Saturday, February 2, 2013
Women's Empowerment Leadership Training
Peace Corps Morocco Volunteer, Kathleen Howell-Burke, has extended her service in order to provide leadership trainings for women throughout Morocco. She has an upcoming three day Women’s Empowerment Leadership Training, Training of the Trainers (TOT), being held in Rabat in May 2013. Current Peace Corp Volunteers may nominate up to two women to attend this TOT. A total of 25 women are welcome to attend this event. The Rabat TOT will be the second in the series of leadership trainings. Her first TOT will be occurring in Ouarzazate with 25 women participating from the Souss-Massa-Draa Region from February 8th-10th, 2013.
The purpose of this leadership training is help build the capacity of women who are invested in their community. Ms. Howell-Burke is collaborating with the Association Democratique des Femmes du Maroc (ADFM). As she stated, one of the missions of the association is that “no matter what a woman’s position or status, they have the ability to be a leader and make a difference within their community” ADFM is known as the largest NGO in Morocco and has been instrumental in the women’s rights movement in Morocco. If you would like more information on their mission and activities check out their website. All attendees will be reimbursed for transportation, accommodation and meals. If you are a PCV and are interested in nominating women for this event, then you must fill-out the questionnaire and send it to Zagora.PCV@gmail.com.
Sunday, January 13, 2013
Aladdin and the Girls
Health volunteer Jonathan Pleban has figured out an innovative way of transforming a timeless children’s story into an opportunity to teach youngsters in his community about gender equality. With audiences ranging from ages 4 through 14, Jonathan has been able to excite and keep children actively participated in discussions regarding the similarities and differences between boys and girls, men and women. Moreover, he has bridged the age-gap, and through a form of peer education, has enlisted the assistance of mature community members to lead the dialogue.
How has he accomplished this? First he breaks-the-ice, and has his audience watch the animated version of Aladdin. The enchantment and action of the story does nothing less than invigorate and enthuse the children. Once the movie is over, Jonathan uses an unconventional tool for targeting kids; a PowerPoint presentation. However, by using the images seen in the cartoon as the backdrop, Jonathan is able to keep the interest of his young crowd when addressing gender issues.
Jonathan’s second step is to get older participants involved. He will usually facilitate a session, as the discussion is led by an older member of the village. The educator clarifies information for the children, and answers questions as necessary, becoming inherently familiar with the subject. As the chief audience is fairly young, Jonathan repeats the same presentation once again, after a week or two, either as the main speaker, or using a different peer educator.
Jonathan’s work has shown that gender awareness can be broached at any age, by involving varying age groups!
This is a great opportunity for PCVs to encourage their students to become peer educators themselves, and to improve on their presentation skills.
Find Jonathan’s PowerPoint here to use with your youth group today!
Saturday, December 1, 2012
Craft Corner - GingerBread Houses - Cultural, Festive, Crafty, and Fun!
Itching to bring a little bit of the holidays to your Dar Chebab but can’t figure out how? Get together with your girls’ club, cooking club, or women at your neddi for a cookie party: baking, building, and decorating. Collect fun candies and sprinkles at your hanut and use the ground coconut for snow.
You can use this as a cultural lesson, an English lesson (parts of a house, colors, baking/building/decorating verbs) or just an excuse to fill your kids with sugar and send them home with way too much energy.
Spicy Gingerbread Cookies
- 6 cups all-purpose flour, plus more for work surface
- 1 teaspoon baking soda
- 1/2 teaspoon baking powder
- 4 teaspoons ground ginger
- 4 teaspoons ground cinnamon
- 1 1/2 teaspoons ground cloves
- 1 teaspoon finely ground pepper
- 1 1/2 teaspoons coarse salt
- 1 cup (2 sticks or 1/2 pound) unsalted butter (at room temperature)
- 1 cup sugar
- 2 large eggs
- 1 1/4 cup date syrup

Whisk together flour, baking soda, baking powder, spices and salt in a large bowl and set aside. Beat butter and brown sugar together in a large bowl until fluffy. Mix in eggs and date syrup. Add flour mixture, mixing on low until just combined. Divide dough into thirds and wrap each in plastic. Refrigerate until cold and firm, about one hour or up to two days (or months in the freezer).
Preheat oven to 350 degrees (low for gas ovens, like fat raindrops). Roll out dough on a lightly floured work surface to a 1/4-inch thick. Cut into shapes of your choice (if you are making houses, you want to use a stencil so that the dimensions are the same for each side of the house, use cardboard, and cookie cutters to cut windows and doors out of each stencil - more recommendations below). Spread two inches apart on baking sheets lined with parchment paper (it is at Marjane, but you can also just butter and flour the pans well). Bake cookies until crisp but not dark, 12 to 14 minutes. Let cool on clean dry towels.
Royal Icing
- 3 egg whites
- 4 cups sugar ‘glacee'
- (if you have it, ½ teaspoon cream of tartar, but not necessary)
- (also optional) zest of one lemon
Royal icing needs to be kept covered, because it will dry quickly and become lumpy if exposed to the air. The easiest way to store the icing for long periods of time is in a plastic zip-top bag.
In a large bowl, whip the egg whites (with the cream of tartar, if you have it) until foamy. Sprinkle in the sugar gradually, whipping all the while. The more you whip the icing, the stiffer it’ll be and the faster it will harden up. If you want to “paint” with the icing, you can use food coloring to create different colors and thin the icing with a few drops of water so it will flow.
Building tips
1. Use cardboard to make a stencil for each wall of the house. Moroccan houses are easy because you can leave them roof-less and then they are a simple rectangle. If you want to add the Kasbah tops that are on the corners of houses, cut a separate stencil and ‘glue’ them on later with icing.
2. When constructing use cups and boxes to hold up the structure as it dries. The royal icing is very strong once it dries, but it needs to stay still.

4. Younger children have a hard time with sprinkles, so be sure to get more candies and nuts than sprinkles.
5. Consider your group, it may make more sense for each person to decorate one wall of a house and then to construct the house after all walls are decorated (but some decorations may have to be re-attached after).
6. Have a good clean-up plan, or better yet, decorate on tables over a big tarp!
Thursday, November 1, 2012
Food for Thought
With Halloween behind us, this month marks the beginning of the holiday season back at home. Thanksgiving is usually the kick-off, and where some Americans begin gaining the “holiday weight.” Turkey, stuffing, peppermint mochas, ham, etc. it’s the season to cook and indulge! In Morocco, Peace Corps Volunteers are using cooking as a way to empower females.

Krista Jorstad, Youth Development Volunteer in Berkane, provides in-class cooking tutorials at a women’s center. Jorstad explained that she was having trouble finding enough work at the Dar Chebab, so at the end of the summer she approached a women's center offering to volunteer her time.



The girls meet at the Dar Chabab and use a portable buta gas stove. They also use an oven that was donated to them. Bond stated that prior to this, there were no girls who attended the Dar Chabab, but with this cooking club, girls are the only ones that attend it. When explaining her role, Bond stated, “I try to make sure that they don’t light themselves on fire.” Bond stated that she loves being fed, and enjoys being the taste tester! Bond stated that the girls have taken ownership of it, and have a leadership team that facilitates the meetings. Bond stated that, “this club created a space where girls can hang out, and talk amongst themselves.”
Monday, October 1, 2012
October Updates and Ideas
Happy October, GADsters!
The sweltering days of summer are behind us, and with the change of the seasons and the start of school come lots and lots of opportunities to implement GAD programs in your site!
We've heard from several PCVs who have used existing resources for GAD programs in camps over the summer: the sexual harassment toolkit and grant application, the GAD Camp Toolkit, or the "You Can Dream" video. Here are a few more ideas for GAD activities that you could consider doing in the fall:
- Start a girls' (or boys') activity at your Dar Chabab/Nedi/CSSP: GLOW Clubs, girls' basketball or soccer teams, running groups, dance nights - the possibilities are endless! The GLOW Manuals have lots of ideas for leadership programs that you can do with girls, not just in a big camp setting.
- Work with your local hospital/clinic to bring in a female medical professional to do programs about women's health. PCV Liz Chon put together an awesome women's health booklet in English, Arabic, and French that a female doctor/nurse could use as a basis for a program.
- Consider incorporating GAD into the English classroom. The Baccalaureate book that students use has an entire chapter on women and could be used as a springboard for great activities. Students could make posters or give presentations about famous women, or for more advanced English students, have a discussion together about gender roles.
- For a longer-term project, consider working with other PCVs to plan a GLOW camp or women's leadership workshop. Lots of great resources can be found here and here.
Whatever ideas you've got, the GAD Committee is here to support you and help in any way we can. So if you have ideas, questions, or resources that you'd like to see, please email us and let us know. We'll be meeting as a committee in mid-October to talk about plans over the coming months, so we'd love to hear from you!
The sweltering days of summer are behind us, and with the change of the seasons and the start of school come lots and lots of opportunities to implement GAD programs in your site!
We've heard from several PCVs who have used existing resources for GAD programs in camps over the summer: the sexual harassment toolkit and grant application, the GAD Camp Toolkit, or the "You Can Dream" video. Here are a few more ideas for GAD activities that you could consider doing in the fall:
- Start a girls' (or boys') activity at your Dar Chabab/Nedi/CSSP: GLOW Clubs, girls' basketball or soccer teams, running groups, dance nights - the possibilities are endless! The GLOW Manuals have lots of ideas for leadership programs that you can do with girls, not just in a big camp setting.
- Work with your local hospital/clinic to bring in a female medical professional to do programs about women's health. PCV Liz Chon put together an awesome women's health booklet in English, Arabic, and French that a female doctor/nurse could use as a basis for a program.
- Consider incorporating GAD into the English classroom. The Baccalaureate book that students use has an entire chapter on women and could be used as a springboard for great activities. Students could make posters or give presentations about famous women, or for more advanced English students, have a discussion together about gender roles.
- For a longer-term project, consider working with other PCVs to plan a GLOW camp or women's leadership workshop. Lots of great resources can be found here and here.
Whatever ideas you've got, the GAD Committee is here to support you and help in any way we can. So if you have ideas, questions, or resources that you'd like to see, please email us and let us know. We'll be meeting as a committee in mid-October to talk about plans over the coming months, so we'd love to hear from you!
Saturday, September 1, 2012
Join the Movement
The Gender and Development committee encourages all PCVs to open up the conversation on sexual harassment! Harassment is different in every city and village, but it is often more than just an annoyance. This yearlong theme is intended to give voice to Moroccans who feel affected by harassment; girls who are harassed, boys who want to help stop the harassment, and everyone in between. We believe that awareness and open dialogue can be the beginning of the end of sexual harassment. Join Us!
To assist you, we developed three small projects that can be done consecutively or individually. The toolkit is now available and includes these small projects on harassment:
1) Talk About It, a focus-group discussion on sexual harassment
2) STOP!* a collective-art movement advocating the end of sexual harassment
3) Hear Us Now, an interview activity publicizing the effect of sexual harassment on individuals
To ensure you and your counterpart are on the same page about this complicated topic we have also provided an introduction to sexual harassment and the yearlong theme along with useful Darija translations:
1) Overall theme description and sexual harassment definition
2) Discussion questions for Talk About It
Don’t limit yourself to our suggestions. We would love to hear about your ideas for projects as well! Please, don’t be shy, Peace Corps Staff is excited about this yearlong theme and welcomes all grant applications for other project ideas based on this theme as well. We wish you success and please drop us a line about how the conversation on harassment is going in your site!
*STOP! the collective-art project, has a corresponding grant-template so that you can more easily apply for a small grant to purchase necessary art materials.
Wednesday, August 1, 2012
The Winning Theme!
After 2 months, 7 themes, and 130 votes from across the country, we are pleased to present the new GAD theme for 2012.........
Psssst.... I Protest!! Stop Sexual Harassment
Congratulations to the Ouarzazate eNews team for developing a brilliant theme along with some great project ideas! Click here to check out the awesome PowerPoint that they put together.
PCVs will be receiving additional information on the theme at the upcoming regional meetings in June, including a project idea that ties into the theme, along with a prewritten grant application. So more to come soon!
Thank you to all of the people who submitted great themes, to those who promoted the competition to others, and to all who voted on the theme ideas. We have been really excited about the participation in the contest and we are looking forward to seeing the theme in action over the coming months!
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