Investing in women
September 22, 2010
As the Clinton Global Initiative holds its annual meeting in New York, it continues its focus on investing in girls and women. Why?
Because an educated, empowered and employed woman reinvests more than 80% of what she earns back into her family and community — compared to less than 30% reinvested by each working man.
Although this was not the impetus for the first Global Women’s Leadership Institute, it has become the slow burning flame of intention and action among the institute’s first participants.
While in Thuwal, Saudi Arabia, the institute began to bridge the divide between vision and action — which is what separates aspiring leaders from accomplished leaders. We started by setting the leadership table with multicultural groups of ambitious women seeking tools and strategies for making a leadership difference.
These women want to DO something — something meaningful that requires leadership expertise.
Consequently, we provided opportunities for them to learn from us and each other, in conflict and in quiet reflection; to acquire leadership tools and test their leadership acumen; and to design and implement a leadership project in their home community that reflects their passion and their commitment to meaningful change.
Not surprisingly, most of the women seized the opportunity and have been seeking partnerships, securing resources and launching projects as varied as multicultural mentorships for aspiring women in health care, a cross-cultural blog for young Saudi women, development of a community college, and a new, global women handicrafts enterprise constructed in partnership with an established global NGO. Most of the women have focused their considerable energy and expertise on projects that contribute to the long-term sustainability of their communities.
Some of the projects are underway and others are still taking shape, but one thing is clear — these women are committed to staying connected and making a difference not just in their home country but beyond.
In November, we will distribute leadership medallions to the US women who have successfully completed their project plans and have achieved a project milestone. In January, we will hold a similar ceremony in Riyadh.
The medallions are a recognition of this point in time and cannot begin to celebrate the long-term contributions that are yet to be revealed. My experience with this group is that their investments in women will reap rewards well beyond anything we imagined.
Dowd on Saudi tourism
August 2, 2010
Maureen Dowd has written an article in this month’s Vanity Fair that exposes the many quirks, limitations, and contradictions for women living (and visiting) in Saudi Arabia.
http://www.vanityfair.com/culture/features/2010/08/maureen-dowd-201008
The article includes many “Dowd-isms”, amusing anecdotes and even pictures of Dowd posing in her abayah in absurd locations like the Jeddah Park Hyatt pool and the beach on the Red Sea. I do enjoy Dowd’s distinctive writing style and her wry wit especially concerning womens’ issues. However, having traveled many times to Saudi Arabia and knowing the important work that is being done there to make meaningful change in that country, I was also a bit turned off.
In service to her humor, she has demeaned (by omission) the work of women leaders in business, government and education who are working tirelessly to expand opportunity for themselves and their peers. Their shared vision — to empower women to participate in the economic diversification of that country.
Why is it that women can so easily (and so quickly) work to defeat each other in service to their own personal agenda?
In fairness to the article, it does portray the limitations of life for Saudi women including the well-publicized rules against driving and the ubiquitous presence of the abayah. But, in order to serve Dowd’s distinct agenda and writing style, the article also omits some very important information.
For instance, an influential group of women in both Jeddah and Riyadh have devoted themselves to expanding women-owned enterprises across real estate, health care and technology industries. The presence of women in high ranking positions (deputy minister and above) in the education and commerce departments is already delivering results on the quality of education and availability of commercial incentives. KAUST, the new university in Thuwal, Saudi Arabia, is writing a new book on the role of women in and outside the classroom, developing STEM careers for both genders.
Let’s celebrate the successes of women first, Ms. Dowd, especially those women who are making strides under the most difficult circumstances, before you take a cheap shot in service to your editorial agenda.
We’re off to the desert!
May 3, 2010
More than a year ago, I began a dialogue, across continents, to launch a multicultural ‘leadership & sustainable communities’ workshop in Saudi Arabia, and last week, in what can only be described as a payoff for tenacity, I got my wish.
In early June, I will be traveling with nine US women leaders to Jeddah. In this ideal setting, between the desert and the sea, established and emerging women leaders from both Saudi Arabia and the US will be enriched by the diverse culture, geography and economy. The women will seek new experiences, challenging dialogue, and relationships outside their comfort zone. During our 12-day immersion experience, we will explore economic development, environmental ethics and leadership development — focusing on purpose, vision-to-action, and service.
At the end of the journey, each woman will identify and lead a project at work or in her home community that coincides with a topic that resonated for her during her leadership journey between the Arabian Desert and the Red Sea.
This blog will document our shared journey in words, pictures and video.