The Most Important Outcome of the World Humanitarian Summit

As the first-ever World Humanitarian Summit closed yesterday, many important commitments were made, but none as important as the agreement to place women and women’s empowerment at the centerpiece of the international response to humanitarian crises.

We know that women bear the brunt of conflict. Women for Women International was founded in 1993 in response to the rape camps in Croatia and Bosnia. And over the last two decades, we have worked with women survivors of war in countries including post-genocide Rwanda, eastern DRC (the rape capital of the world), South Sudan, and most recently with Syrian refugees in northern Iraq.

So we have seen on a daily basis the impact conflict has on women. Not only have they suffered unspeakable trauma themselves, but conflicts have torn their families apart. Women survivors often inherit greater responsibility for the financial and social needs of family members. Ensuring these women have the support they need is critical. The issue is what kind of support and how it is delivered. We have learning to share from our own experiences.

First, women affected by conflict face a myriad of obstacles that require an integrated program that addresses all of their social, political, and economic realities. Too often, the international community has taken a piecemeal approach providing disparate services to women. For example, narrowly crafted programs that only offer cash transfer payments often miss the opportunities to address the interconnected challenges that prevent women survivors from gaining new skills and rebuilding.

This was a critical lesson we learned 20 years ago from our work in Bosnia. Stipends were not enough, women asked for more: they needed safe spaces, basic business training, greater literacy and numeracy, peer support, and opportunities to connect with other women. And so our program evolved.

This underscores a second key point: women and girls impacted by conflict are isolated. They have lost their networks of support; they are prone to isolation and depression. While developing income generating skills is critical to moving along a path to self-reliance, we must also recognize the steps women need take to regain self-confidence, to find their voice, to realize their own power.

So we must also invest in women’s leadership and role in decision-making. Multiple speakers reinforced this key lesson, recognizing women as agents of change in their communities. We have found that while conflict and humanitarian crises provoke human suffering, they ironically provide an opportunity to refashion gender roles and challenge the social norms that exclude women from participating in civic and economic life.

Programs need to provide women with skills and opportunities to amplify their own voices to influence changing social norms that stem not from religion or culture but from traditional power arrangements that are in flux. These steps are key to actualizing women’s full participation, and ultimately to building more peaceful and resilient societies, less susceptible to conflict in the future.

So bravo to global leaders who have made commitments to do more for women over the last two days. Now we need to make sure that words translate into actions and strategies that are based on best practices to date, with programs that meet women where they are and that include all the components needed for them to not only heal, but rebuild their lives, their families, and their communities.

Learn more at www.womenforwomen.org.

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Tenkara on Small Streams: Teaching Kids Fly Fishing, Respect for Conservation and a Mother's Love

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Image Credit: Blair Smith

My girls were waiting in the car. I slid in the driver’s seat and directed my voice to the back, over the Shovels & Rope album playing: “Girls, I don’t know what today will bring. I don’t even really know where we are going. All I know, it will be an adventure.”

We set off towards a gorge outside of Floyd, Virginia. I hiked the trail through the gorge last fall. It was brutal and not for my girls. There’s an off road parking area that can be seen from the trail near primitive camping sites and the stream. That was our destination.

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Image Credit: Blair Smith

A few albums later, with the side of our car plastered in sunflower seed hulls, I saw the sign. There it was. I pointed it out to the girls: “Look, the ‘end state maintenance’ sign. That means we are close.”

We parked and threw our pack together: the water-filled Platypus, Nikon, Go Pro, and tenkara tackle. I don’t have much gear. We keep it simple. It doesn’t take much anyway. We also took a 5 weight fly rod, but seldom use it in these small streams.

As we prepared to head out, I heard a car down below on the gravel. A brown Volkswagen bus barreled up the washed out road. It caught me off guard. I didn’t expect a VW bus moving that fast on a rough road. It became obvious he knew where he was. He has been up that hill many times. The same hill I traveled with cautiously gripped tires on the rise of the dirt where the road hadn’t washed away.

Tenkara Fly Fishing Camaraderie

There is an instant connection formed with tenkara fishermen and women. Maybe it is the connection of simplicity with no reel. He saw our rod sticking out of our pack as we hiked down towards the stream. The tenkara fishing rod was a magnet to conversation.

Turns out, I was right. He fishes tenkara and is a local. He knew exactly where he was. I should have had him pegged. We talked streamlining, tenkara rods, the rain that week, currents, and stinging nettle. We were just like a group of kayakers studying the river at an access point.

He helped us get bearings and sent us 200 yards downstream where the girls could hike in. He commented that it was cool to see a tenkara fisherwoman and her 10 year old twin daughters out there learning. He opened his solid van door. There was a comfort in the heavy sound. They just aren’t made like that anymore. He grabbed his tenkara rod, quickly telescoped it open, and offered it towards me with an unsaid understanding that I would want to feel the action. He was headed into the backcountry.

I wasn’t the only one creeping up the gullied hill, leading to the off road parking area. A truck slowly came up and it was a four wheel drive vehicle. I didn’t feel so bad after that. It wasn’t just the hill. It was the unknown of what’s at the top on a single lane road.

We met this couple later in the day, while regrouping before hiking further upstream. They were at a music festival up on the Blue Ridge Parkway and looking for a mountain river to cool off. She jumped out of the truck and with high energy asked, “What are those? What are those you have? Are those fly fishing rods?”

He walked up from the woods and they changed at the tailgate: her in a sundress, him in a trucker hat and outdoorsy button up. Off they went back down the washed-out road. I sent them off with a “stay hydrated.” They laughed and said they would surely do so. Conversation started about a rod, and led to Ben Harper, lap steel guitars, and bluegrass on the mountain. All centered around a tenkara fishing rod.

A friend from our rural town in North Carolina was passing where the creek runs into the larger stream. He yelled down from the trail and doubled back to visit. It was with him that I had hiked this gorge last year, discovering the creek with native brook trout. He has pushed me through many tough times in life and on the trail. The girls sat in the cargo area of the car and ate peaches while swinging their legs off the bumper; ready to get back in the creek. We all refueled and talked about tenkara fishing, trout, kids, and hiking. Again, all moments that surrounded a simple tenkara rod.

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Image Credit: Blair Smith

Teaching Kids Tenkara Fly Fishing and Environmental Conservation

One daughter practices casting in the yard regularly. She has the patience to feel the weight of the line and casts a fly rod rather well. She finds her rhythm and is learning to shoot line. But, she still says, “I like the tenkara rod better.” There’s a pond on the farm where we live. The girls are no strangers to bass and bluegill on the tenkara rod. The stream currents are new for them.

Festival goers to tenkara environmentalists to lifelong friends…and I was there to fish with my girls: a mom with her daughters. Teaching them the patterns in currents, behaviors of fish, and native fish conservation. The day, because of a rod, was a day in simplicity and centering. And when we go out with this tenkara rod, that’s what it is; just being present with what matters. A day to put it all down and focus on simply being and fish… but it is not just fishing. It’s the adventure.

The tenkara rod is the common denominator.

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Image Credit: Blair Smith

It’s about the moment around the rod. The rod is so simple and well designed. Casts are precise, requiring less thought and more focus on fish, water, and the people surrounding you. It is about being present in the moment.

It is what the tenkara rod brings: the chance for adventure, movement, centering, peace, people, and fish. It’s the moment. It’s the simplicity. It is the yoga of fly fishing. So do it. Get out. Center yourself. Find simplicity. Recharge. Connect. And, most importantly, teach all of this to children.

Also published on Carolina Hunting Guide.

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Stray Kitten Finds Forever Home After Heartwarming Chance Encounter

An adorable stray kitten has landed on her feet in a loving home after a heartwarming chance encounter in an Arizona parking lot.

The fluffy feline was stretching her tiny paws out on a truck’s tire when the vehicle’s owner says he caught sight of her white feet and poked his head down to get a better look. What he saw looking back at him melted his heart, as well as his wife’s when he sent her a picture asking if they could keep her.

“Of course I said yes,” his wife, Ann, told The Huffington Post by email on Wednesday.

That was good news not only for the Tempe, Arizona, family — which includes a 2-year-old rescue dog and a 19-year-old cat — but for the entire Reddit community which went gaga after the kitten’s adorable face was uploaded to the social media page Friday.

There, the world was introduced to little Axel Roads.

“A friend suggested her name be Axel, given the circumstances in which she was found,” Ann wrote. “The spelling is as a name, not a car part. Another Redditor suggested her full name be Axel Roads, and so now it is.”

Little Axel was taken to see a vet the same day she was found. It was there that they estimated that she’s only 4-5 weeks old, Ann wrote.

She obviously still has a lot of growing and learning to do, but fortunately, she has a great, four-legged team around her.

“Our 2-year-old dog (another rescue) loves having a playmate who interacts with him. She purrs when she’s near him, and chews on him and plays chase with him,” Ann said. “Our 19-year-old cat is not impressed, but since he has raised two puppies, he is very patient with her as she chews his leg and tries to eat his food. She is learning to respect his authority.”

They expect Axel — who will be spayed in the coming weeks — will be an indoor cat, unlike her adopted big brother.

“She hasn’t shown all that much interest in being outdoors as yet. I think she knows she’s found a good thing with us: a warm bed, plentiful food, playmates and love,” Ann said.

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