الجمعة، 28 يوليو 2017

Rima Mansour: The lady is a debater!










-“The lady doth protest too much, methinks.” 
Shakespeare

In a world where women are compelled to follow a certain model of appropriate feminine behaviour, to please never to protest, to be silenced never to speak, debate opens new horizons for women to make their voices heard. Such is my journey with debate within the Yong Arab Voices programme. When I joined the project in 2015, I had no idea that debating could be the empowerment I needed to finally be able to step up, break the circle of silence imposed on me by years of traditional education, and help other “ladies” make their voices heard. Throughout the training I had with YAV, I learned how to structure my ideas, how to question assumptions, how to detect fallacies and how to make my protest and voice count. More significant was the opportunity YAV offered me to share my passion for debate and to help young people and more specifically women and girls gain confidence in themselves, cross the threshold of imposed silence, and speak up. Debate, I believe, empowers women and young people with the appropriate tools to be active agents of change in their communities: not only does it boost our self confidence, rhetorical skills and analytic mind; it also offers us an opportunity to formally discuss a wide range of topics with varying degrees of complexity outside our own fields of study. I found myself discussing topics such as state interventionism in economy, Middle East policies, refugees’ crisis and even football which is considered a “men-exclusive” topic. The debate experience proved, first to myself, and to others that there are no topics that should not be discussed by women, young people, children, certain groups etc. and that there is no prefabricated image of what a lady should or should not do or be; after all the 
                   lady is a debater!


Rima Mansour
A University Teacher, a Researcher and a Debate Trainer with the YAV program 

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