Wednesday, May 27, 2009

Global Daughter Home Parties= Smart Fun!



Summer is the perfect time to celebrate fair trade...
and shop, shop, shop with friends!


Global Daughter gives you the opportunity to support women artisans around the world from the comfort of your own home, with the people you love. Global Daughter Fair Trade House Parties are a great way for women (and men!) to come together and learn about fair trade, shop beautiful hand-crafted gifts and hear the stories behind the product.
________________________________________

Book a Party in June or July and receive a fabulous OM Copper Tray
to serve your guests along with 25% off your ENTIRE PURCHASE!!
________________________________________

Hear what people are saying about Global Daughter Home Parties...

"I decided to host a party because it was a cause I could believe in and product that I wanted!"
-Tiffany Lettieri, Burbank, CA

"After attending my first Global Daughter party I was taken with the story of these two bright and energetic women from America and their idea of helping women through Global Daughter. When I decided to host a party, my guests were blown away by the handmade products and they loved the chance to meet Erika, one of the GD founders. Guests at my party opened their wallets and their hearts because they saw Global Daughter as the great idea that it truly is."
- Gail Jahn, Seattle, WA

"I very rarely host at-home parties, but when I heard about Global Daughter, their cause and the unique product line, I knew my family and friends would love to attend something different from the usual candle party. My guests enjoyed the relaxed atmosphere along with the beautiful products and story of Global Daughter."
- Suzanne Cowart, Lake Tapps, WA

Book your next Global Daughter Fair Trade Home Party today @ www.globaldaughter.com.


Monday, May 18, 2009

"Garbage out of Thin Air"

A 10-day exhibition of art in April, entitled, "Garbage out of Thin Air," was created by artists from the Kathmandu University Centre for Art & Design. The artists used garbage and debris collected on Mt. Everest and brought down by the Eco Everest Expedition 2008 Team led by Dawa Steven Sherpa. Debri included helicopter parts that have fallen out of the sky, garbage left over from trekking expeditions- pieces that have been buried in the snow and ice for decades. In total, 300 kilos of garbage were transported off the mountain!

Sherpa said the significance of this exhibition is to urge people to create greater empathy with the mountains. The garbage, in the form of art, will be valued by people who recognize the importance of Mt. Everest not only in mountaineering as the highest peak on earth, but also for the mountain’s cultural importance. He said it is also a symbol that if we can keep our mountains clean, then surely we can keep our town, cities, rivers and air clean.

The garbage brought down from Mt. Everest has been used to create works of art with a message rather than just being disposed of randomly.

What a great idea for young artists to use their creativity and have an outlet for social responsibility! It made me look at "garbage" in a whole new light.



























Monday, May 11, 2009

The Badi Women Experience

The women of the badi community in Nepal are some of the most discriminated in the country. Their fate as bonded sex labourers is cruel and their future in the village is bleak. They are the exact women Global Daughter aims to connect with to create employment or skills training for them and their daughters. The following is an informative article on the Badi experience.

Caste System Binds Nepalese Prostitutes

By AMY WALDMAN
New York Times

MUDA, Nepal-- With its simple mud homes, low roofs and string cots, this tiny settlement near the Indian border looks like any other in this part of western Nepal. Only the women suggest something different, garishly painted as they are even in the early morning hours.

They loiter on a slope or around the tea stall, waiting for men, who come, banter, negotiate, then slyly walk one of the women to one of the village houses. The women's children play nearby and watch.

Caste has become destiny for many communities, defining their profession through generations. But few people have inherited so vexed a destiny as the Badis of Nepal. Their profession is prostitution, passed down from one generation to the next.

While many Badi women have left the sex trade, others keep falling into it, driven by hunger, a lack of alternatives and the stigma of being a Badi.

The Badis, who number tens of thousands across western Nepal, are one of 36 castes who make up Nepal's untouchables, said Suk Lal Nepali, a Badi who runs Social Awareness for Education, or SAFE, a nonprofit organization that works with the Badis.

But, he added, "we are untouchable among the untouchables."

Sunni Nepali, now 22, began working as a prostitute four or five years ago. Her body supports 11 relatives, including her parents and two younger brothers. Each encounter she has up to five a day earns her anywhere from 70 cents to $2.15. She loathes the work, she said, but sees no choice. She has no education.

Besides, she asked: "Who's going to marry me? I'm already involved in this."

The Badis did not start out as prostitutes when they migrated to Nepal from India some three centuries ago. They made drums and musical instruments, fished and danced and sang. They would go to the homes of landlords, or zamindars, to entertain at social ceremonies, in return for food.

In time, the zamindars claimed some of the girls as concubines. They would use them, then abandon them when they had children, said Ramesh Nepali, a Badi. Many Badis have taken the surname Nepali to avoid the disgrace of being a Badi.

In this patriarchal society, fatherless children have few rights. It can be difficult to register their births, and thus get them citizenship, school admission, even the right to vote.

Already nonentities in society's eyes, daughters dutifully followed their mothers into prostitution, often encouraged by parents no longer willing or able to work themselves. Badi men lived off the women's work.

Social welfare organizations have tried to coax the women into other jobs with some success, said Suk Lal Nepali, although he noted that even his own sister slipped into prostitution three years ago. He says only 150 women remain in prostitution, down from 587 a decade ago.

Still, the whole population remains stigmatized.

About half of the 50 families that lived in this settlement have migrated to India in search of work as maids or guards, leaving perhaps 250 Badis in Muda. In part, that is a result of pressure from Maoists waging an insurgency against Nepal's constitutional monarchy. They are also against prostitution and have ordered the Badis to stop their work. There is pressure, too, from the government, carried out by the army and the police.

"We can no longer be prostitutes," said Kokali Nepali, 30, a mother of four. "Before, it was accepted, it was open. Now there is pressure from all sides society and government. We cannot do it openly."

In this part of Nepal, however, there is little other work to be found. Even many of the women who have abandoned the sex trade, like Kokali Nepali, live off it, working as educators for SAFE and other groups.

All of the women insist they practice protected sex, and say they have educated many of their customers to do the same. Sunni Nepali even lamented that because she used condoms so reliably, it would be difficult for her to conceive a child to raise on her own, which she wanted.

There have been about 236 total H.I.V. cases identified in the middle and western parts of Nepal, said Dr. G. Raj Shakya, the president of the Nepal S.T.D. and AIDS Research Center in Nepalgunj.

He said he had not identified H.I.V. cases among Badis, but that he was almost sure there were some. Many of the women refused to be tested, he said, for fear that a positive result would further stigmatize them and their community.

The women say the danger is from those who migrate to India, and then come back.

Using the AIDS threat as leverage, the Badis have been seeking government help to move into other lines of work, but without success.

"We are in a position to leave prostitution if the government is ready to announce we are not prostitutes and provide alternatives," Suk Lal Nepali said.

His organization has opened hostels for Badi girls, hoping that a different environment will keep them from following their mothers into the sex trade.

But some girls remain. Kokali Nepali's 7-year-old daughter was around as the women did business. So was Gomati Nepali's 12-year-old, Rabina, who said she wanted to be a nurse.

Gomati Nepali got into prostitution at 15, when her parents were sick, the family poor. She works out of her mother's house.

"In an environment like this," Gomati said of Rabina, "I'm afraid she will go into this."

source: http://www.nytimes.com/2004/04/11/international/asia/11MUDA.html

Sunday, May 10, 2009

Happy Mother's Day!

A special Happy Mother's Day to our mom's, Debbie and Paula- our biggest supporters! We love you today, and every 365 days a year.


Debbie & Paula


Kiss.

Tuesday, May 5, 2009

Update on Witchcraft Case...

This is a follow-up on the story reported in the Himalayan Times and on GD's blog about Kalli Kumari B.K who was accused of witchcraft and brutality assualted. The story seems to have got the attention of law enforcement, but in Nepal, that isn't saying much.


Kalli’s date with hollow promises

Kathmandu Post

RENU KSHETRY


KATHMANDU, April 29 - For Kalli Kumari B.K. life is hollow. The 45-year old says she finds it hard to come to terms with the trauma she went through on March 20. That day her husband could only look on helplessly as her neighbours overpowered them and forced her to eat human excreta accusing her of witchcraft.

Three days later, she was rescued from the village of Phyutar in Lalitpur.That incident, she says, has changed her life, but does not know how. For the moment, she just wants to go back home from Maiti Nepal, where she has been sheltering since March 23 with her daughter Shanti B.K., 17.


Her husband, Chetman B.K. has been living with his relatives at Chapagaon. “I am extremely worried about him,” she said of her 50-plus husband, who is blind in the left eye. “He came here to meet us twice, but it's a long time since we heard from him. We hope he is all right and gets to eat two meals a day.” Not just that, she is concerned about the 25 chicken she left with her neighbours or the buffalo bought by mortgaging an old pair of ear-rings to the local lender.


Little over a month has passed since that fateful day. Kalli Kumari has listened to many influential figures, including 'a fat, old man' -- Deputy Prime Minister Bam Dev Gautam -- and has been to the Legislature Parliament to brief them on what happened. She has heard bundles of assurances that those subjecting her to inhumane treatment would be brought to justice. So far, the words have sounded hollow.


But she has her mind set on the village-level all-party meeting slated for Wednesday, which is expected to ensure her a dignified return home. If every thing goes as planned, she gets to reunite with her family, but does not quite know how she is going to deal with the stigma of being labelled a witch.


“Is that going to go?” she asks. “My skin is black but my heart is not,” she chokes on her words. “Does being a poor, old Dalit with grey hair make me a witch?”


Most importantly, will her tormentors be punished, as she has been promised? She does not know. Member of National Women's Commission Dhan Kumari Sunar, however, assured the Post they would put the culprit behind bars and resettle Kalli and her family securely with respect and dignity.

Saturday, May 2, 2009

Mother's Day is Around the Corner...


Celebrate your loved ones with a handmade gift from Global Daughter this Mother's Day, Sunday, May 10th.

Design by: stork-bite (b. brown)

**Order online by Wednesday, May 6th to make sure Mom receives her gift in time! **

---Last Minute Gift Ideas Under $25---

"I am a Global Daughter" Cotton Shopping Bag: