Saturday 31 December 2011


About WLUML

WHAT IS WOMEN LIVING UNDER MUSLIM LAWS?
Women Living Under Muslim Laws is an international solidarity network that provides information, support and a collective space for women whose lives are shaped, conditioned or governed by laws and customs said to derive from Islam.

For more than two decades WLUML has linked individual women and organisations. It now extends to more than 70 countries ranging from South Africa to Uzbekistan, Senegal to Indonesia and Brazil to France. It links:
  • women living in countries or states where Islam is the state religion, secular states with Muslim majorities as well as those from Muslim communities governed by minority religious laws;
  • women in secular states where political groups are demanding religious laws;
  • women in migrant Muslim communities in Europe, the Americas, and around the world;
  • non-Muslim women who may have Muslim laws applied to them directly or through their children;
  • women born into Muslim communities/families who are automatically categorized as Muslim but may not define themselves as such, either because they are not believers or because they choose not to identify themselves in religious terms, preferring to prioritise other aspects of their identity such as political ideology, profession, sexual orientation or others.
Our name challenges the myth of one, homogenous ‘Muslim world’. This deliberately created myth fails to reflect that: a) laws said to be Muslim vary from one context to another and, b) the laws that determine our lives are from diverse sources: religious, customary, colonial and secular. We are governed simultaneously by many different laws: laws recognised by the state (codified and uncodified) and informal laws such as customary practices which vary according to the cultural, social and political context.
For an in-depth piece on the origins of WLUML, please read 'Heart and Soul' by founder, Marieme Helie-Lucas:  http://www.wluml.org/sites/wluml.org/files/Heart and Soul_Marieme Helie-Lucas.pdf
HOW DID WLUML START?

WLUML was formed in 1984 in response to three cases in Muslim countries and communities in which women were being denied rights by reference to laws said to be ‘Muslim’ requiring urgent action. Nine women from Algeria, Morocco, Sudan, Iran, Mauritius, Tanzania, Bangladesh and Pakistan came together and formed the Action Committee of Women Living Under Muslim Laws in support of local women’s struggles. This evolved into the present network in 1986. The network is guided by Plans of Action which are reviewed periodically.
WHAT ARE WLUML’S AIMS AND FOCUS?

The network aims to strengthen women’s individual and collective struggles for equality and their rights, especially in Muslim contexts. It achieves this by:
  • Breaking the isolation in which women wage their struggles by creating and reinforcing linkages between women within Muslim countries and communities, and with global feminist and progressive groups;
  •  Sharing information and analysis that helps demystify the diverse sources of control over women’s lives, and the strategies and experiences of challenging all means of control.
WLUML’s current focus is on the critical issues identified as our priorities for collective analysis and action:
  • Peace-Building and Resisting the Impact of Militarization
  • Preserving Multiple Identities and Exposing Fundamentalisms
  • Widening Debate about Women’s Bodily Autonomy
  • Promoting and Protecting Women’s Equality Under Laws
As a theme, violence against women cuts across all of WLUML’s projects and activities.
HOW IS WLUML ORGANISED?
WLUML’s open structure has been designed to maximize participation of diverse and autonomous groups and individuals as well as collective decision-making. WLUML does not have formal membership and networkers are a fluid group of individuals and organisations who maintain regular two-way contact with the network.
WLUML distinguishes between networkers and active networkers. A networker can be either an organization or individual that/who:
• Subscribes to WLUML’s principles and values and puts these into practice in their own context;
• Receives and engages with WLUML information; and
• Engages in two-way communication with WLUML Council members, Coordination Offices or sub-committees
An active networker/networking group, in addition furthers the work and vision of the network under the umbrella of WLUML by:
• Contributing/participating in WLUML initiatives - e.g. collective projects, solidarity work;
• Engaging in a consistent two-way interaction over a period of time with WLUML Council members, Coordination Offices or sub-committees that are undertaking on-going WLUML collective projects/activities;
• Taking responsibility for some aspect of WLUML’s work; and
• Being involved at the decision-making level, for example in the identification of critical issues.
The WLUML Council comprises 20-30 people involved in aspects of cross-regional networking within WLUML for a significant period of time. They take primary responsibility for developing and implementing the Plans of Action.
The International Coordination Office (ICO) has primary responsibility for facilitating coordination between networkers. Regional Coordination Offices are currently based in Pakistan (Asia) and Senegal (Africa and Middle East) and are responsible for coordinating network activities in their respective regions. Although legally and financially autonomous, they are key components of WLUML. Based on their connections with networkers, and their knowledge and understanding of networkers’ activities and contexts, the ICO and Regional Offices ensure that the relevant people in the network are meeting, strategizing, planning and acting so as to support each other and thereby strengthen local, regional and global effectiveness.
WHAT ARE WLUML’S PRINCIPLES?
WLUML focuses on laws and customs and the concrete realities of women’s lives. This includes the often diverse practices and laws classified as ‘Muslim’ (resulting from different interpretations of religious texts and/or the political use of religion) and the effects these have on women, rather than on the religion of Islam itself.
The network consciously builds bridges across identities - within our contexts and internationally. We are especially concerned about marginalized women. This includes non-Muslims in Muslim majority states, especially where spaces for religious minorities is rapidly dwindling; Muslim minorities facing discrimination, oppression, or racism; women whose assertions of sexuality – including but not limited to sexual orientation - are either criminalized or are socially unacceptable.
WLUML recognises that women’s struggles are interconnected and complementary, and therefore has a commitment to international solidarity.
WLUML actively endorses plurality and autonomy, and consciously reflects, recognises and values a diversity of opinions. Individuals and groups linked through the network define their own particular priorities and strategies according to their context.
The personal has always played an important part in the work of WLUML, which values the solidarity and active support that the networkers extend to each other by way of personal links.
WHAT DOES WLUML DO?

Solidarity & Alerts
WLUML responds to, circulates and initiates international alerts for action and campaigns as requested by networking groups and allies. WLUML also provides concrete support for individual women in the form of information on their legal rights, assistance with asylum applications, and links with relevant support institutions, psychological support, etc.
Networking & Information Services
WLUML puts women in direct contact with each other to facilitate a non-hierarchical exchange of information, expertise, strategies and experience. Networking also involves documenting trends, proactively circulating information among networkers and allies, generating new analysis, and supporting networkers’ participation in exchanges and international events. While WLUML prioritises the needs of networkers, it also selectively responds to requests for information from, for example, academics, activists, the media, international agencies and government institutions.
Capacity Building
WLUML consciously builds the capacity of networking groups through internships at the coordination offices, and exchanges, trainings and workshops.
Publications and Media
WLUML collects, analyses and circulates information regarding women’s diverse experiences and strategies in Muslim contexts using a variety of media. It translates information into and from French, Arabic and English wherever possible. Networking groups also translate information into numerous other languages.
An active publications programme produces:
  • A theme based Dossier, an occasional journal which provides information about the lives, struggles and strategies of women in various Muslim communities and countries;
  • A quarterly Newsheet on women, laws and society by Shirkat Gah, WLUML Asia Regional Coordination Office;
  • A bi-annual Newsletter on women, laws and society by WLUML International Coordination Office (ICO);
  • Occasional Papers - specific studies and materials which, for reasons of length or style, cannot be included in the Dossier series and;
  • Other publications on specific issues of concern such as family laws, women's movements, initiatives and strategies, etc.
For more information and to download WLUML publications, please visit our Resources section.
Collective Projects
Collective projects have included topic-specific initiatives that arise out of the shared needs, interests and analysis of networkers. Networking groups and individuals are free to participate, or not, according to their needs and capacity, and collective projects have involved from three to over twenty networking groups and lasted from a few months to ten years. Projects are principally coordinated and implemented by networking groups or individual networkers in their respective countries or communities; the coordination offices provide facilitation when necessary. Some collective projects are in collaboration with sister organizations and allies.
Collective projects have included training sessions, workshops, research for advocacy, meetings and exchanges around specialised topics.
Previous projects include:

Wednesday 28 December 2011


Woman arrested for making meth in Walmart



Tulsa - A 45-year-old woman has been arrested for allegedly mixing meth inside a Tulsa, Oklahoma store. Purportedly the woman spent an inordinate time in Walmart engaging in activity that could have been dangerous to other people in the store.
According to Fox 23, police arrested the woman for endeavoring to manufacture meth at the Tulsa Walmart.
Reportedly the woman was caught on surveillance video as having been in the store for several hours; security staff noted the woman exhibiting suspicious behavior and called Tulsa police.

CNN reported the woman was grabbing bottles off the shelves and mixing them with lithium and drain cleaner.
Police arrived at approximately 6 p.m. as the woman was mixing the unpredictable potion in the back of the store.
"When I saw her she had just finished mixing sulfuric acid with starter fluid in a bottle,” says Officer David Shelby.
According to KSDK, when questioned, Halfmoon denied attempting to make meth in the store, but firefighters at the scene say otherwise


“When firefighters were on the scene she made statements to them that is what she was doing, she was attempting to obtain these chemicals and was in the process of trying to manufacture meth. However, she said she was not very good at it,” said Shelby.
Reportedly she told respondents to the scene she was "too broke" to buy the chemicals.
An officer on the scene, who did not realize the bottle was active, picked up the bottle to discard it and was injured as the mix burned through the bottle and his gloves. He was medically treated at a local hospital for chemical burns and is reportedly okay.
No one else in the store was hurt and customers did not need to be evacuated.
However, some of the toxic potion had also spilled on one of Walmart's shelves, and ate through some of the metal.
Elizabeth Alisha Greta Halfmoon, 45, also known to go by the name of Alisha Halfmoon, had recently been arrested for a related crime, and was just released from jail on Dec. 6, having received a deferred sentence and bonded out on $7,500.
Halfmoon is now being held on $100,000 bond for the current charges, and her arraignment is set for Dec. 16.

In other crime-related news recently occurring at Walmart, last week Digital Journal reported syringes were found in various items of clothing in a Georgia Walmart with four separate incidents of customers getting pricked by the hypodermic needles.

Read more: http://digitaljournal.com/article/315879#ixzz1hu5sY8wd

Women celebrities who practice yoga

Yoga is seen by many as a “passive” form of exercise; however, many women celebrities claim to have lost weight, toned up and are in overall more physical better health because of the practice of yoga. Yoga provides exercise not just for the body, but for the mind and spirit too. There are so many different types of yoga available that you are sure to find one that suits your particular needs. 
Hollywood celebrities who practice yoga

Hollywood actress Jennifer Aniston, 42, reportedly keeps herself in shape with the practice of hot yoga (also known as Bikram yoga). Hot yoga is a form of Hatha yoga that is practiced in a studio where the temperature ranges around 100 degrees. The heat, and high humidity, help to improve flexibility, increase weight loss and helps to eliminate toxins from the body. Jennifer Aniston credits her body strength and flexibility to the practice of hot yoga. 
Singer and actress Madonna, 52, is a well known advocate of yoga. Madonna is said to practice Ashtanga yoga which is another form of Hatha yoga; however, Ashtanga yoga is a physically demanding workout, with breathing exercises, that pushes the body to build up strength and stamina. 
Other women celebrities who reputedly incorporate yoga into their daily lives include: 
  • singer Geri Haliwell, 38
  • actress Meg Ryan, 49
  • actress Gwyneth Paltrow, 38.
The benefits of yoga for women
There are many benefits to women practicing yoga; these include: 
  • weight loss
  • improves heart health
  • increases strength and physical function after surgery forbreast cancer
  • reduces stress
  • decreases depression
  • improves skin health
  • strengthens the immune system
  • manages insomnia
  • manages osteoporosis.

References:

Monday 26 December 2011

Violence Against Women

Violence Against Women (VAW) peer-reviewed and published monthly, is an international, interdisciplinary journal dedicated to the publication of research and information on all aspects of the problem of violence against women. VAW assumes a broad definition of violence; topics to be covered include, but are not limited to, domestic violence, sexual assault, incest, sexual harassment, female infantcide, female circumcision, and female sexual slavery.

Impact Factor: 1.215
Ranked: 8 out of 35 in Women's Studies
Source: 2010 Journal Citation Reports® (Thomson Reuters, 2011)

OnlineFirst

(Forthcoming articles published ahead of print)

All Issues

March 1995 - October 2011

Podcasts


For an alternate route to Violence Against Women Online use this URL: http://intl-vaw.sagepub.com




WHY WOMEN PLAY GOLF



About Venus Golf

"If it's not fun, we aren't doing it!"

What:
Venus Golf is dedicated to women's golf. From instruction to motivational speaking... from health and fitness to wedge selection, Venus Golf turns information into recreation and makes golf fun for women.
Who:
Venus Golf was founded by CEO Debbie Steinbach Keller (aka Venus), former LPGA touring pro and a Golf for Women Magazine "Top 50" instructor. Keller competed for 12 years on the Tour and now devotes her time to instruction and motivational speaking plus other activities associated with her company.
Instruction:
Venus Golf promotes teaching golf from a woman's viewpoint. Venus-styled seminars, instruction and clinics are offered in a fun, educational format, based on Keller's popular books, Venus on the Fairway and Venus on the Fringe and NEW Venus on the FUNdamentals DVD series.
Speaking Engagements:
Debbie is available as an entertainment-styled, motivational speaker. She has appeared before a wide variety of corporate groups and organizations including Kraft, Bristol Meyers, Sony, Nabisco, the Executive Women's Golf Association, Colgate, the Women's Southern California Golf Association, the LPGA, Meeting Industry Ladies' Organization, Ralph's and Von's.
Other Experience:
Venus has been highly visible, appearing as an announcer on NBC during its coverage of the Nabisco Dinah Shore Tournament, the National Pro-Am of Women's Golf, the San Diego Honda Classic, the World Championship of Women's Golf and ESPN's Golf America.

you can contact for more information & question: http://www.venusgolf.com

Sunday 25 December 2011


Nico’s pan seared lamb chops

I have a theory about how the guys cook, let me clarify that this theory excludes chefs, passionate foodies and sometimes my father in law, but does specifically include my husband and probably my dad.Nicolas –the husband – loves food and he also likes to cook, but he likes to keep it as simple, fast and as easy as possible, he also tends to use the first ingredients he sees in the fridge.  I think that when he cooks he has two things in mind: first, he’s looking for something that will taste decent, and second, he wants his hunger to be satisfied as quickly as possible (without resorting to fast food).
I remember when I was a kid and on those rare days when my dad would cook he would always make the same dish: yucas in a peanut sauce, it was actually very good and for him it was easy to make. Of course if my mom was gone for more than a few days we (kids) got really tired of eating the same thing for lunch and dinner every day; it made me very happy to see my mom when she returned (and thankfully it wasn’t very frequent that my dad had to cook). Nicolas also has this repetition thing going on -which going off track here is very different from the way he listens to music, he hates listening to the same song over and over (which is the opposite in my case I love listening the same song again and again until I am sick of it);but back to the cooking situation, in the summer he will add blueberries to every salad he makes – which tastes good, but maybe let’s alternate with raspberries or strawberries once in a while; the same thing happens with any type of meat he cooks: it will always have some herbes de Provence (a mix of dried herbs that usually includes dried thyme, rosemary, marjoram, oregano, basil, sage, lavender, fennel, among others -you can find them in the dried herb and spice section at the supermarket, or mix your own), there will also be garlic involved and either olive oil or butter (or both).So, you can predict the ingredients of this lamb chop recipe, and in true Nico style it is very simple to make, very quick and delicious.My most recent favorite side dish for lamb chops (or lamb roast) is a puree made with ripe plantains; the sweetness of the pure is a perfect match for the flavor of the lamb.
Ingredients:
8 lamb chops
2 tbs olive oil
1 tbs herbes de Provence (or mix of thyme, rosemary, sage, and other dried herbs)
1 small head of garlic, peeled
2 tbs butter
Salt and pepper
Suggested side dishes – ripe plantain puree and quinoa salad
Preparation:
  1. Season the lamb chops with the olive oil, the dried herb mix, salt and pepper.
  2. Melt the butter in a sauté pan over medium high heat.
  3. Add the lamb chops and garlic cloves; cook until the chops are golden on each side.
  4. Serve immediately.


Wednesday 21 December 2011

Recipes for Weight Loss




Weight loss recipes and healthy lifestyle articles for those wanting to lose weight without any loss of the taste. Low fat and fat free recipes for use in your diet. These recipes have been tested to ensure they are fat free or have only trace fat content by a fully qualified nutritionist. Each recipe is easy to prepare and the ingredients should be readily availabile. The simple lifestyle equation of low fat or fat free food, portion control and regular exercise will guarantee your weight loss.




You can see. There are more plan for weight loss recipes. 
http://www.weightlossrecipes.co.uk/

Kashmiri Lamb

Recipe by: thegnome

This recipe has been with me for over 30 years, it was given to me by a Kashmiri guy I shared a house with when I was 17. This is his mum’s family recipe ... See more







Ingredients

Serves4
  • 4 dried red chillies
  • 3 fresh green chillies
  • 1 teaspoon cumin seeds
  • 1 teaspoon Kashmiri garam masala
  • 1 inch piece of root ginger, peeled and grated
  • 5 cloves garlic, crushed
  • 4 tablespoons desiccated coconut
  • 3 tomatoes, chopped
  • 6 tablespoons oil
  • 2 large onions, sliced thinly
  • 1kg (2 lb) lamb, washed, pat dry and cut into 1 1/2" pieces
  • 1/2 teaspoon turmeric
  • 1/2 pint plain yoghurt
  • 1/2 teaspoon saffron
  • 20 blanched almonds
  • A handful chopped coriander
  • salt to taste

Preparation method
Prep: 15 minsCook: 1 hour 30 mins
1.
Grind the red chilies, green chilies, cumin seeds, garam masala, ginger, garlic, grated coconut and tomatoes together into a smooth paste.
2.
Heat the oil in a pan and fry the onions until golden.
3.
Add the spice paste and fry it until the oil separates from the mixture.
4.
Now add the lamb pieces and the salt and cook until it is almost done. Stirring frequently.
5.
Add the yoghurt, saffron and the blanched almonds and mix well.
6.
Cook over low heat until the meat is tender and the gravy is thick.
7.
Garnish with chopped coriander leaves.
8.
Serve with hot freshly steamed rice.
Tip
You can also make this with mutton, goat or beef. It is one of those recipes that tastes great the next day too! Make it in a slow cooker and cook for 8 to 10 hours