next hundred years of voting don’t look too bright. The memories of the Supreme Court gutting the Voting Rights Act of 1965 are fresh. Many voters were planning on mailing in their ballots for this fall’s election, but we are now watching the President’s lackey systematically dismantle the US Postal Service. And as we all watch the rise of fascistic and authoritarian governments across the world, it feels almost ironic to celebrate the historic expansion of the right to vote.
We need a happy story about U.S. politics!  
And that is what Kamala Harris seems to promise for women of color.
There are two stories everyone seems to want to tell about Kamala Harris: the child of immigrants who rose to power, and the living embodiment of South Asian’s antiracism. But a quick look behind the headlines shows she is neither. Let’s look at each story in turn.  
First, she is cast as a child of immigrants who lives out the American Dream, going “From India and Jamaica to the doors of the White House in one generation.” Hard work and individual ‘grit’ and dedication to social justice raise her from (implied) humble beginnings to the heights of power. It doesn’t seem to matter that her humble origins are actually not that humble; that her Indian grandfather was a career civil servant who served as Under Secretary in the colonial Ministry of Transport and Joint Secretary in the Ministry of Rehabilitation in the Indian government; or that her mother immigrated as part of an elite group of students who were able to enter the United States before the Immigration and Nationality Act of 1965 ended the 100-person cap on Indian immigration to the U.S. More than three-quarters of the Indian immigrants who came to the U.S. the year Kamala Harris’s mother came were agricultural laborers. Their children might be cast in the feel-good stories about rising through hard work and grit alone, but Kamala Harris’s savarna-Indian background and powerful relatives do not allow her to be cast in this role. These realities get in the way of good story-telling. We’d rather celebrate the U.S. as the Land of Opportunity than examine how caste privilege presents translates in the U.S. context.
Then there is the second narrative: Kamala Harris as the emblem of South Asians’ affinity for social justice. This is perhaps most prevalent among Indian Americans and the more woke Indian feminists. We want her to represent the affinity between Indian Americans and the global Black freedom struggle. Because her parents met during the civil rights struggle of the 1960s, and because by all accounts, her mother was invested in social justice (and even her high-ranking diplomat grandfather dedicated much of his career working on refugee resettlement in India and Zambia), we want her to be the living proof that regular Indians are on the right side of history in the struggle to make Black Lives Matter. We want her to embody the principles of Afro-Asian solidarity we study in history texts or that we aspire to enact in our own lives. This desire lets us put aside the inconvenient truths of how her career was built on the backs of poor Black and brown people. She famously sponsored a truancy law that jailed parents whose children were found to be absent from school without ‘good reason.’ This is the sort of policy making that gave us the school-to-prison pipeline. It’s also the kind of thinking that turns poor children’s schools into mini-prisons whose main job is to warehouse them away from harmful influences until they are old enough to work, instead of actually preparing them for a future of self-determination. Kamala Harris is not the social justice warrior either the angry right or woke liberals want her to be. She did not use her leadership position as Attorney General of California to call for transparency and police accountability, even as the Black Lives Matter movement swelled across the country after the killing of Michael Brown in Ferguson, Missouri. Kamala Harris’s career is not a trajectory for South Asians who want to be in solidarity with Black women and other women of color in the U.S. or across the world.
If we are looking for a common sense narrative that explains Kamala Harris’s rise to power, it cannot be the American Dream or even the South Asian American dream. Her career trajectory is actually an embrace of what we used to call the model minority myth; the idea that the achievements of some minorities (whether they are high-performing undocumented immigrants or highly educated, affluent Black people like the Obama family) are proof that our education system and political infrastructure are not rigged against poor Black and Brown people, and also proof that the people who aren’t able to rise through the ranks of this fictitious meritocracy are the problem and not centuries of systematic dispossession and disfranchisement. Kamala Harris’ career shows us how, if we use our privileges correctly, play by the rules, don’t scare white people by making radical claims (for example, that poor Black people matter every bit as much as any wealthy person); if we are willing to put our smiling “diverse” faces as stamps of approval on white supremacist policies, we too can be the face of white supremacist mass incarceration. Kamala Harris, as the California attorney general, repeatedly defied a 2011 US Supreme Court order to reduce the prisoner population in California’s prisons. Kamala Harris and her team filed motions which were seen as obstructionist and in bad faith and were indicative of her reliance on the prison and carceral justice.
Kamala Harris’ career shows us how, if we use our privileges correctly, play by the rules, don’t scare white people by making radical claims (for example, that poor Black people matter every bit as much as any wealthy person); if we are willing to put our smiling “diverse” faces as stamps of approval on white supremacist policies, we too can be the face of white supremacist mass incarceration.
To hold up Kamala Harris as a role model for young girls is to teach them that their humanity is a function of their capacity to dehumanise others. And what’s more, we don’t need her! We already have a plethora of progressive South Asian American, immigrant, and second-generation sheroes to emulate. We have Kshama Sawant (didn’t your amma have that same curtain somewhere in her house?), Pramila Jayapal (the only aunty I fear), Ilhan Omar, and Rashida Tlaib  to be role models for our political aspirations. These are women of color who see their freedom bound in the freedom of everyone else. They are not willing to pave their way to power by sacrificing the futures of Black and Brown boys and girls. We shouldn’t either.
Vineeta is a teacher and student of black feminist epistemology and critical anti-racist pedagogies (not necessarily in that order). She completed her Ph.D. in Ethnic Studies from the University of California, San Diego in 2018 and is trying to put that training to good use wherever she can. She can be found on Twitter.
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ewei-nigeria · 4 years
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Yasmin Belo-Osagie is the cofounder of She Leads Africa (SLA), a Nigeria-based social enterprise she built with Afua Osei in 2013. Today Yasmin has proven that there is no investment more profitable than female empowerment as she has gone on from leading in business to leading women empowerment in Africa. The Nigerian born 29 years old entrepreneur, studied in Princeton with degrees in History and Finance and has proven right the notion which says, educate a girl child and you educate a nation. Yasmin grew up realizing there weren’t enough women role models and so she decided to invest in women by becoming a role model and in so doing her investment has reaped multiple dividends in equipping female entrepreneurs in Africa with the knowledge, network, and financial support needed to build and raise strong business empires. She Leads Africa (SLA) is a digital media company for the modern, millennial African woman that provides the foundation to promote female entrepreneurs from SMEs to pan-African industry leaders. It provides support for ideas and gives opportunities to access professionals who can assist with mentoring and funding to escalate the process of rebranding start-ups into business empires. Asides being the co-founder of She Leads Africa, Yasmin has grown a community of 350,000 women across 47 countries, Collaborated with brands including Nestle, Bobbi Brown, Facebook, Dark & Lovely (L’Oreal), Intel, GTBank, Pandora and hosted the first all-female pan-Africa pitch contest. At just 29, Yasmin and her co-founder Afua Osei (26) were recently selected as 2 of Forbes’ 20 Youngest Power Women in Africa. She has featured in several reputable publications including Black Enterprise, Fox Small Businesses, Ventures Africa, etc. Yasmin is defying the stereotypical narratives of African women’s lack of inclusivity in business and leadership role by defying all odds to spotlight and highlight gender inclusivity by women in leadership positions while still maintaining a leading role in the kitchen, she is a trained sous chef who worked in the Mandarin Oriental in Hong Kong. @sheleadsafrica #sherowednesday #sheroes https://www.instagram.com/p/CDyxL4xpLeV/?igshid=6be30htoqgas
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2018 YSEALI Seeds for the Future
Twenty-one winners have been announced in the Young Southeast Asian Leadership Initiative (YSEALI) Seeds for the Future small grants competition. The grantees, young leaders who represent all 10 ASEAN member states, will use YSEALI Seeds funding to conduct projects in the region across the themes of civic engagement, sustainable development, education, and economic growth.
Selected from a competitive pool of over 450 applications, the 2018 YSEALI Seeds for the Future winners received grants ranging from $4500 to $15000. Tackling everything from making biofuel from coffee peels to afterschool arts programs, they will build on the accomplishments of last year’s grantees, who successfully implemented 20 projects across ASEAN.
Learn more about the accomplishment of 2017’s grantees
Along with funding, the YSEALI Seeds grantees will receive coaching throughout the year to ensure the success and sustainability of their projects. This mentorship will kick off with a two-day workshop in Jakarta on January 18-19. Two representatives from each winning group will convene to learn best practices in project management, budgeting, and cultivating awareness and messaging strategies.
The YSEALI Seeds for the Future program is sponsored by U.S. Department of State and is funded through a grant from the U.S. Mission to ASEAN. For the second consecutive year, one outstanding project that supports entrepreneurship across multiple countries is receiving funding support from the U.S.-ASEAN Business Council. This is the second year Cultural Vistas will administer the program.
The U.S. government launched YSEALI in 2013 to strengthen partnerships with emerging leaders in Southeast Asia; to expand their skills as effective civic, economic and non-governmental leaders in the region; and to nurture an ASEAN community of leaders who work together to solve common issues. Since that time, the YSEALI network has grown to more than 111,000 members.
Learn more about the YSEALI Seeds for the Future Program at ysealiseeds.org
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YSEALI Seeds for the Future 2018 Grant Recipients
After Mining Project (Indonesia): Equipping youth with skills to compete in modern economy
CC Educare (Myanmar): Developing internet skills and etiquette among youth in Myanmar
Wasted Coffee Coals (Indonesia, Vietnam, Philippines): Turning wasted coffee peels into alternative energy source
Environmental Film Camp (Laos): Creating a film industry in Laos by training local filmmakers
FIBERS (Philippines, Thailand): Bootcamps designed to create a more sustainable, just fashion industry
Financial Literacy of Micro and Small Business (Cambodia): Training small businesses on best practices in financial management
Fine Arts Major Organization (Philippines): Arts and storytelling program for female inmates
Interactive E-Learning (Laos): Online educational platform for high school students in Laos
Kid + (Vietnam): Educational program for disabled children to learn about sexual abuse prevention
Participatory Environmental Education for Indigenous Youth (Thailand, Laos, Myanmar): Teaching indigenous youth natural resource management and sustainable practices
Reef Stakes (Malaysia): Card game that teaches about the coral reef ecosystem
Rubic Collaborative (Vietnam): Outdoor activities for children with autism and their families
Schoove (Indonesia): Marine and fisheries educational program in Kupang, Indonesia
SHE Community Business Incubator (Cambodia): Accelerator program for women-owned micro businesses
She Talks (Philippines): Mentorship program for disadvantaged young women
SHero (Thailand, Vietnam, Philippines): Creating networks of female leaders to affect community changes
Teach for ASEAN (Singapore, Malaysia, Myanmar): Educational program for underprivileged youth in Myanmar
Viet Children’s Picture (Vietnam): Afterschool arts, music, and crafts program for suburban children
Youth-Setter Community (Brunei): Workshop to create and implement solutions for special education in Brunei
AMPLIFY (Indonesia, Malaysia, Thailand): A kid-friendly household disaster preparedness toolkit
Coffee Warriors Empowerment (Indonesia, Vietnam): Exchange program among Vietnamese and Indonesian coffee farmers
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bigyack-com · 4 years
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‘Orange Cafe’ by acid attack survivors to open soon in Varanasi - more lifestyle
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After the Sheroes Hangout Cafe in Lucknow and Agra, acid attack survivors in Varanasi will soon have a cafe that will be run by them.The restaurant called ‘The Orange Cafe’ is being opened in the Durga Kund area and is the brainchild of Ajay Kumar Patel, who started the ‘Red Brigade’ in 2011 which is an NGO that trains women in self-defence.Patel said: “We are starting The Orange Cafe from a rented place but we soon plan to get ownership of the place. Our aim is to make sure that the acid attack survivors own the café and run it themselves.”Patel has been travelling through the state since the past two years to connect with acid attack survivors in various districts.He short-listed four survivors, who were willing to shift to Varanasi and take on the responsibility of running the cafe.ALSO READ:Laxmi Agarwal, who Deepika Padukone plays in Chhapaak, shares how not to talk to an acid attack survivorThe acid attack survivors who will be a part of the venture are Rekha from Jaunpur, Somvati from Bareilly, Vimla from Rae Bareli and Badam Devi from Varanasi.“We are now training these women to cook food, serve the customers and undertake the billing. We do not want them to depend on others for these tasks. For the first four months, we will pay them a token amount but they will later share the profit among themselves,” said Patel.Somvati from Bareilly said that she was hopeful that they would finally stand on their own feet with this venture and not be dependent on their families for survival.“I want to ensure good education for my 10-year-old son and the cafe will help me fulfil my dream,” she said.Somvati was attacked with acid by her neighbour three years ago when she spurned his advances.(This story has been published from a wire agency feed without modifications to the text. )Follow more stories on Facebook and Twitter Read the full article
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survivalarts · 5 years
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Survival Arts x Bayani Art ᜂᜇ͓ᜇ̥ᜑ URDUHA @bayaniart, culture-bearer and one of the premier lifestyle brands of Pilipinx history in the United States, has partnered with @survivalarts to honor Warrior Queen Urduha. 🗡✨ . Urduha, more commonly known as Princess Urduja, was a 14th century warrior queen of Tawalisi, in what is now known as Pangasinan. Princess Urduha was trained in the art of war since she was a child, and became an expert in using the kampilan and a skilled navigator. Known far and wide, she was famous for leading a retinue of women warriors who were skilled fighters, equestrians, and experts in weaponry. With bodies of strength and muscular physique, they were known as Kinalakihan, or Amazons. The legend of Princess Urduha can be attributed to the story of when she met the greatest traveler in history, Ibn Battuta. (Learn more here: survivalarts.org/articles/urduha) . . Survival Arts continues the legacy of Queen Urduha by leading the first all-womxn’s Kali training groups around the world. By training womxn and girls to protect their bodies from violence and sexual assault, Survival Arts works to carry on our warrior bloodline.  Bayani Art works to strengthen unity within our community by sharing the rich history of our Motherland. By using one of our images to pay homage to Warrior Queen Urduha, Bayani Art honors Survival Arts with their creative talent. Together, we uplift our communities and stories of power, survival, and resilience. Maraming Salamat Mga Kapatid sa Bayani Art! ᜃ🇵🇭⚔️✨ . . . . #Urduha #Urduja #Warrior #Queen #kasaysayan #pilipinas #bayani #art #mandirigma #babaylan #kapwa #kali #pilipinafightingarts #pekititirsiakali #warriorwomxn #islandwomxnrise #walangmakakapigil #pinay #herstory #ph #amazon #pinay #pangasinan #luzon #legendary #shero #ibnbattuta #philippines #history #SurvivalArts survivalarts.org/articles/bayaniart (at Philippines) https://www.instagram.com/p/BxOqnhBgoJS/?utm_source=ig_tumblr_share&igshid=1jzmrlhcv29k1
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