WIZO REVIEW SPRING-SUMMER 334 May, 2014 | Page 20

Young Leadership for Girls “We don’t have to leave it up to the boys” Graduates of WIZO’s Young Leadership for Girls course reflect on their newfound worldviews Text and photos Zohar Friedman “Now I understand that sexism and inequality are part of our reality in Israel. Before, my eyes weren’t quite open to it, now I see it everywhere,” says Inbal Azaria, a soon-to-be graduate of the WIZO Young Leadership for Girls course. Held at the WIZO branch in Hadera, the course provides some 20 girls, ages 15-16, with the opportunity to meet once a week for two and a half hours to learn about the status of women, develop leadership and life skills and volunteer in WIZO institutions. in her stride, with a sense of humour and a smile. “It’s different to work with young girls, but enormously rewarding,” Adi explains. “They take the world around them for granted, and it’s important to show them at this critical age that reality isn’t exactly right and it shouldn’t continue this way.” For Adi, the girls both represent a troubling reflection of the gaps within our society as well as also the potential to close these gaps. “You see [the gaps] in their world-views,” Adi explains, recalling an incident where she asked the girls to look through newspapers to critically examine how women’s bodies and roles were depicted in advertisements. Some of the advertisements showed fathers in more domestic scenes – and while the inclusion of fathers in domestic roles is positive, Adi was saddened to hear the girls describe it as, “’Look, the dad is doing the mum’s jobs’ – not the job of a parent, but ‘mum’s job.’” In order to broaden the girls’ perspectives and help them become leaders, Adi located three areas of focus that she wanted to address in the course: First, personal development and practical tools, such as time management, public speaking and self-presentation; second, developing their understanding of gender inequality; and third, providing them with meaningful volunteer opportunities. “We don’t have to leave it up to the boys” Putting inequality into context While opening the girls eyes’ to these problematic thinking patterns has set them on personal missions to change the world around them, giving them the opportunity to volunteer and meet female role models in leadership positions has given them more concrete visions for their futures. For Inbal, a 16-year-old Ethiopian girl, the course was not only eye-opening, but life-changing, a sentiment echoed by many of her classmat