A Voice For the Voiceless

The Advocacy Project helps marginalized communities to tell their story, claim their rights and produce social change.

We are currently recruiting graduate students to volunteer as Peace Fellows with partners.


The Impact of Service



"I look at myself as having the potential to be as strong and caring as the amazing women I met in Kenya."

Kate Cummings (Tufts University) volunteered in 2009 as a Peace Fellow for Vital Voices in Africa.

For more 2009 feedback click here.


Translate this page:



TAKE ACTION FOR ADVOCACY

  • News
  • Subscribe to our newsletter
  • Search

Resources > News Service > Bulletins > By Country/Territory > Other > Blogging Connects...

Blogging Connects Women Across the World, October 21, 2008



***** 
AdvocacyNet 
News Bulletin 159 
October 21, 2008 
***** 
 
Blogging Connects Women Across the World
 
October 21, 2008, Washington, DC: The Zonta Club of Washington and The Advocacy Project (AP) have launched a blog group to connect professional women in the Washington area with young American women volunteering for human rights overseas. 
 
This innovative use of information technology was developed during the summer, when eight Zonta members in Washington decided to follow the blogs of graduate students serving as AP Peace Fellows in Serbia, Kosovo, Uganda, Jordan, El Salvador, Nepal and Kenya.
 
"This is a fantastic program," said Heather Dolstra, a Zonta member and Washington travel agent who followed the struggles of Jordan's landmine survivors through the blogs of Peace Fellow Krystal Sirman. "I am in awe of what these young people are doing out there."
 
The experiment proved so successful that it recently won a prestigious advocacy award from Zonta's regional organization. AP and the Washington branch of Zonta are now exploring ways to expand the model. This could include joint projects between the two organizations to support women advocates abroad.
 
With 33,000 professional members working to advance the rights of women, the Zonta movement has impressive global reach. Zonta International has raised more than $8 million for international service projects in 34 countries. The Washington branch of Zonta has shown a particular interest in AP's work, and previously purchased a carpet made by AP's partner in Bosnia. 
 
This has now evolved into a more organized initiative to connect Zonta members in Washington with Peace Fellows. This summer, a group of Zonta members met up with selected Fellows before they left and then sent them regular feedback on their blogs while they were abroad.
 
The result has been an unexpected boost for AP's fellowship program, which seeks to empower young professionals. This year, AP deployed 35 Fellows to 22 countries and attracted more than 400 applicants, a 50 -fold increase from 2003 when the program began. Most Peace Fellows have been women.
 
AP's fellowship program fits with Zonta's own mission, which is to advance the status of women worldwide through service and advocacy. Since 2001, the Washington branch of Zonta has awarded more than $250,000 in scholarships to women at universities in the Washington area.
 
Several Zonta members described the connection with Peace Fellows as inspiring. Joanne Gallos, a Zonta member who works at the Inter-American Development Bank, recruited a group of friends to follow the blogs of Georgetown University graduate student Janet Rabin. Ms Rabin worked with the Women in Black-Serbia in Belgrade, and received at least one e-mail from Washington every other day.
 
Ms Gallos said that Ms Rabin's blogs had brought alive the challenges that face women in post-war Serbia and allowed her group to see the impact of conflict in the Balkans through the eyes of Serbian women. In the process, she said, the Zonta women formed a connection with the Women in Black without actually meeting them.
 
"Their movement to advance women, and in doing so, to help the world, is what we as Zontians also believe," Ms Gallos said. "Janet brought their tragedy, their strengths, their camaraderie, and their support of women worldwide to us... We applaud them and we weep with them."
 
Peace Fellows who participated in the initiative took comfort from the fact that their work was being closely followed on the other side of the world. Juliet Hutchings, from American University, worked for pygmies in Uganda with online guidance from Mary Ellen Bittner, a judge in Washington.
 
"Right out of the box, she responded," said Ms Hutchings. "She always had something really comforting to say, just a reminder that there's somebody out there that cares."
 
Ms Bittner, who is a past president of Zonta International, said that the blog group created bonds between different generations of professional women. "I had no idea about enslavement of pygmies," she said about Ms Hutchings' fellowship. "I found myself getting infected by someone else's enthusiasm. It kind of gives you a little hope."

Back