March 16, 2015
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TESOL ARABIA SUPPORTS NEEDY WOMEN OF NEPAL
Melanie Gobert, Higher Colleges of Technology, Abu Dhabi Men's College & Vicky Allen,Higher Colleges of Technology, Fujairah Women's College


Melanie Gobert


Vicky Allen

Chetana Women's Empowerment Group offers a maximum 2-year training/work program, helping women become self-sufficient providers for their families. So far, Chetana has trained more than 80 women. After the training, the women take the skills that they have gained to acquire employment in local shops or to return to their village homes and continue producing and selling back to Chetana their finished loomed fabrics (See their Facebook page).

The process begins with the initial dying of cotton thread in a multitude of colors, and then it is left to air dry for several days. The next step is the winding of the thread so as to make a variety of patterns in the finished fabric. These threads are then woven on low-to-the-ground handlooms where the women sit for hours on floor cushions as they create the wonderful patterns that you see. After that, the newly created fabrics are cut for various designs and then sewn together to make the final products.

Chetana Women’s Skill Development Project (PDF) is a not-for-profit, nongovernmental organization registered in Nepal. Established in 2008, it creates opportunities for women of Nepal. Because it promotes the traditional handicrafts of Nepal, it also contributes to sustainability. Women in Nepal have a 27% illiteracy rate, and one in four females is involved in child labor. More than 160,000 Nepalese women are held in Indian brothels, some from as young as 11 years old. Over 25% of Nepalese women are married between the ages of 15 and 19. From 70–80% are anemic, and the average life expectancy for women is 53 years old. Nepalese women are deprived of education and discriminated against in the job market (Chetana Women’s Skill Development Project, 2012–2013).

TESOL Arabia usually spends about US$20,000 per year to purchase conference bags for the annual TESOL Arabia International Conference and Exhibition, attended by 1,800 delegates and held in March. The conference bags are usually nylon computer bags with the TESOL Arabia logo embroidered on the front, sourced locally in Dubai, but imported from China. This year, we decided to do something different. Vicky Allen, a TESOL Arabia member from the Higher Colleges of Technology, Fujairah, approached the conference co-chairs with a novel idea: Purchase the conference bags from the Chetana Women’s Skill Development Project and aid the community to support their families. Vicky has been instrumental in setting up an extensive reading library for the children of the community with a grant from the Extensive Reading Foundation using the M-Reader website to track the students’ reading. We were keen to take on this initiative, as TESOL Arabia is looking for ways to give back to the greater community in the spirit of sharing and building a better world.

Tara Timilshina is a dynamic, hardworking manager, teacher, and role model for these women. Because of our existing friendship, Tara immediately accepted the challenge of not only creating a conference bag for TESOL Arabia 2015 but also figuring out a way to produce 2,000 of them in 5 months. She was extremely excited about the opportunity and told Vicky that “this is what we work for, to create new products that people will enjoy!”

Not only did Tara and her husband take the 12-hour, round-trip journey to Kathmandu to order the cotton, but she also found someone who could re-create the TESOL Arabia embroidered logo on each of the bags.

While Vicky was there, she started designing the fabrics that we would use for the bags and experimenting with different designs. As you can see from the photos, the bags are unique in every way. During this 5- to 6-month process, 22 women of Nepal will have been employed and have received salary to support their families and provide for their children.

Vicky says,

I want to thank Melanie Gobert and Rehab Rajab, conference co-chairs, for being “out-of-the-box” thinkers. Because of their vision to offer a conference bag that would support women in a developing country, many children and families have been helped in Nepal by this sustained employment for almost half a year.

If you are interested in sourcing your next conference’s bags from the Chetana Women's Empowerment Group, please contact Vicky Allen at vallen.hct.ac.ae.

Reference

Chetana Women’s Skill Development Project. (2012–2013). Chetana Women’s Skill Development Project Catalogue. Retrieved from http://www.thehubnepal.com/AAA%20FINAL%20CATALOGUE.pdf


NOTE: Permission was received from Vicky Allen as a coauthor of this article. Parts of this article were originally published in Perspectives, the TESOL Arabia peer-reviewed journal, in November 2015, Volume 21, Issue 3, and on the TESOL Arabia Conference website.


Melanie Gobert was a 2009 recipient of an Emirates Foundation Grant for a research project, “Enhancing National Identity Through Indigenous Literature.” She is currently TESOL Arabia president and conference co-chair. She was the editor of Perspectives, the TESOL Arabia peer-reviewed journal, from 2009–2014.

Vicky Allen has a BA in linguistics, an MEd in deaf education, and a TESOL certification from Anaheim University. Through most of her years of teaching, her focus has been on extensive reading, incremental learning, and individualized instruction. She has been instrumental in initiating a special program at Fujairah Women’s College, which emphasizes extensive reading, listening, speaking, and writing.

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