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sheshe2

(83,751 posts)
Wed Mar 4, 2015, 11:53 PM Mar 2015

When Women Succeed, the World Succeeds: What They’re Saying About the Let Girls Learn Initiative

When Women Succeed, the World Succeeds: What They’re Saying About the Let Girls Learn Initiative
President Obama and the First Lady have teamed up with the Peace Corps to expand access to education for adolescent girls around the world through the Let Girls Learn initiative.

“A good education can lift you from the most humble circumstances into a life you never could have imagined.”

— First Lady Michelle Obama

70% of the 1 billion people living in extreme poverty are women. Education can change that.

Education is not a privilege, it is a fundamental human right for all. Through a global network of support, the Let Girls Learn initiative will put lasting community-led and community-generated solutions in place for the more than 62 million girls across the globe are not receiving an education. The Peace Corps will be expanding the number of volunteers focused on advancing universal access to education and will continue to break down the barriers to girls' education in the communities they serve.

The positive effects that an education has not just for girls, but also for their families, communities and countries are boundless. As a global community, we are making progress. While we don’t yet live in a world where every women has an opportunity to learn, we do have numbers telling us why we need too.

According to data from USAID, one in seven girls is married before her 15th birthday in the developing world. However, girls with a high school level education are up to six times less likely to marry as children compared to girls who have little or no education.

Read More http://www.whitehouse.gov/blog/2015/03/04/when-women-succeed-world-succeeds-what-they-re-saying-about-let-girls-learn-initiati

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When Women Succeed, the World Succeeds: What They’re Saying About the Let Girls Learn Initiative (Original Post) sheshe2 Mar 2015 OP
And so much wrong could corrected with gender inequities abolished ismnotwasm Mar 2015 #1
sigh... sheshe2 Mar 2015 #2
Education of women is vital in areas of high population growth Warpy Mar 2015 #3
#LetGirlsLearn~ Mahalo for your OP, she.. Cha Mar 2015 #4
A long ago quote 2naSalit Mar 2015 #5
That is awesome. freshwest Mar 2015 #6
That's why it's stayed with me all these years. n/t 2naSalit Mar 2015 #7
It always amazes me brer cat Mar 2015 #8

Warpy

(111,255 posts)
3. Education of women is vital in areas of high population growth
Thu Mar 5, 2015, 12:20 AM
Mar 2015

because nothing else has ever succeeded in lowering birth rates there.

When a woman's only value is as a baby incubator, preferably all male babies, she will pop out children until it finally kills her. Even modest education and the path to opening an equally modest business raises her horizons and she feels her wealth is greater than that of an perambulating flower pot into which a man puts his seed and she limits her family in order to run her business.

Pushing birth control has been a serious flop. Education and microloans have succeeded where it failed.

Cha

(297,196 posts)
4. #LetGirlsLearn~ Mahalo for your OP, she..
Thu Mar 5, 2015, 02:00 AM
Mar 2015


Barack Obama ✔ @BarackObama
Follow
"Every girl deserves an education." —President Obama #LetGirlsLearn
12:27 PM - 3 Mar 2015 4,952 Retweets 8,768 favorites

http://theobamadiary.com/2015/03/03/a-tweet-or-two-252/



2naSalit

(86,579 posts)
5. A long ago quote
Thu Mar 5, 2015, 02:46 AM
Mar 2015

from Oscar Arias, former president of Costa Rica and Nobel Laureate, "The only way to have peace and growth and a healthy community is to give women the power to make the decisions that effect their lives."

He was giving a speech at my university and I had the chance to go to it and that is what he said. He backed it up with a story...

This story is about a village in his country that was located on the banks of a river were very poor and had not safe way to cross the river to get to the next village for trade and other beneficial interactions unless they walked two miles downriver to cross which was time consuming among other drawbacks. Most of the villagers who went to the other village were the women who went to get food and trade fabrics and other goods. So a group of engineers went to see if they could help. They looked at the site and determined that a bridge could be built to assist in these two villages in connecting at a location nearer to both villages.

So a costly bridge was erected near the village on the river's edge, but nobody used it. The villagers still went to the crossing two miles downriver. The engineers were perplexed and annoyed at this after all they had done to "help" these people. What was the issue here? Why didn't they use this wonderful new bridge that was built for them?

Finally someone asked the villagers about this. The answer was that nobody asked the women if they wanted the bridge nor whether the location was satisfactory to them... it wasn't because a bad thing had happened there where the bridge was built. They considered it a sort of sacrilege to go there and felt that the spirits of the people who were involved at that site would harm them if they used the bridge because its construction disturbed their resting place. A bad juju kind of thing. They wouldn't go through that part of the forest because of this even if the bridge hadn't been built. Aside from that, the bridge also messed up the river bank so they couldn't access the water near the village because the erosion and killed many of their medicinal plants that grew along the bank at that location.

The point being, nobody bothered to give these women the power to make the decision about where the bridge should be built and whether it would be an improvement for them because they were women. The women ended up deciding to move the village a few miles further away from the bridge because it had that bad juju and they felt it affected life in the village in a negative way so they moved away from the bridge that disturbed the spirits of the victims of the event on the river's edge that they guarded but never approached. And now they had nearly twice as far to travel to get to the other village where they traded their goods.

The reason the RWNJ faction wants to disempower women is because they fear women and their general sanity and wisdom. Women will change the world in a good way if they only had the power to get it done instead of being subservient to men who manage to abuse most of everything they touch.

I have had so much respect for Mr. Arias since then and will never forget what he said that evening back in 1999.

brer cat

(24,562 posts)
8. It always amazes me
Thu Mar 5, 2015, 10:13 AM
Mar 2015

how many men are afraid of educated girls and women! How fearsome it is for one to learn to read, write, and THINK.

Thanks for this important thread, sheshe.

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