women leadership

Asnairah Tahir with other women leaders learn Qur’an teachings together in Mamasapano, Maguindanao. (Photo: Princess Taroza/Oxfam)
Asnairah Tahir has been a bakwit (internally displaced person) all her life. She is a resident of Mamasapano, Maguindanao, one of the battlegrounds in the Philippines between government forces and armed groups, and even for rivalry among family clans called rido.
Melan Sayutin, Sigay Nu  Babay organization president, conducts a  weekly meeting with fellow women in Sitio Gadong, Datu Saudi Ampatuan, Maguindanao. (Photo: Princess Taroza/Oxfam)
When the 2008 conflict between Armed Forces of the Philippines and Bangsamoro Islamic Freedom Fighters broke out, Melan's family and other hundred families were forced to evacuate to a safer place in Datu Odin Sinsuat.
This International Day of Peace 2020, we are putting into highlight the leadership of four women pushing for conflict transformation in their own work.
Marianita assists her 86-year-old mother in taking her medicines.
I learned the importance of saving from experiencing medical emergencies in our family. Now, I am glad that we are provided with a very accessible and better way to safe keep our money”, shares Marianita Magtarayo, a mother of three.
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