By Diana Duarte | Communications Director
The Indigenous Women's Forum is an annual gathering organized by Wangki Tangni, MADRE's partner organization in Nicaragua. It's a time where Indigenous women living along the North Atlantic Coast come together to discuss the main issues and challenges they face, including violence against women. At the latest forum, MADRE's Communications Director, Diana Duarte, led a training for 17 "comunicadoras", or communicators -- grassroots volunteers with Wangki Tangni. The communications training showed these women how to document stories and capture interviews to amplify the voices of their communities. The skills they learned in this training will be very beneficial to the radio program MADRE runs with Wangki Tangni. Here's Diana's reflections on the training:
The Power of Sharing our Stories
I believe in the power of a story to move, motivate and mobilize. Which I suppose makes it no great surprise that communications is so tightly linked to my activism.
When I went to Nicaragua for our partner’s annual Indigenous Women’s Forum, I had a specific agenda in mind. There were 1,000 participants there, but there were 17 in particular I’d like to tell you about. They are a group of young women called the “comunicadoras,” or communicators. As volunteers with Wangki Tangni, our sister organization, they lend their time and energy to grassroots organizing. And they had their hands full helping to make the Forum happen.
These comunicadoras saw the power of the Forum, and they wanted to capture it. They wanted to document it so that the lessons of the Forum could live on beyond its four days. And they wanted to build their own skills to amplify their stories and the voices of their communities.
During the Forum, I held a series of communications workshops. Together, we got up early and stayed up late to make sure we had enough time. MADRE provided Wangki Tangni with a set of digital voice recorders, and I showed the comunicadoras how to use these tools to conduct interviews and record the Forum’s valuable discussions. Through the days of workshops, we also talked about how to take powerful photos and how to craft impactful messages.
Most importantly, we talked about the stories that drive their activism. They shared stories about the violence that women in their commmunities face. They spoke of the need to create possibilities for young girls instead of selling them into marriage. We talked about their fears at the environmental degradation triggered by industrial agriculture encroaching on Indigenous territories. These conversations would often turn into debates, as they mulled over the best solutions they could offer.
At the end of the workshops, I was honored to give each of them a certificate marking the effort they had made and the skills they had built. And I know that their debates and storytelling will continue.
By MADRE | MADRE
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