Thursday, February 26, 2009

Lanjana, GD Designer, Gets Married!


Greeting guests with her mother (right) and sister-in-law


Erin enjoying face time with the bride.


Guests at the Party Palace


Congratulations, Lajana. Best wishes.


Erin with Ajit, GD producer, Sharada, from Federation of Women Entrepeneurs Associations of Nepal, and local designer.



Global Daughter Lead Designer and production whiz, Lanjana was married this week in Kathmandu. Her wedding lasted one full week (yikes, right?) with one day for an engagement party, then two days later a wedding party and then two days later the actual wedding. Her wedding week included many traditional rituals. She comes from an ethnic group, Newars, who have a unique style of marriage ceremonials. It is a quite an experience to witness the pageantry of weddings in Nepal!


I was so excited to attend and support Lanjana during her wedding party. Newaris love a good time and eat the tastiest food! That meant loads of buffalo dishes and local spirits (roxi). This marriage was arranged by her parents (they chose her husband) and she is looking forward to living the life of a married woman. She will continue to work (yipppeee!) with Global Daughter as well as with a felt workshop in the Valley.

Wednesday, February 25, 2009

Global Daughter NOW in Marlene's Market & Deli!




You can now head to Marlene's Market and Deli in Federal Way to pick up your Global Daughter handmade gifts! We are very pleased to have our products featured there as it is in line with our company values and fair trade principles. Both Erin and I have been shopping at Marlene's since we were kids so it means so much to us to be partnered with a local group. We are excited to offer our unique fair trade goods in a retail environment that promotes healthy living, eco-freindly lifestyle and general well-being. As a valued Global Daughter customer, we encourage you to shop at Marlene's for convienence... and, of course, to save on shipping!

Address:
2565 S. Gateway Center PL
Federal Way, WA 98003
(253) 839-0933

Thursday, February 19, 2009

For ALL Women

Our dear friends and fellow activists, Stu and Jaco from Amsterdam have started a fantastic project working with the transgender and lesbian groups here in Nepal. They were funded by an organization in Holland to form a choir with the girls and perform concerts in Kathmandu. It is a great project that gives the transgender and lesbians in Nepal a place to come together, laugh, learn and sing their hearts out. In Nepal, these girls face social discrimination and many live in fear and sadness. The choir, with about 20 members, has been a ray of light in their lives and a platform to be themselves....all they have ever wanted to be.

Global Daughter is pleased to be associated with Stu and Jaco, the choir, and the brave girls that meet every Sunday to celebrate one another. Lesbians in Nepal are yet another group of women that live oppressed lives. It is important that they have a voice, as well, because the stories they have to tell are as heartbreaking as anyone elses. Global Daughter is for all women and we are excited to support the work of the choir and all the women/girls involved.

This project has had worldwide exposure, including an article in the BBC. It is truly an out-of-the-box idea that is making a big difference in the lives of many. Cheers to Stu, Jaco and their aunt, Anky!


Here is the article from PAGE Six in Kathmandu.

Kathmandu, Feb 3 (IANS) Bhakti Shah faces an uphill struggle to get her job back a year after Nepal’s army sacked the physical training instructor for being involved in a lesbian relationship with a trainee.”I have filed a case in the Supreme Court,” says the 24-year-old, who looks like a teenaged boy with her close-cropped hair and wiry frame.

“But the hearing can’t start until the army has completed its procedure and the army is deliberately prolonging it.”

Shah’s partner, who too was sacked by the army, has been disowned by her family for refusing to end her relationship. She now faces a harrowing time in college.

“I am studying management,” says the 23-year-old, who does not want to be named. “But I can’t attend class because the other students mock at me.”

Suman Tamang, 26, who comes from Nepal ’s tea garden district of Jhapa in the east, has a similar story.

Rejected by her family after she decided to begin a same-sex relationship, Tamang now works as a peer counsellor at Blue Diamond Society (BDS) in Kathmandu , Nepal ’s pioneer gay rights organisation.

“Sundays used to be the worst days for me,” Tamang confesses. “With the office being closed and nowhere to go, I used to have dark thoughts about how my family and friends treated me and I would become depressed.

“But now, I have begun looking forward to Sundays. They have become fun days.”

For nearly two dozen gays, lesbians and transgenders like Tamang and Shah, Sundays now have a new purpose, thanks to the first transgender choir that made its debut with a concert at a hotel in Thamel, the capital’s tourist hub, Sunday.

The choir is the brain child of a Dutch gay couple, Sjoerd Warmerdam, 21, and Jaco Van Dendool, 29, who first visited Nepal in February 2008, came in contact with BDS and decided to stay on.

Joined by a third tourist, 28-year-old Marloes Oudeman, the three set up a band, Poesie and the Fags, and began to play gigs in Thamel’s hotels.

“We saw how gays are treated in Nepal ,” says Sjoerd. “They are thrown out by their families and no employer would give them a job. We saw the interest they have in music and dancing and we thought of forming a gay band.

“It is meant to get together and have some fun afternoons.”

The transgender choir has also brought out its first CD.

“It’s not a commercial venture,” Sjoerd explains. “It’s more to create awareness about transgenders - that they have the same human rights as any others.”

Sjoerd’s aunt Ankie Warmerdam, a 63-year-old retired health educator, sponsored the first concert, from the roses presented to the members to the black T-shirts with a pink sun worn as the choir uniform.

“I am a bisexual,” Warmerdam says. “About 35 years ago, I faced a lot of problems in my own country. But now things have changed. My nephew didn’t have to go through my difficulties.”

She calls the transgender choir a community art.

“It’s meant to bring people together,” she says. “The members of the choir get food for self-esteem.”



















Global Daughter on You Tube

We have set up a Global Daughter You Tube channel to give you an inside into some of our adventures. If you have a you tube account, make sure to subscribe to us so you can get updates on new videos!

http://www.youtube.com/user/globaldaughter

Enjoy yourself!

Wednesday, February 18, 2009

Pink Panty Protest!

In response to the events as posted in the latest blog....
Please join the Facebook group if you are interested, or just browse the group to get more information on this amazing story of modernization and women's empowerment.

Thousands of Indians, many fuming over a recent assault on women in a pub, are vowing to fill bars on Valentine's Day and send cartons of pink panties to a radical Hindu group that has branded outgoing females immoral.

A "consortium of pub-going, loose and forward women," founded by four Indian women on social networking Web site Facebook has, in a matter of days, attracted more than 25,000 members with over 2,000 posts about the self-appointed moral police.

The women said their mission was to go bar-hopping on February 14 and send hundreds of pink knickers to Sri Ram Sena, the militant Hindu group that has said pubs are for men, and that women should stay at home and cook for their husbands.

The same Hindu group was blamed for attacking women in a bar in the southern city of Mangalore in January, an incident that sparked a national debate about women's freedoms in India.

Collection centers have sprung up in several cities, with volunteers calling for bright pink old-fashioned knickers as gifts to the Sri Ram Sena as a mark of defiance.

"Girl power! Go girls, go. Show Ram Sena... who's the boss," reads one post on Facebook from Larkins Dsouza.

'Hooligans'

There is a separate campaign to "Walk to the nearest pub and buy a drink (and) raise a toast," that has found supporters from Toronto to Bangkok to Sydney, with even teetotalers saying they will get a drink on Saturday to show solidarity.

"Though I don't promote smoking or drinking for both sexes, we definitely don't need hooligans telling us what to do and what not. Best of luck!," reads one post from Iftehar Ahsan.

There are more heated discussion threads as well that range from the limits of independence to religion and politics, reflecting the struggle facing a country that has long battled to balance its deep-rooted traditions with rapid modernization.

Growing numbers of young and independent urban women have become an easy target for religious fundamentalists and aging politicians trying to force traditional mores on an increasingly liberal, Western outlook.

Not to be outdone, the Sri Ram Sena, which has cautioned shops and pubs in southern Karnataka state against marking Valentine's Day, has promised to gift pink saris to women and marry off canoodling couples to make them "respectable."

Women Assaulted in Indian Pub




MANGALORE: A fanatical right-wing group notorious for creating communal tensions and indulging in moral policing has struck again in Karnataka.

The activists of Sri Rama Sena entered the Amnesia Bar and Restaurant on Dr Shivaram Karanth Road on Saturday evening and threatened the women sitting inside. The men, who took objection to women drinking alcohol, pushed them outside, many women falling to the ground while they were being driven out.

Mangalore North Circle inspector Umesh G Shet said a group of 10-15 men entered the pub in the evening and started arguing with the guests. ``They got into an altercation with the women customers saying they were dressed indecently,'' he said.

The men also told the women that they would face dire consequences if they were seen in pubs again. The group left the bar after threatening its owner.

The incident drew instant criticism from various sections of the society, who strongly condemned the moral policing by members of the Sri Rama Sena, which was involved in violence during Karnataka's Cauvery water dispute with neighbouring Tamil Nadu.

Police have arrested 13 men in connection with the incident.

Police said those arrested were activists of Sri Rama Sena The arrested Sena activists claimed that they carried out the attack ``because of the attitude of the young women'', police sources said.

The Sena activists accused the women of ``involving themselves in immoral activities, including consuming alcohol, dressing indecently, and mixing with youths of other faith''.

The arrests came after police questioned the owner of the pub and customers present there at the time of the incident. ``The owner was initially reluctant to file a complaint, but relented after we assured him of police protection,'' said inspector Umesh Shet.

Police are looking for Shashidhar Shetty, a local Sri Rama Sene leader, and Preetham, a student leader, for issuing comments supporting the violent incident. Umesh Shet said they would be arrested on charges of conspiring with those who were involved in the attack.

Source: The Times of India

Thursday, February 5, 2009

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