From the Worldwide Faith News archives www.wfn.org


Anglican women gather in New York for 54th annual UNCSW


From Worldwide Faith News <wfn@igc.org>
Date Mon, 01 Mar 2010 10:58:00 -0800

Anglican women gather in New York for 54th annual UNCSW

Posted On : March 1, 2010 12:27 PM | Posted By : Webmaster
ACNS: http://www.aco.org/acns/news.cfm/2010/3/1/ACNS4689
Related Categories: ACO - UN

Thousands of women from around the world, including more than 90
representing the Anglican Communion, will gather in New York March 1-12
for the 54th session of the U.N. Commission on the Status of Women to
undertake a 15-year review of the implementation of the Beijing
Declaration and Platform for Action.

The CSW is the oldest U.N. standing commission. It meets annually to
examine a different theme as it relates to gender equity -- global
poverty, economics, peacekeeping, human rights, etc. -- from the lens of
the most vulnerable and exploited communities, mostly women and
children, said Alessandra Peña, a consultant for the Anglican United
Nations Thematic Working Group on Women's Right and Empowerment.

"This year is a review year ... there was a five-year review in 2000 and
a 10-year review in 2005," she said. "Beijing (is important) because it
is still considered the most comprehensive platform on issues of gender
equity ... the MDGs were informed by the Beijing platform."

In September 1995, the U.N. convened the Fourth World Conference on
Women in Beijing, China, which focused on action for equality,
development and peace and during which 189 U.N. member governments
adopted the declaration and platform for action. The 12 critical issues
included in the platform influenced the eight U.N. Millennium
Development Goals adopted in 2000.

Anglican Observer at the United Nations Hellen Wangusa and her office
coordinate the commission's Episcopal-Anglican delegation. Prior to the
commission meeting, delegates were asked to familiarize themselves with
the overall objectives of the Beijing platform and the MDGs; to deepen
their understanding of the Anglican theological perspective on the
issues raised in the platform; and to select one of the platform's
critical issue and write a five- to seven-page report documenting the
advances and obstacles to implementation in the delegate's home country.
This was to prepare the delegates to make reports and answer questions
in meetings with U.N. bodies, NGOs and church officials, and to advocate
effectively with their national government's representatives.

"When we bring women, we are using our voice as a critical resource.
Critical in the sense that it brings persons from all over the globe,
and being the largest women's delegation, and most comprehensive, we
believe that the impact is going to be very visible, and is going to be
very useful," said Wangusa, in an interview at her office in the
Episcopal Church Center. "We are using the same voice to raise critical
challenges; they have to do with the conceptual development of what we
have been using as tools to advocate for women's empowerment, women's
issues, girls' issues ..."

Deroe A. Weeks of the Episcopal Church of Liberia focused her country's
report on universal access to primary education for girls. Girls'
enrollment has increased in her country as attitudes and policies toward
"traditional schools" - a barrier to education - have changed, she said.

It used to be, Weeks said, that girls would be taken out of primary
schools and enrolled in traditional schools that teach them how to be
better wives and mothers. As a result of Liberia's National Girls'
Education Policy, enacted in 2006 by President Ellen Johnson Sirleaf's
administration, girls can attend traditional schools only during regular
school breaks.

Attitudes toward traditional schools vary countrywide and tend to be
more favorable in rural areas; the practice of female genital
mutilation, which is associated with traditional schools, is also
addressed by the change in girls' educational policy, she added.

Weeks is a member of Trinity Cathedral in Monrovia, Liberia's capital,
and works with the Children's Assistance Program, an NGO that educates
youth and adolescent girls about sexual reproductive health and
HIV/AIDS. She attended the 2000 Beijing conference, she said.

Alice Garrick, of the Diocese of Lahore, Pakistan, focused her report on
the education and training of women.

"If women are educated, skilled and trained, they can deal with life,"
she said, adding that she speaks of her experience in Pakistan, where
fundamentalists rule over government and society. "If they are not, it
is hard to deal with a male-dominated society."

Since 1995, Garrick said, the diocese has used the Beijing platform as a
basis for addressing and discussing social taboos such as domestic
violence, HIV/AIDS awareness, child abuse and the rehabilitation of
home-based female sex workers.

Garrick coordinates four programs in the Lahore diocese that help women
and children.

"Social harmony within families, society and the church is an outcome of
educating women," Garrick said.

Both Weeks and Garrick attended an opening Eucharist and luncheon for
CSW delegates at the church center Feb. 26.

The UNCSW meets once a year for eight working days; participants include
representatives of its 45 member states, observers from other U.N.
member states and non-member states (the U.N. currently has 192 member
states), representatives of U.N. organizations, intergovernmental,
governmental, and non-governmental organizations.

Further Information can be found here:
http://www.aco.org/ministry/un/women/

Artcle from ENS: Lynette Wilson is a reporter and editor for Episcopal
News Service.

___________________________________________________________________
ACNSlist, published by Anglican Communion News Service, London, is
distributed to more than 8,000 journalists and other readers around
the world.

For subscription INFORMATION please go to:

http://www.anglicancommunion.org/acns/help/acnslist.cfm


Browse month . . . Browse month (sort by Source) . . . Advanced Search & Browse . . . WFN Home