Showing posts with label micro-lending. Show all posts
Showing posts with label micro-lending. Show all posts

Tuesday, January 17, 2012

Ann Dunham


After a very difficult evening with my children (young adults) I found myself doubting the kind of mother I am, have I given them too much? Am I not giving them enough? Will they be prepared for the world? Have I done My JOB? The job of mother is usually thankless and let’s face it Hard! No matter how good your intentions we all make mistakes, we are all human. So today I decided to honor a mom who was not perfect but I think we can all agree did an amazing job raising her kids, I mean after all her son grew up to be the first Black President of the United States.

Today January 17, 2012 the WOD is Ann Dunham the mother of the 44th President of the United States, Barack Obama.

In an interview, Barack Obama referred to his mother as "the dominant figure in my formative years ... The values she taught me continue to be my touchstone when it comes to how I go about the world of politics."

Stanley Ann Dunham (November 29, 1942 – November 7, 1995), was an Americananthropologist who specialized in economic anthropology and rural development. Born in Wichita,Kansas, Dunham spent her childhood in California,Oklahoma, Texas and Kansas and her teenage years in Mercer Island, Washington, and the majority of her adult life in Hawaii and Indonesia.

Dunham studied at the Honolulu University of Hawaii Manoa campus, and the University of Hawaii Manoa's East–West Center, where she attained a bachelor's in anthropology or mathematics and master's and Ph.D. in anthropology. Interested in craftsmanship, weaving and the role of women in cottage industries, Dunham's research focused on women's work on the island of Java and blacksmithing in Indonesia. To address the problem of poverty in rural villages, she created microcredit programs while working as a consultant for the United States Agency for International Development. Dunham was also employed by the Ford Foundation in Jakarta and she consulted with the Asian Development Bank in Pakistan. Towards the latter part of her life, she worked with Bank Rakyat Indonesia, where she helped apply her research to the largest microfinance program in the world.

On August 21, 1959, Hawaii became the 50th state to be admitted into the Union. Dunham's parents sought business opportunities in the new state, and after graduating from high school in 1960, Dunham and her family moved to Honolulu. Dunham soon enrolled at the University of Hawaii at Mānoa. While attending a Russian language class, Dunham met Barack Obama, Sr., the school's first African student. At the age of 23, Obama Sr. had come to Hawaii to pursue his education, leaving behind a pregnant wife and infant son in his home town of Nyang’oma Kogelo in Kenya. Dunham and Obama Sr. were married on the Hawaiian island of Maui on February 2, 1961, despite parental opposition from both families. Dunham was three months pregnant. Obama Sr. eventually informed Dunham about his first marriage in Kenya but claimed he was divorced. Years later, she would discover this was false. Obama Sr.'s first wife, Kezia, later said she had granted her consent for him to marry a second wife, in keeping with Luo customs.

On August 4, 1961, at the age of 18, Dunham gave birth to her first child, Barack Obama II. After one semester at the University of Hawaii, Ann Dunham withdrew from college to help care for her new family. Soon after, Barack Sr. accepted a scholarship to pursue a Ph.D. in economics at Harvard University. Acknowledging her husband's life quest of revitalizing Kenya's economy, Dunham decided to remain behind in Hawaii. In 1964 Dunham filed for divorce in January 1964, which Obama Sr. did not contest. Obama Sr. received a M.A. in economics from Harvard in 1965 and in 1971, he came to Hawaii and visited his son Barack, then 10 years old; it was the last time he would see his son. In 1982, Obama Sr. was killed in a car accident, or possibly murdered

Approximately one year later after her divorce, Dunham returned to the University of Hawaii. With help from her parents and government food stamps, she was able to juggle a full schedule of classes while caring for her son. Despite life as a struggling young mother, Ann Dunham earned her undergraduate degree in four years. During her tenure at the University of Hawaii, Dunham became romantically involved with fellow student Lolo Soetoro.

Polite, even-tempered Soetoro was an international master's student from Indonesia. In 1967 he proposed to Dunham. Once married, Ann changed her surname to Soetoro and the new family relocated to Indonesia near the city of Jakarta. In 1970, Ann gave birth to daughter Maya.

Ann Soetoro was often grieved by the quality of life for local Indonesians. Those who were close to her say she was compassionate almost to a fault, and would give money to countless ailing beggars. As Ann became more interested in Indonesian culture, her husband Lolo began working for a Western oil company.

Bored by the domestic, traditional course her marriage had taken, Ann intensified her focus on formal education. She began teaching English in the American Embassy. In the mornings she would give Barack Jr. his English lessons, and in the evenings she would give him books on civil rights and play him Mahalia Jackson's gospel songs.

When her son was 10 years old, Ann sent him back to Hawaii to attend prep school and reside with his grandparents. One year later, Ann and her daughter also returned to Hawaii. Here she enrolled in graduate school at the University of Hawaii to study cultural anthropology of Indonesian peoples. In 1980 she would file for divorce against her husband Lolo.

After several years of schooling, Ann Soetoro returned to Indonesia for doctoral level fieldwork. Wishing to remain with his grandparents, 14-year-old Barack Obama Jr. declined to join his mother. Once back in Indonesia, Soetoro began working for the Ford Foundation studying women's employment concerns. From 1988 to 1992 Soetoro helped install a microfinance program in Indonesia where small business owners could gain small loans. Many credit Soetoro's research with informing fiscal lending policies, making Indonesia a world leader in microfinance loans.

Through the years, Ann and her daughter would move around the world to Pakistan, New York, and back to Hawaii. In 1992 Ann Soetoro finally finished her doctoral dissertation: a 1,000-page analysis of peasant blacksmithing. In 1994 during a dinner party in Jakarta, Soetoro complained of stomach pains. Months later she was diagnosed with ovarian and uterine cancer. She died on November 7, 1995 at the age of 52.

In his 1995 memoir Dreams from My Father, Barack Obama wrote, "My mother's confidence in needlepoint virtues depended on a faith I didn't possess... In a land [Indonesia] where fatalism remained a necessary tool for enduring hardship ... she was a lonely witness for secular humanism, a soldier for New Deal, Peace Corps, position-paper liberalism."[In his 2006 book The Audacity of Hope Obama wrote, "I was not raised in a religious household ... My mother's own experiences ... only reinforced this inherited skepticism. Her memories of the Christians who populated her youth were not fond ones ... And yet for all her professed secularism, my mother was in many ways the most spiritually awakened person that I've ever known." "Religion for her was "just one of the many ways — and not necessarily the best way — that man attempted to control the unknowable and understand the deeper truths about our lives," Obama wrote.

Friday, May 20, 2011

Maria Shriver

Hello, Awesome Women members… I am pleased and honored to offer my first submission to this outstanding group which I’ve admired from afar for some time. I’m acting on a hunch to, “strike while the iron is HOT”, and present… MARIA SHRIVER! Think you know everything there is to know about the former celebrity First Lady of California and exhausted from the current malestream media bombardment? Think again. My objective in choosing this fabulous feminist is to show us all that as real, three-dimensional human beings, and as such, we refuse to be defined archetypically in the press as the scorned spouse or exclusively through our relationships with men.

Toward this end, my entry focuses exclusively on one of the most informative and significant professional contributions Maria Owings Shriver (born November 6, 1955) has made independently from her formal role as the governor’s wife and in collaboration with other progressives. Recently, Shriver took a groundbreaking and original historical look at the transformation of the American woman. In October 2009, Shriver launched "The Shriver Report: A Woman's Nation Changes Everything," a national study and comprehensive report conducted in partnership with the Center for American Progress, USC's Annenberg Center on Communication, Leadership and Policy, and the Rockefeller Foundation. The Shriver Report revealed that American women, for the first time, make up half of the United States workforce and studied how that fact is impacting major institutions like family, business, government and faith organizations. The report was released last year in partnership with Time and NBC News. It was the first study of its kind since her uncle, President John F. Kennedy, asked Eleanor Roosevelt to chair the first Commission on the Status of Women in 1961. That report was published within months of Betty Friedan’s The Feminine Mystique, the opening salvo of the second-wave Women’s Lib movement. All of a sudden, so many women became activists, taking to the streets and the halls of power. Many of these women risked their reputations, their security, their jobs—sometimes even their lives and marriages—to knock down walls of inequality. They got many outdated work laws changed and new anti-discrimination laws put in place. Their work and their courage created opportunity for many women, enabling more women to go to college and professional schools, more women to play sports, more women to get on career tracks. Today we stand on their shoulders. Their work freed so many of us to dream new dreams and fulfill them.

Yet, feminism has not yet fulfilled all its goals. Fast-forward to today. From Maria Shriver’s introduction & the new report’s key findings: “Women still don’t make as much as men do for the same jobs. Women still don’t make it to the top as often as men. Families too often can’t get flex-time, child care, medical leave, or paid family leave. The United States still is the only major industrialized nation without comprehensive child care and family leave policies. Insurance companies still often charge women more than men for the exact same coverage. Women are still being punished by a tax code designed when men were the sole breadwinners and women the sole caregivers. Sexual violence against women remains a huge issue. Women still are disproportionately affected by lack of health care services. And lesbian couples and older women are among the poorest segment of our society,” in my analysis, exacerbating an institutionally and ideologically-supported feminization of poverty.

The report’s main resulting policy recommendations are that families need more flexible work schedules, comprehensive child care policies, redesigned family and medical leave, and equal pay. This will be a difficult agenda to accomplish in a political and cultural climate that seems to be waging a war on women and workers.

For more great stuff than I could possibly incorporate here, I encourage you to check out the entire website which includes interesting and diverse chapters by powerful pundits and the voices of everyday Americans, like ourselves. Among the selections, there are essays on women’s sports, women’s health by tennis great Billie Jean King, Suze Orman on Money Matters and even an epilogue authored by Oprah Winfrey.

The Shriver Report

A Woman’s Nation Changes Everything

By Maria Shriver and the Center for American Progress,
http://www.americanprogress.org/issues/2009/10/womans_nation.html

Not just an academic exercise, one of the most promising forms of activism to be generated by Shriver’s report is in 2008, Shriver launched her WE Invest Program, which provides training, mentoring, support networks, microloans and other resources to help women launch or grow their businesses. A microloan is a small loan of money, sometimes as little as $25 or as much as $5,000, that enables a microenterprise or impoverished person to continue or start a business. In June 2009, she expanded WE Invest nationally through a partnership with Kiva, creating the first-ever online peer-to-peer microlending program in the U.S. Shriver is credited with coming up with the idea to bring Kiva's international micro-lending model to the United States domestically to support low-income entrepreneurs like women and minorities in the United States. Following the recession, the organization realized the opportunity and need to provide community driven, low-cost capital for the everyday small business owner in the U.S. Micro-loans Kiva's concept is simple — so simple it seems unlikely. Small-business entrepreneurs who need money are listed on Kiva's site. Individuals who want to lend money choose who'd they like to help. And over time, the lenders get paid back and can lend their money again. Kiva has a 98% repayment rate!

So, in conclusion, I hope you enjoyed and are inspired by this refreshing look at a woman’s life that goes beyond the sensationalized and scandalous headlines to reveal that each one of us can, “be the change we want to see in the world”. Thank you and I look forward to hearing your feedback.


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