Post by jakir32 on Feb 17, 2024 4:06:20 GMT -5
Jewish women in Mexico It was the writer Mary Wollstonecraft who stated: “I do not want women to have power over men, but over themselves.” This has been not only the desire... but the fight that many have fought throughout history, and one of the sectors that has joined is Jewish women in Mexico. Currently, they lack spaces for enunciation, action, freedom and inclusion, and they still carry on their backs the stereotype of what it is to “be a good Jewish woman,” or the idea that there is a “single or best experience of the feminine.” or femininity.” With the purpose of promoting social deconstruction, a group of women has generated the project : Mixed Technique , which has had support from the Pablo Foundation (FPL) —social arm of — , whose socially responsible commitment is to support to those who need it most.
If you want to know how they have implemented it and the fruits of it... Don't stop reading! Jewish women in Mexico: A sector that urgently needs to be made visible Born thanks to the legacy of Don Pablo , businessman and philanthropist, the Pablo Foundation has become one of the business foundations with the greatest presence in the country. This supports various sectors of the population that live in vulnerable Telegram Users Number List conditions, allocating resources permanently and contributing to different causes. Its pillars are divided into: Feeding. Health. Sustainable development. Humanitarian care. Education. And it is in this last pillar where the financial support provided to : Mixed Technique arises . This is a project that was born two years ago during the health emergency, and the idea of a group of women such as Helen Marcos, theater director and playwright, and Sully , art historian. The purpose? Give a voice to Jewish women in Mexico to make visible the diversity of their ways of life.
We want to represent and honor the stories of women and the ways in which we live and accommodate our “being a woman” individually in our collective, to create a movement that gives us strength and voice, and perhaps eventually, allows us to change how gender roles are conceived in our spaces.” Women Project: Mixed Technique. Let's Talk about Women: Mixed Technique Melinda Gates states: “A woman with a voice is by definition a powerful woman, but the search to find that voice can be extremely difficult,” and this complexity and way of overcoming obstacles is what the members of this project have experienced. Woman: Mixed Technique was born with the idea of interviewing 100 Jewish women in Mexico, whose profiles were extremely different and had no restrictions, that is, speaking with religious women, non-religious women, members of the LGBTQ+ community, girls, grandmothers and more.
If you want to know how they have implemented it and the fruits of it... Don't stop reading! Jewish women in Mexico: A sector that urgently needs to be made visible Born thanks to the legacy of Don Pablo , businessman and philanthropist, the Pablo Foundation has become one of the business foundations with the greatest presence in the country. This supports various sectors of the population that live in vulnerable Telegram Users Number List conditions, allocating resources permanently and contributing to different causes. Its pillars are divided into: Feeding. Health. Sustainable development. Humanitarian care. Education. And it is in this last pillar where the financial support provided to : Mixed Technique arises . This is a project that was born two years ago during the health emergency, and the idea of a group of women such as Helen Marcos, theater director and playwright, and Sully , art historian. The purpose? Give a voice to Jewish women in Mexico to make visible the diversity of their ways of life.
We want to represent and honor the stories of women and the ways in which we live and accommodate our “being a woman” individually in our collective, to create a movement that gives us strength and voice, and perhaps eventually, allows us to change how gender roles are conceived in our spaces.” Women Project: Mixed Technique. Let's Talk about Women: Mixed Technique Melinda Gates states: “A woman with a voice is by definition a powerful woman, but the search to find that voice can be extremely difficult,” and this complexity and way of overcoming obstacles is what the members of this project have experienced. Woman: Mixed Technique was born with the idea of interviewing 100 Jewish women in Mexico, whose profiles were extremely different and had no restrictions, that is, speaking with religious women, non-religious women, members of the LGBTQ+ community, girls, grandmothers and more.