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    Saving

    communities

    p.4

    Take your place

    at the table

    p.3

    International Womens Day

    campaign a success!

    p.2

    Sankofa

    Canadian

    Crossroads

    international

    w w w . c c i . c V o l . 1 0 N O . 1 S p r i n g 2 0 1 0

    49 Bathurst St., Suite 201Toronto, ON M5V 2P2 Canada

    ColleCTIve

    gaIn

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    n

    Sh utt & tikcctistransorm womens live in Mali & Senegal

    For Marone a 52-year old mother of three in Senegal, who struggled to make ends

    meet selling bits and pieces of clothing on consignment after her husbands death in

    2000 this is a new life.

    After [my husbands] death it became very difficult [to get by] now things

    are good, Marone says. Its great here. The solidarity is very good. Kankou

    Sidibe, the 48-year-old mother of three teenagers, agrees. She leads a batik

    workshop run, like the soap workshop, by CCIs long-time partner in

    Senegal, the Association des Femmes de la Mdina (AFEME). Years of work

    on the front-lines in the city of Mdina convinced AFEME of the need to

    directly confront womens poverty and economic dependence. Enter the

    soap workshop and Sidibes batik workshop.

    We see a change in the women after they join the batik work-

    shop, says Sidibe, who herself struggled with unemployment while

    raising three children. After joining AFEME, Sidibe took part in a South-

    South Crossroads exchange to learn traditional batik dyeing techniques

    in Mali. Now [the women] have work that gives them revenue, greater autonomy and a

    new skill. Its an eminently practical approach.

    Sidibe, for example, now pays school fees for her son and two daughters, and for

    many of the women, earnings are crucial to ensuring their girls get an education.

    The cooperative is also a tool in the struggle for food security, says Mariam

    Ouattara, manager of the Cooprative de karit de Zantibougou, or Coprokazan, a

    tremendously successful cooperative in Mali (and another CCI partner) that uses shea

    butter as a tool for community transformation. The women use their shea butter earnings

    to buy food, especially during drought or other tough times.

    But women like Sidibe and Marone and the more than 600 women members of

    Coprokazan are agents, not just tools, of change.

    We really see a major change, says Ouattara. Women gain respect within their

    families and increase their roles as decision-makers in their communities.

    CCI, with partner Association Malienne pour les Jeunes (AMPJ), supported the for-

    mation of the co-op nearly a decade ago, and continues to support its expansion.

    Recently, CCI funded tools to assist in processing shea butter. Now, says Ouattara,

    Coprokazan has members in 32 villages in rural Mali, up from 11 villages and around 200

    members just two years ago. The cooperative sells shea butter products in Zantibougou

    and Bamako in Mali; in Senegal, and in Canada.

    CCI volunteers have been instrumental in the cooperatives development. This spring

    Crossroader Ourida Anki is working with Coprokazan to improve its website, brochures

    and the packaging of its products. In May, Ouattara and Mah Kon, the president of

    Coprokazan, will travel to Montreal to seek new Canadian markets for their wares.

    The women of the Senegalese soap and batik co-ops both put their products to thetest in April at an international agricultural products forum. I hope to help members

    improve and standardize the quality of their products so that they can compete in the

    market, says Crossroader Josianne Bathalien, who is also providing expertise in market-

    ing and packaging their products.

    Asked her hopes for the future, Fatou Marones response comes without hesitation:

    To work more, and with great courage. Then she pauses a moment. And, she adds

    with pride, with great skill.

    n ws more surprised to discover that Meredith Low came out as topvolunteer fundraiser in CCIs pilot International Womens Day campaign this year

    than Ms. Low herself. Sure, the mother of two girls is director, strategic planning

    and initiatives at the CIBC. But asking friends and acquaintances to contribute to

    the campaign to raise funds for womens cooperatives in Mali and Senegal (see

    feature story above) took courage.

    I didnt really know how to ask people for funds, she explains.

    Low has been committed to CCIs work against poverty and for human rights

    for many years. She first got involved 20 years ago in 1989, was a Crossroads

    volunteer in Zimbabwe in 1991, volunteered with CCI in Canada through the 90s,

    and served on the organizations board of directors for six years.

    Im confident saying its a good cause. You can really have an impact.

    It seems that Lows friends and acquaintances agree. Even people she expected

    to ignore her appeal responded readily to Lows call to support economic develop-

    ment projects that empower women.

    It felt really unobtrusiveyou tap people on the shoulder and say basically

    are you interested? Low explains of the web-based program that enables CCI

    supporters to invite their friends and acquaintances to visit their personal fund-

    raising pages.

    While raising nearly $3000 for the CCI-supported cooperatives in the space

    of a month in honour of International Womens Day, March 8th, Low discovered

    that it isnt so hard to seek support for a worthy end.

    I pushed my comfort zone a bit and I was really pleasantly surprised,

    says Low.

    The campaign exceeded its target of $20,000 in support of CCIs work with

    womens cooperatives. And CCIs Director of Resource Development Jill Bridgman

    hopes to expand this program in the coming year. We were really inspired by the

    response of volunteers and staff who raised funds for the campaign, says Bridgman.

    Thanks to their support and that of hundreds of their colleagues, family and

    friends we can expand these proven programs to help even more women.2

    |www.cciorg.ca

    CanadianC

    rossroads

    International

    Itti Wms Dycmpi succss!Profile of a star fundraiser

    Arriving at work at 9:30, Fatou Marone heats palm oil and adds a mixture

    of luxurious shea butter, honey and henna. By the afternoon, she and

    her colleagues are cutting the pieces of their rich, natural hand soap. In

    between, they work and talk, sharing the joys and trials of their daily lives.

    Im confident saying itsad cus. You canreally have an impct.

    Meredith Low (Zimbabwe 1991)

    empoweringwomen

    Now [the women] have work that gives them

    revenue, greater autonomy and a new skill.

    Kankou Sidibe, batik workshop leader,Association des Femmes de la Mdina

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    www.cciorg.ca

    |

    !

    makingChange

    Our monthly donors deserve a huge and resounding

    THanK YoU! Day in and day out, they provide ongoing

    funding to support innovative projects in eight developing

    countries. This kind of commitment, no matter what size, is

    the most cost-effective and helpful way to support the valu-

    able work of Canadian Crossroads International and our

    partners abroad. As little as $10 a month quickly adds up to

    a gift that could provide a microfinance loan for a small dairy

    producer in rural Bolivia or a villager in Niger growing food

    staples to support her family.

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    CCIs visi f o Wd.

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    at th T, a campaign calling for real action onpoverty, climate change and global economic reform, waslaunched on March 8th, International Womens Day. And with

    good reason after all, women endure disproportionately the

    dire effects of both poverty and climate change.

    The name of the campaign is a succinct reminder of a

    bitter truth: the vast majority of people on this planet are not at

    the table when decisions are made that determine the course of

    their lives.

    In June, the leaders of the worlds most powerful nations

    the G20 and, even more exclusively, the G8 will be meeting in

    Toronto. These leaders have made numerous commitments to

    economic justice, real action to confront climate change and its

    effects, and (particularly through the Millennium Development

    Goals) to produce measurable, specific reductions in poverty

    around the world. They have not kept these promises.

    At the Table, a response to this breach of trust, is a global

    call to action by Canadians and global civil society. At stake?Everything and that is why CCI is proud to join the call to

    hold these powerful leaders to account for a viable world as we

    inch closer to deadlines: on action to minimize the most cata-

    strophic effects of climate change, and on absolutely crucial

    goals for development, poverty reduction and justice that are

    simply not being met.

    We invite Crossroaders and CCI supporters to get active in

    the campaign by writing letters, contacting your elected repre-

    sentatives, organizingAt the Tableevents with your family and

    friends, and joining online actions check out cciorg.ca to

    learn more about the Flat Leader Photo Action, the Shortchange

    video contest and other ways you can take your place At the

    Table.

    TaKe YoUrPlaCe aTTHe TableCCI joins global call for action

    athuh m th two years have passed since abill specifically criminalized domestic violence, few women in

    Ghana are aware of the landmark 2007 legislation. If that situa-

    tion is to change at last, it will be because of the work of women

    like Beauty Basah, a legal literacy volunteer (LLV) who educates

    fellow women in the community.

    In her day job as a government community worker

    who provides group and organizational training, Basah

    gets plenty of exposure to the cost of physical, psycho-

    logical and sexual violence women in Ghana regularly

    suffer at the hands of men often their husbands.

    The 52-year-old mother of three first trained as an

    LLV with CCIs partner organization Women in

    Law and Development-Ghana (WiLDAF-Ghana)

    back in 1997. She had jumped at the chance

    to help women learn about their rights. But her

    decade of volunteer work has transformed her

    as well.

    I became assertive[this experience] has built upon my

    own knowledge and broadened my horizons.

    As Basahs long-time service shows, WiLDAF has been

    training LLVs since long before the domestic violence legislation.

    But their work is of critical importance today. The challenge

    now is implementation.

    Two years since the passage of the bill, few lawyers

    use the legislation in arguing a case. In fact, there has yet

    to be a single sentence passed as a result of the 2007

    legislation, which WiLDAF was instrumental in

    getting passed. Through the CCI partnership with

    WILDAF and Toronto-based Metropolitan Action

    Committee on Violence Against Women and

    Children (METRAC), and the help of skilled

    volunteers, WiLDAF has increased capacity to

    monitor the implementation of the legislation in

    the courts.

    This year, CCI also supported the expan-

    sion of the legal literacy volunteer program so

    that Basah and her colleagues can reach even

    more women to help them assert their rights.

    My own life as a woman has improved,

    says Basah. Indeed, her role has had a small butnotable domino effect in her community. People look

    at me as a role model.

    Stt

    Legal literacy volunteers help women stand up for their rights

    My own life as a woman

    has improved. ... People look

    at me as a role model.

    Beauty Basah, Legal Literacy Volunteer,Women in Law and Development-Ghana (WiLDAF)

    Canadian Crossroads Internationals goal has always

    been to create an equitable and sustainable world

    through international collaboration and collective action.

    This year, were taking to heart Gandhis admonition to be

    the change you want to see. We have developed a bold

    new strategic plan through which we will redouble our

    efforts to empower women and children and ensure sus-

    tainable livelihoods for all. The plan addresses both what

    CCI will do and how the organization will transform itself to

    increase its impact.

    In the next five years, CCI will build on its strengths.

    CCI will reduce violence against women and girls; increase

    womens political representation; and increase economic

    empowerment for people in rural and disadvantaged

    communities in West Africa and Bolivia moving ever

    closer to our vision of ONE WORLD where poverty is

    eliminated, equality prevails and the rights of women and

    girls are fulfilled.

    Climate change and HIV and AIDS remain critical

    obstacles to development. And while they are not program-

    matic areas of focus for CCI now, we will continue to work

    with partners to mitigate their impact and the disproportion-

    ate burden they place on women.

    Never has the need been more urgent. As we began

    developing our plan for 2010-2015, many thousands of

    people around the world joined the ranks of those living in

    extreme poverty thanks to global economic crisis. Stories

    like those of Crossroaders Mariana Salazar (p. 4) , Jo-Anne

    Rolls and Anna-Colletor Penduka (p. 4) remind us that the

    issues we are trying to address are not Southern issues,

    theyre global issues. CCIs unique way of working, leverag-

    ing the diverse experiences and perspectives of North and

    South to bear on these problems, has particular value in

    tumultuous times. But to effect real change we need your

    support.

    To achieve our ambitious goals requires that we also

    transform our organization. In the next five years, CCI and

    our supporters can make meaningful contributions to

    national and international dialogues to advance womens

    rights and the right to sustainable livelihoods for all. As

    we strive for excellence in international volunteering and

    cooperation, we will engage even more Canadians as

    volunteers, collaborators and donors. Already we have

    restructured our Canadian operations to effectively and

    efficiently deliver on our plans and in the next five years

    we will double funds raised in support of overseas

    programming. To learn more about our plan please read

    the enclosed insert or visit our web site cci.c.

    Mss fm

    th Chi

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    No smallchCCI launches new strategic plan

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    T

    sharingknowledg

    e

    Thy stppd th in what seemed, to Jo-Anne Rolls, to be the middleof nowhere. For the program coordinator with the AIDS Coalition of Cape Breton

    (ACCB), this would be the most life-changing part of her trip to Zimbabwe. Rolls was

    accompanying staff from Southern partner Women and AIDS Support Network (WASN),

    on the travelling health clinic they hold every two weeks in a different rural area. The

    Crossroader, whose organization directly serves people living with HIV or AIDS in the Cape

    Breton area, was overwhelmed at the sheer number of women who travelled long

    distances to reach the clinic.

    Some women walk 15 km to get there, she recalls. One woman came in an oxcart

    she couldnt walk anymore.

    About 25 per cent of the population of Zimbabwe are thought to be infected with

    HIV, and the life expectancy has declined to a stupefying 36 years. With political instabil-

    ity, currency devaluation and an exodus of professionals from the country, structures like

    the health care system have all but collapsed, increasing womens vulnerability in every

    way. WASNs multi-pronged work against this background includes care and support like

    the mobile health clinic; public education on sexually-transmitted infections,

    healthy living and nutrition; and advocacy. They train other organizations

    in rural, under-served areas in Zimbabwe more than 80 of them to

    date to better address the overwhelming burden HIV and AIDS

    have placed on women. And they run a mentorship program

    where older students provide long-term mentorship to

    younger women.

    WASN is a womens organization, it looks at HIVand AIDS through gender lenses, says Anna-Colletor

    Penduka, a staff-member with WASN, speaking from

    Canada near the end of an extensive CCI-sponsored

    lecture-and-meeting tour of Cape Breton.

    Gender inequality, oppression and violence against

    women facilitate the spread of HIV and AIDS and place

    an extra burden on women as AIDS sufferers and as

    caretakers of the sick and orphaned.

    About eight years ago, WASN began developing user-

    friendly booklets addressing issues ranging from HIV and AIDS

    and nutrition, to communication and assertiveness for a rural

    audience. Were trying to create an atmosphere where women

    can enjoy their sexual and reproductive rights free from vio-

    lence, Penduka explains. CCI supported a review of the in-

    demand material for up-to-date reprints (including recent

    reprints in local languages Shona and Ndebele) and publication online.

    On her visit to Zimbabwe, Rolls wasnt just struck by the admittedly staggering level

    of need for free health services targeting women living with HIV.

    Whats amazing, she recalls with awe, is the hope and the joy that exists with

    these women.

    Rolls brings her recollection of that courageous, unstoppable attitude back to

    Canada, along with a stronger sense of how to apply a gender and human rights lens in

    her work.

    For us, she explains, our fight against HIV is all about harm reduction. In Africa its

    all about human rights.

    The CCI partnership ongoing since 2008 has had a profound impact on both

    Southern and Northern partners. Penduka, like Rolls, found that differences between their

    respective situations shed light on strategies.

    While in Canada, Penduka learned as much as she could about harm reduction

    strategies to minimize the spread of HIV, anticipating that the problem of drug addiction

    (which already adds fuel to the AIDS crisis in neighbouring South Africa) will soon become

    yet another issue to confront in Zimbabwe.

    Penduka also studied the womens centre model prevalent in Canada, anotherpossible way for women to organize together for lives of dignity and health. Ive actually

    gone to every womens centre [in Cape Breton], she says.

    I realized its more or less the same as in Zimbabwe, Penduka says. Personal

    approaches to care and support, in the end, trump the vast differences between the Cape

    Breton and Zimbabwe contexts. When you continuously engage them, people open up

    and tell you their problems. But once they get together they start assisting each other.

    CCIis supported by the Canadian International Development

    Agency (CIDA), the Ministre des Relations internationales

    of the Government of Quebec, other government and non-

    government funders, as well as many individuals around

    the world. Skf is published twice yearly for Canadian

    Crossroads International alumni and friends. Please sendus your comments, letters and ideas. excuti Dict:

    Karen Takacs Dict, ext rtis: Christine Campbell

    rsch d witi: Carlyn Zwarenstein Cditi :

    Candice OGrady Ctiuts: Darlene Bessey at Dicti: Wioletta

    Wesolowski, Visual Concepts Cdi Cssds Itti, Tt

    offic: 49 Bathurst St., Suite 201, Toronto, ON, M5V 2P2, Tel: 416.967.1611,

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    Mi Sz wanted to volunteer in Canada so badly that

    she spent four years preparing. But when the 32-year-old Bolivian

    credit administrator with CCI partner Foncresol finally got to visit

    Canadian partner Community Futures, the best thing was how much

    she was able to share with her Canadian hosts. She inspired them

    to start their own communal savings bank based on the Foncresol model, and provided

    the expertise needed to make it a reality.

    When I was only in Cochabamba [Bolivia], she says in her newly acquired English,

    I never thought that I can share something with other countries, especially with a different

    language.

    Indeed, over two months as a South-North Crossroader, Salazar has contributed

    detailed technical knowledge of how to set up and run communal savings banks, power-

    ful tools for community economic development and helping people rise out of endemic

    poverty.While Canada has a history of peer lending, communal banks differ in many ways.

    In these banks, the only guarantee is trust among members. As they are member-run,

    they also develop self-esteem, leadership and public speaking skills. Salazar says that

    85 per cent of Foncresols clients in the communal banks are women and, save for a

    single man, women hold every leadership role in the more than 200 banks that Foncresol

    currently supports, with ongoing education as well as operating support.

    Along with offering technical know-how and experience, as an indigenous Bolivian

    woman Salazar brought a unique perspective to her work with organizations in two differ-

    ent First Nations communities on islands off the coast of B.C.

    In Haida Gwaii, says Salazar of one of her placements, the First Nations people

    want to start something. They have this spirit and say: I dont always want to live as Im

    living now. They want to tell their children that there is a different life

    The first Canadian First Nations communal savings bank based on the Bolivian

    model will be up and running shortly. The incipient communal bank members, a group of

    Haida artists in Skidegate, are eager to get started with the training and financial literacy

    part of the agreement they signed. The pilot project plan was formalized in April, and

    should be well underway by May.

    Were using it as an experiment to adapt it to the realities here, explains Art Lew,

    General Manager of Haida Gwaii Community Futures Development Corporation.

    Salazar notes that, like her clients in Bolivia, the First Nations people she met in

    Canada aspire to a modest life where they can meet their basic needs, feed their children,

    and live free from the grinding, constant worries of poverty.

    Our clients [at Foncresol in Bolivia] and First Nations people [in Canada] want the

    same, says Salazar. Theyre different people but they have the same dreams.

    Wms mpwmt iskey to Zimws struggle

    against HIv & aIDS

    MonTHlY gIvIng: MaKIng a greaTer IMPaCTWe know you want your donation to have the greatest impact. Becoming a

    monthly donor helps us plan ahead so that we can sustain our programs to

    improve the lives of women in Africa and Bolivia. Monthly giving is environ-

    mentally responsible and helps cut costs. Help us make every dollar count

    where it is needed most!

    Si cmmuitisBolivias approach to communal banks takes root in B.C.

    Were trying to create an

    atmosphere where women can

    enjoy their sexual and reproductive

    rights free from violence.

    Anna-Colletor Penduka, Staff Member, Womenand AIDS Support Network (WASN)

    I would like to receive information about making abequest to Canadian Crossroads International

    Agencecanadienne dedveloppementinternational

    CanadianInternationalDevelopmentAgency

    Program/project/activity undertaken with the fnancial

    support o the Government o Canada provided through

    the Canadian International Development Agency (CIDA)