Women's empowerment - Amplifying Voices https://amplifyingvoices.uk/tag/womens-empowerment Getting people talking, listening and taking action Thu, 20 Mar 2025 14:28:30 +0000 en-GB hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.7.2 https://amplifyingvoices.uk/wp-content/uploads/2020/12/AV_LOGO_FAVICON_RGB-01-150x150.png Women's empowerment - Amplifying Voices https://amplifyingvoices.uk/tag/womens-empowerment 32 32 Opening doors in Sargodha https://amplifyingvoices.uk/opening-doors-in-sargodha Wed, 20 Nov 2024 14:44:00 +0000 https://amplifyingvoices.uk/?p=6623 Going live on local FM radio, woman and girls from the Roshan Ghar project are creating new opportunities and opening new doors for rural listeners near Sargodha.

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Transitioning from sewing classes to live radio may seem like an odd route for a project to take. But this is what several woman and girls are doing in the Roshan Ghar project, creating new opportunities and opening new doors for themselves and for rural listeners near Sargodha.

In 2022, Amplifying Voices Pakistan helped a local pastor and his wife to start sewing classes in a rural village to help women to build skills for earning. These Roshan Ghar classes also became a place for talking about problems many of the women had in common – especially issues affecting the health and wellbeing of families. Some of those conversations led to health camps and a mobile health clinic to take conversations into people’s home. Other conversations were recorded, as were interviews with health professionals, and then put together into conversational education programmes. Women would listen to the programmes on speakerboxes during the sewing classes.

Hazeen Latif and his team from Amplifying Voices Pakistan supported the group by teaching interview skills, recording skills, and editing skills. As the quality got better and better, Hazeen introduced Roshan Ghar’s programmes to a local radio station. These weekly 10-minute slots became popular and the station invited the group leaders to join them for a live show on International Women’s Day in March this year. The sewing teacher went along with Rimshah, the health worker. They were a little nervous about being live on air, so Hazeen joined them.

3 women and an man in a radio studio
Hazeen, Rimshah and Sewing Teacher (off camera), Int’l Women’s Day

The live show received lots calls from listeners who were excited to hear women from villages like their own in the studio alongside the professionals. The Roshan Ghar women were creating an atmosphere of possibility.

The radio station called them back for another live show in June. This time focussing on the Roshan Ghar project and the partnership with Amplifying Voices. The local station started to invite the Roshan Ghar team for monthly live shows.

A show in August focussed on neurological conditions. The mobile health clinic had found several families with children suffering from epilepsy but who did not understand what was happening to their children. Two of these women came and spoke on the show. One lady shared about her son being excluded from school because he had fits. They also shared about the advice and treatment they had received from the lady health worker and volunteer doctors visiting the village.

Women in a radio studio
Discussing challenges for parents of children with neurological conditions

The women spoke with Hazeen later saying:

“before we felt ashamed [of our children’s conditions], but now we can talk about taking care of our children.”

… not just in the sewing class but live on air.

More women from the village are now taking part in monthly live shows accompanied by local project leaders, but no longer needing to have Hazeen or anyone from the Amplifying Voices Pakistan team with them.

“Before we could not talk to other men or people outside our village, but now we get such a confidence that we can talk to anyone.”

Listeners also feel like the Roshan Ghar women are opening new doors for them:

“You talk about things that are taboo – like skin rashes in private areas, and intestinal worms – we learned a lot from you.”

“Especially about toilets – the importance of keeping toilets clean. Most radio programmes are about glamourous topics and don’t touch on things like this.”

Yet, these are topics that make a difference in rural communities. In recent years there have been several projects or campaigns to provide latrines for village homes, but often without a corresponding rollout of advice on care or maintenance. As a result, toilets had become unhygienic and a source of illness. These women, who are not afraid to talk about the unpleasant, are helping people stay healthier.

The programmes continue. Often drawing out the wisdom within the villages as well as accessing the medical experts.

“Next we want to hear about smog and lung diseases, and especially about home remedies for building resistance to the effects of smog.”

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Bright Home – Cholistan https://amplifyingvoices.uk/bright-home-cholistan-pakistan Tue, 16 Jul 2024 12:39:11 +0000 https://amplifyingvoices.uk/?p=6044 Amplifying Voices Pakistan supports communities in Cholistan to set up vocational skills centres integrated with community-centred media.

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Roshni-Ro-Ghar (Bright Home)

Our partner, Amplifying Voices Pakistan is working with a Marwari community in the desert region, Cholistan, to create new opportunies for women and young people. New Hope is one of the Bright Home group of projects, integrating community-centred media with vocational skills classes and other off-air activities

Bright Home (Roshni ro Ghar in Marwari) provides vocational classes for women or young people. In partnership with regional health care providers, health camps provide advice, medical checkup and basic medication.

Media training provides women an additional route for building skills, self confidence, and for participating more widely in community life and wider society.

Women and young people from the community use media skills to create audio content that promotes social developments, good health and hygiene, and supports livelihood development. Content is aired via speakerbox and WhatsApp, with a view to providing FM radio content as skills grow.

Background:

Pastor Lazur heard about Roshan Ghar in Sargodha from a WhatsApp group in June 2023 and invited Amplifying Voices Pakistan to help set up a Bright Home project a Marwari village near Rahim Yar Khan, on the the edge of the Cholistan desert.

woman walking in desert

Bright Home projects aim to build foundations for trust, by creating livelihood opportunities and addressing health concerns before engaging in media.

During earlier projects in we found that media activities can be sensitive. Local power-brokers are suspicious when minority figures suddenly gain prominence.  Working primarily with minority Marwari people in a multi-ethnic region, Roshni-ro-Ghar activities encourage participation from across the Hindu, Muslim and Christian communities.

Our Role:

Provide support to Amplifying Voices Pakistan for project planning, including funding proposals and design of participatory community-based research and learning.

Read more about Amplifying Voices Pakistan.

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Six sisters in front of their home

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Amplifying with care https://amplifyingvoices.uk/amplifying-with-care Tue, 16 Jul 2024 07:59:32 +0000 https://amplifyingvoices.uk/?p=6162 Amplifying Voices Pakistan promotes change at a pace that allows time for long-held cultural norms to adapt. Through Bright Home groups, they're finding a care-filled approach to amplifying voices is paying dividends for positive change.

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Through Bright Home groups, Amplifying Voices Pakistan promotes change at a pace that allows time for long-held cultural norms to adapt. We’ve talked previously about Bright Home, but as the projects develop, we discover new benefits from this way of working. This month I’ve been learning about Bright Home teams’ care-filled approach to amplifying voices for change.

Bright Home principles developed partly in response to lessons learned a few years ago in a different project where change started to happen too quickly. At that time, we had supported a youth group to make radio programmes about local social issues and injustices. At first, we were excited to hear how young people’s confidence and hope grew. Things could – and should – be different. However, some powerful people felt threatened and pressurised the project leader to stop. The fierce backlash forced the team to bring the project to an abrupt halt. They returned the equipment to us, and we were unable to continue any further activities in that community. Marginalised voices had become too loud, too fast.

A Bright Home approach

Hazeen Latif, CEO of Amplifying Voices Pakistan, told me that Bright Home projects take a different approach. Rather than starting with a media project, local partners provide sewing classes for young women and free medical camps focussing on women and children. These address some very pressing needs in a culturally acceptable way, developing traditional skills to earn income, and bringing healthcare to women and children who are rarely able to travel to a city for advice or treatment.

However, Bright Home classes are also places of conversation. Hazeen told me how, through conversation, aspirations are emerging and possibilities for change are growing. In one Punjabi community, conversations in the sewing classes about food shortages and lack of shade in summer led to a kitchen garden initiative and a tree planting campaign.

“Like my own daughter”

Some of these activities also improved community cohesion between minority Christian groups and people from the majority religion. The Bright Home team extended health camps and healthcare home visits beyond their own Christian community to work with women and children in majority religion homes. People from the majority religion responded, with one of their leaders donating money to buy medicines for the health camps. One older woman said of the Bright Home healthworker, “she is just like my own daughter”.

Women and children talking in brick courtyard

Home visits -supporting families across the community

The tree planting campaign gave men opportunity to get involved. Men from both communities came together to plant trees in public spaces and in each other’s home compounds. Both religions value good stewardship of creation, and in particular, they see tree planting as a virtuous activity.

Group of people planting trees

Coming together to plant trees, Punjab, 2024

“No one will harm you”

The sense of togetherness became very real after an incident in the regional city, Sargodha. Someone there had used religion as an excuse to provoke a mob attack on a Christian business. But in the village, leaders from the majority community came to the Bright Home team and said, “No one will harm you when we are sitting here”.

Instead of feeling threatened by the changes brought by Bright Home, people with power, whether through gender or through religion, have felt included and found themselves contributors to change.

“I am Light”

In KPK province, some of the young women attending a Bright Home class spoke up and said they wanted to learn to read, write and do arithmetic. In that community, many girls had not been allowed to go to school. However, the literacy and numeracy classes that are now underway are not perceived as a threat, because these skills are necessary for using sewing patterns, and for developing businesses to make money from the sewing skills. The girls called the literacy classes, “Zama Rana” (I am light).

woman's hands on a sewing pattern

Working with sewing patterns, Nowshera

In each of the Bright Home groups, they use speakerboxes for listening to health advice programmes made in other Amplifying Voices projects. And in each place, some of the young women would ask to learn how to make speakerbox programmes themselves – “If they can do it, we can do it” – They start by discussing topics that are raised in the class setting. The programmes are played within the class to start with, but as confidence, skills, and local acceptance of the Bright Home activities have grown, some groups are now airing their programmes on local FM stations.

Some people may still oppose changes, especially those that offer opportunity and influence to young women in very conservative communities. However, there are now more who support the changes, who even help to make change happen. Bright Home communities are able to amplify local voices, because they do so with care.

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Things no-one talks about https://amplifyingvoices.uk/things-no-one-talks-about Sat, 03 Jun 2023 07:30:03 +0000 https://amplifyingvoices.uk/?p=5560 Bright Home helps Pakistani women create new opportunities. We hear how Amplifying Voices navigates challenging cultural barriers and norms, and discusses things no-one talks about.

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Bright Home (or Rokhan-e-Kore in Pashtu) helps women to create new opportunities for themselves and their families in communities where men are culturally expected to be the ones making decisions and generating the family income. This can create dilemmas about when to courageously overcome cultural barriers and when to operate sensitively within cultural norms. Hazeen Latif from Amplifying Voices Pakistan shares some insights into how this is happening in a community where Rokhan-e-Kore is just getting started.

Women in sewing class

Rokhan-e-Kore class, KPK, 2023

Sewing classes have been running now for several weeks and young girls who attend have told us that they have learned a lot. They can see how they will use these skills to earn money from their families. Some of the participants said they would be interested in learning computer and media skills. But there are challenges.

It started with a challenge to one of our own norms! We have a training mantra which you may have heard us say before: “Get your shoes dirty”. It’s a shorthand way of saying people should build trust and be relevant by getting out of their office or studio into the community to engage with people on the streets and in the markets. The women attending the sewing classes had picked up on this aspect of community-centred media, perhaps during discussion about community-centred media in the broader community during the AViD response to the floods last summer. When discussing the possibility of including media training in Rokhan-e-Kore, the participants said they couldn’t be involved if it meant going out to record interviews etc in the streets and markets of their own village and neighbouring places.  They said it has been a big thing for many of these women and girls to get permission from their families to attend Rokhan-e-Kore in a classroom outside their homes. They don’t want to jeopardise that.

Hazeen explained that they would be able to do all media learning, recording and other production within the classroom. The class teacher is very willing to learn how to teach the media skills, so eventually Hazeen would not need to be the one teaching. He also explained that the purpose of the “get your shoes dirty” principle is to persuade media people and service providers (eg clinics, religious groups) to leave their comfort zones to come and listen to people in community locations, like the women in the sewing class. The voices of local women making and taking new opportunities are the voices that media should amplify.

Hazeen also recognised that it could be a bit scary to talk on a radio programme, which could go out via a local FM station, about these new opportunities and the participants’ roles in creating them. It’s scary because it the people who traditionally make decisions and create income might feel threatened by the programme content. He encouraged the women that they could use pseudonyms whenever they create content, and that the name of their village needn’t be mentioned. This does create a challenge for one of our other norms – that of building trust and rapport with community members through familiar voices. However, listeners don’t need to identify the women speaking to be able to identify with them. The women have familiar accents and their stories or challenges are similar to what the listeners’ face.

Within minutes of Hazeen providing these reassurances, the participants asked him,

“will we able to talk about the womens’ issues that no-one ever talks about?”.

With an emphatic yes, Hazeen was delighted to say that this is one of the main reasons why we offer media training and ongoing support to create programmes. It’s what community-centred media should be all about.

Paraphrasing something I heard from Fred Bahnson, the frontlines of change are best led by those most disadvantaged by the status quo. In Rokhan-e-Kore contexts, we are equipping those disadvantaged by the status quo to take their first steps as agents of change by helping them to feel sufficiently safe to do so.

The arrival of some solar panels gave another indication that these culturally sensitive steps are bearing fruit. Hazeen and his local partner leave most of the engagement with class participants to a local woman so that there are only few occasions when a man is present and so the women can continue to observe “purdah” (or seclusion from men). Because the classes are in a public place outside their homes, and because a man may occasionally be present, the women do wear veils in the classroom. At this time of year, it gets very hot, and wearing a veil makes the heat even harder to bear. However, a local man has agreed to donate solar panels if Hazeen can provide pedestal fans. This reflects that some local men value the Bright Home activities and want to do something to support.

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The Power of Ubuntu https://amplifyingvoices.uk/the-power-of-ubuntu Thu, 02 Mar 2023 13:01:09 +0000 https://amplifyingvoices.uk/?p=5176 A remote village in Maharashtra, India, comes together in the spirit of 'ubuntu' to resolve a crippling water crisis.

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Having grown up in southern Africa, I am very familiar with the concept of “ubuntu”, which was popularised by people like Desmond Tutu and Nelson Mandela. It’s a concept used in many Bantu languages and is part of a phrase which translates something like, “I am because you are.” In English a good way to think of it is, “the power of us.”  It nurtures the idea that communities are one of the strongest building blocks of society, especially when they act together. Ubuntu recognises that communities have innate strengths and can drive development themselves by identifying and mobilising existing, but often unrecognised assets.

In our work at Amplifying Voices, we aim to foster this idea of Ubuntu in communities by equipping them with media tools, to get people talking, listening, and taking action, to improve local health, well-being and resilience.  So I’m always thrilled when I hear stories of where this is happening, as it is in one community of indigenous (Adivasi) people in a remote village of Maharastra.
A year ago my daughter, Amy and I joined the Adivasi Voices Project (AVP) team in the small village of Khobrakahandol, where they had been working since 2020.  Working closely with the community and service providers to tackle some of the biggest challenges facing them, they had begun to see some remarkable changes: the establishment of a self-help savings group; people setting up kitchen gardens to grow vegetables; improvements in health due to better hygiene and sanitation; more children going to school, especially girls.  But on the day we visited, there was only one thing on the villager’s minds. Water!  After a long spell without rain, the village was reeling from drought.
They insisted that we accompany them on the very long journey they had to walk several times a day, down a very steep incline, to find the water to fill their pitchers. On the walk back, and out of breath from the exertion, one of the ladies smiled at us saying, “I do this walk at least five times a day and with a water pitcher on my head.”
Over the course of the next nine months the AVP team worked with the community to make programmes in which they discussed the water problems and what they could do about it and how they should use their voice to make their needs known.  Led by Sonu, a local barber and activist, the community put pressure on the local water department and the Panchayat Samiti a local government body, to assist them in their hardship. The AVP team for their part continued to support the community in their advocacy, inspiring them to keep talking to officials and helping them to understand their rights through conversations, information programmes and dramas played on speakerboxes.
Finally on 2nd February, a machine was sent by the local government to begin drilling for water.  Yesterday I received pictures of the completed well and a delighted community, who, because they discovered the power of ubuntu, learned that together they can bring about change.  Or in the words of community activist Sonu, “We did this!”

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Vocational skills pave the way https://amplifyingvoices.uk/vocational-skills-pave-the-way Thu, 18 Aug 2022 07:38:02 +0000 https://amplifyingvoices.uk/?p=4479 This week, women from a minority community in Punjab started a series of workshops teaching sewing skills to other women and girls. At the end of the first day, participants and their relatives told the coordinator that they see this workshop as a launch pad to greater things. One participant said that her sister is…

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This week, women from a minority community in Punjab started a series of workshops teaching sewing skills to other women and girls. At the end of the first day, participants and their relatives told the coordinator that they see this workshop as a launch pad to greater things.

One participant said that her sister is getting married and that she was very excited because she would be able to do all the sewing in preparation for the wedding.

The workshop is part of a vocational skills programme being piloted by Amplifying Voices Pakistan in several communites. The pilot is called Roshan Ghar in Punjabi, Rokhani Kor in Pashtu, and Bright Home in English. In communities such as this one near Sargodha in Punjab, there are not many opportunities for people from minority groups to complete education or to find employment. Those that do find work often end up in dangerous sanitation jobs, cleaning sewers and sorting rubbish. However, some women in the community who have had some education realised they could teach sewing skills to other women, who could then use those skills to support their household incomes.

Another two participants came with their father. He said he had six daughters, and that the cultural expectations for him to pay a dowry would make it impossible for him to support them getting married. But he was hopeful that this workshop would help his daughters gain skills to earn an income.

Hazeen from Amplifying Voices Pakistan told me why they have adopted this way of piloting vocational skills programmes linked to community-centred media. The idea for Rokhani Kor started in Khyberpakhtunkhwa province near Nowshera and was originally intended to be a series of radio programmes made by women, for women. The radio programmes would address access to education for girls and were linked to a separate project providing vocational training for young women.

However, Hazeen was also seeing the re-emergence of an issue that affects several projects. Despite initial enthusiasm it was difficult for women to stay involved in a media project on an ongoing basis. Some attended the initial media training but couldn’t contribute to regular programming because of cultural restrictions on travelling to communities or to a recording location.

While exploring options for the project near Sargodha, and hearing women saying they wanted opportunities to learn and become more employable, Hazeen proposed switching the Rokhani Kor/ Roshan Ghar concept around in order to address this issue in a culturally sensitive manner. The project would introduce vocational skills workshops first and build in media engagement along the way. Women could participate regularly in vocational classes in culturally acceptable meeting places where they could also listen to community-centred audio programmes together. Some could contribute through interviews or go on to do media training. This process builds awareness of the benefits of community-media. At the same time the wider community has a chance to see that Amplifying Voices Pakistan can be trusted, paving the way for women and girls to be more involved in media production.

women doing vocational skills

Selfie-time at the first sewing class, Sargodha.

Setting up the Roshan Ghar workshop in Sargodha came out of listening to community members, hearing local concerns, and helping to identify the skills and resources that already exist in the community. Three women with skills and motivation offered to provide training to other women and young girls. The local partner found a suitable training room and a gift from an Australian media organisation, FEBC Australia, helped to buy sewing machines for the class.

Amplifying Voices encourage our partners to have these “strengths-based” conversations in any community they work with when starting a community-centred media project. This process of listening to what’s strong in a community can lead to inspiring on-air discussions about community members responding to challenges, and can encourage community members to put their skills to use in new off-air activities. With Roshan Ghar, it is the off-air activities, i.e. the vocational skills classes, that are paving the way for media conversations and inspiring people to reach for their dreams.

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Listen – then listen again https://amplifyingvoices.uk/listen-then-listen-again Sun, 19 Jun 2022 09:36:47 +0000 https://amplifyingvoices.uk/?p=4254 In a village in Pakistan, we recently heard this story that highlights the importance of iterative listening when engaging with communities. And after listening to come back and listen again ...

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In a village in Pakistan, we were recently reminded why it is so important to listen, then listen again and then keep listening when engaging with communities. Through a process of iterative listening, Amplifying Voices Pakistan learned that, while the men of a community wanted the wellbeing of women in their community to improve, the men’s ideas for how to make that happen were different from the priorities voiced by the women themselves.

Hazeen from Amplifying Voices Pakistan visited some villages near Nowshera with local contact, Zafar, who is leading the Community Media Power project. Following early community consultations, they heard that access to clean water is a priority for several of these villages. The male participants initially said that for change to come, there needed to be change at the top political levels, in particular the removal of corruption. After Hazeen encouraged the men to think more about issues that were closer to their circles of influence, they talked about the need for better hygiene and health, for water and electricity, about poverty. They said that access to clean water is a key issue that could greatly improve local health, especially among women and children.

At that time, Hazeen and Zafar had asked to hear from women in the community, but cultural norms meant that the women did not want to speak to unknown men publicly. More recently, a community leader who is very supportive of the project, introduced Hazeen and Zafar to a female social worker from the area. Before the media project came along, Gul had been going door to door, mobilising people to get vaccinated for polio. She also started a small project working with women to give vocational training. However, the project stopped when the roof fell in on the training room after heavy rains. The community knows her and trusts her, and she still wanted to work with these villages. So, she agreed to go with Zafar to the villages and do some interviews.

When Zafar first took Gul to help with interviews, they had prepared interviews about clean water and hygiene. And this is an issue that matters to women too, so they had plenty to say. Gul was a natural at interviewing so Hazeen encouraged Zafar to ask her to become more involved in developing the community-centred media project. She agreed and is really keen to help marginalised people by using radio. She also has the support of her family which is so important in this cultural context.

Gul joined Hazeen and Zafar for a training day with only women from the community, and they did another community mapping exercise. The outcome revealed the importance of listening to both groups directly, even though the men were trying to speak with the interests of women in mind. The number one issue that the women highlighted was education for women and girls, and related to this, when parents are arranging marriages, girls said they wanted their parents also to consider whether husband is educated.

Woman and girl

Listening to different perspectives, nr Nowshera, 2022

The topic of women’s education did come up in the original consultation which only men had attended, but it was lower priority. One of the elders said “Pathan men are like men everywhere. They love their daughters very much and want the best for them – would do anything for them”. He went on to say that they also find it hard to give them access to education because schools or colleges are far away from the home, and they feel it is too risky to allow their daughters to travel across town to get there. There was a sense that those risks put this topic outside their perceived field of influence.

However, it was clearly a top priority for the women who met with Gul, and they decided this would be the topic for a pilot for series of women’s radio programmes. Zafar taught Gul to use the Zoom voice recorder so she could collect content without him being present and Hazeen taught her to write a script for a programme and prepare for interviews.

The pilot programme, called Bright Home, has interviews with community members (girls and parents of girls). It will also have an interview with a school principal about education for girls. The interviews cover issues such as access to schools as well as exploring the issue of transport and distance from the girls’ homes to the nearest schools. Gul will also be supported to develop her vocational skills programme in partnership with community members. The vocational programme will be called SHE (Skills, Health, Education).

A 2015 study among men in north-western Pakistan, found that the men’s attitudes to women’s participation in community and education are at times contradictory, but heavily influenced by the cutural norms of the Pakhtunwali tribal code.  The author recommends that “Understanding men’s views is a starting point. The next step is to engage men in the collective struggle for gender justice.” Community-centred media creates opportunities for men to engage by listening directly to the voices of women. Iterative listening can be a far-reaching process.

For more about Amplifying Voices’ listening approach to community engagement see Its a Ting thing

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Sierra Leoneans prevail through Covid isolation https://amplifyingvoices.uk/sierra-leoneans-prevail-through-covid-isolation Sat, 13 Mar 2021 06:00:15 +0000 https://amplifyingvoices.uk/?p=2293 Social distancing – a term that most of us were unfamiliar with pre-2020. These days, we can hardly have a conversation without mentioning it. Though it is essential to keep the virus from spreading, it is taking its mental toll. Communities in Sierra Leone are feeling it too. Ransford Wright, Founder and Chief Executive of…

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Social distancing – a term that most of us were unfamiliar with pre-2020. These days, we can hardly have a conversation without mentioning it. Though it is essential to keep the virus from spreading, it is taking its mental toll.

Communities in Sierra Leone are feeling it too. Ransford Wright, Founder and Chief Executive of our partner the Believers Broadcasting Network (BBN)* gives us an update:

‘Currently, we are on restricted movement in and out of Freetown. The major feeling in the community is still around mental health and economic challenges. There is no government bailout here, so making a living is a serious challenge.’

Wright says there has been a reduction in the sense of community togetherness and trust.

Physical distancing not only prevents people from seeing loved ones; it also heightens feelings of isolation and separation. Due to increased restrictions, the regular SALT project community visits have been stopped. Community members have expressed how much they miss these visits.

The SALT team of volunteers continue to reach out to their actively engaged communities. While Covid has prevented some community initiatives, new stories are emerging about the resilience people are showing at this challenging time.

A SALT volunteer turns to smile at the camera as the rest of the team walk towards a village to help a community in need, Sierra Leone

SALT volunteers continue to help communities struggling through Covid isolation. This image was taken before coronavirus hit Sierra Leone.

Community-centred initiatives

In one of the nine communities, the Mohtomeh neighbourhood, a women’s group has started a cooperative to help each other through the crisis. Pooling together shared resources; they are distributing food, healthcare, and supporting small businesses. They are also actively caring for the most vulnerable in their community.

BBN radio has amplified their story as it is an excellent example of a community-centred initiative. Mohtomeh was an area decimated by the 2017 mudslides, but people have banded together to improve their community. BBN radio hopes to encourage other communities to start building up their initiatives again.

Feeling heard in a crisis

BBN is looking to start a new radio drama series to help communities. The radio drama will focus on relevant social issues, such as unemployment, poor mental health, teenage pregnancy, and water shortages. These are the topics that come up in conversations when listeners phone into BBN’s phone counselling service. Continuing to talk to, listen to, and support the local community members is more critical than ever.

Storytelling and radio drama work really well in Sierra Leone as it evokes a lot of listener response. In a context where many feel unheard, community-centred media helps people feel heard:

Someone heard my concern. It mattered. And they talked about it on the radio.

To read more news about our partner-led project in Sierra Leone, click here.

*BBN set up the SALT ministry in 2015 in response to the devastating Ebola outbreak which heavily weakened Sierra Leone’s already fragile health system. SALT is a strengths-based approach to improving health and promoting community healing, integrated with radio broadcasts.

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Women’s health workshop held in Pakistan https://amplifyingvoices.uk/womens-health-workshop-held-in-pakistan Thu, 18 Feb 2021 17:55:00 +0000 https://amplifyingvoices.uk/?p=2246 Amplifying Voices partner in Pakistan recently hosted a workshop for women to learn more about health and hygiene. It was a great opportunity to give some hands-on help, so after the event the women received free check-ups from health workers and medicines were provided through Amplifying Voices Pakistan. The local partner based in the Khyber…

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Amplifying Voices partner in Pakistan recently hosted a workshop for women to learn more about health and hygiene. It was a great opportunity to give some hands-on help, so after the event the women received free check-ups from health workers and medicines were provided through Amplifying Voices Pakistan.

The local partner based in the Khyber Pakhtunkhwa Province is Naway Sahar Community Services Group (NSCSG). Amplifying Voices Pakistan supports Naway Sahar to inspire positive change through off-air and on-air initiatives, led by the community.

Breaking barriers to women’s health issues 

Woman washing hands, Pakistan

During community consultations, project workers often hear people voice concerns about the vulnerability of women to health issues. The primary concerns are usually related to pregnancy and childbirth.

However, in this community, women are less likely than men to have access to the radio programmes produced by NSCSG. A face-to-face workshop alternative is an effective ‘off-air’ activity to reinforce ‘on-air’ content.

This women’s health workshop and other face-to-face activities are possible as Covid-19 rules are more relaxed in Pakistan compared to Europe. The country has much lower numbers of reported coronavirus cases.

Women’s health workshop inspires relevant on-air content

Conversations in workshops like these also inspire future ‘on-air’ content production. The work of NSCSG is championed by a couple who are both community health workers. NSCSG’s on-air content often addresses local concerns about health and hygiene, enhancing the effectiveness of local face-to-face healthcare activities.

An important element of community-centred media is the way that on-air activities – such as content production, broadcast programmes on radio, or MP3 podcasts on speaker boxes – mesh with off-air activities like community events, local service provider activities.

The effect is mutually productive. Audio content both reinforces and inspires off-air activities, and community activities inspire relevant content, which reinforces the information heard on-air.

Find out what happens next

We’re excited to see the shift in health and hygiene within this community. Get the updates first-hand by subscribing to our newsletter below. Check out more stories from Pakistan here or visit our Amplifying Voices Pakistan website.

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It can’t be done! https://amplifyingvoices.uk/it-cant-be-done Tue, 28 Jan 2020 13:46:47 +0000 https://amplifyingvoices.uk/?p=2562 It can’t be done! How often do you hear this said? What does it stir up in you? Disappointment? Or determination? “It can’t be done” is a phrase the New Dawn community services group won’t accept! They’ve heard it said that local women can’t talk on the media about topics that are considered shameful in…

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It can’t be done!

How often do you hear this said?

What does it stir up in you?

Disappointment?

Or determination?

“It can’t be done” is a phrase the New Dawn community services group won’t accept!

They’ve heard it said that local women can’t talk on the media about topics that are considered shameful in their culture. Determined to see women in their village able to have more control over their health, the team have come up with a solution.

Working in partnership with HCR Pakistan, New Dawn has bought a speakerbox (pictured) which can be taken into homes or places where women meet together. Women’s listener groups will use the speakerbox to play podcasts from an SD card.

At the same time, a team of women, trained in making radio programmes, are using the New Dawn recording studio to create podcasts about women’s health issues. The speakerbox gives the team freedom to get into the details of topics – details that are considered too shameful for radio broadcast. Topics for the podcasts include early marriage, women’s hygiene before, during and after giving birth, breastfeeding and post-natal childcare.

They will also be free to talk about conflict sensitive issues such as vaccination, giving people space to challenge politically motivated rumours and cultural myths.

Women in Radio Studio

New Dawn women’s recording team creating podcasts. KPK, Pakistan. 2020.

Compared to radio, the speakerbox reaches a relatively small number of women at any one time. However, it will open up important new spaces for dialogue. Instead of individuals suffering alone, women and girls will learn together and have freedom to talk about difficult issues with women in similar situations. The podcasts are conversation starters, containing a mix of expert advice and community opinion.

The New Dawn (known as Naway Saher locally) team works in a fairly remote village near Charsadda in Khyber Pakhtunkhwah (KPK) in Pakistan. Since 2017 Community members have been creating regular radio programmes broadcast in community slots on a local commercial station. These programmes prompt discussion about health, hygiene, social-inclusion and local infrastructure. For a long time, the local health worker and the ladies’ health worker have wanted to use media to tackle issues that severely impact women’s health but have been restricted by cultural sensitivities. Perhaps this can’t be done in these communities using a broadcast radio. But we are grateful for the perseverance of the New Dawn volunteers to insist that it “must be done”.

We hope that the combination of speakerbox and women’s production team is successful in empowering women and improving their lives in this village. We would love to see the concept used in more villages in the district.

More stories about Speakerbox projects

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