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Hamish, Peacocks & Scone Palace – a day out with DIWC

20 July 2016 by diwc-admin Leave a Comment

Hamish, Peacocks & Scone Palace - a day out with DIWC

July 2016 saw the DIWC members going for a day trip to Scone Palace. Read on to see what a wonderful day out they all had and take a look at some of the pictures taken on the day. 

Welcomed by Hamish the cow and a Peacock!

We gathered at the centre at 9 am and made our way to the Palace. Upon arriving at the Palace we were welcomed by a beautiful peacock and Hamish the cow. This got the children excited from the beginning of the trip.

Scone Palace

We walked to the Palace and were given a tour around the grounds. Scone Palace has an exciting history as one of Scotland’s most important stately homes. This was also the world’s famous crowning place of the King of Scots.The Palace has an outstanding collection of antiques, paintings and artefacts from around the world.

We then made our way to the garden for an afternoon picnic lunch. The sun was out, the peacocks flared their feathers, and the children enjoyed themselves.We all brought our packed lunches and spent the afternoon chatting away under the bright Scottish sun.

 FotorCreated2
The afternoon continued with a walk around the garden and exploring the maze. The maze was an exciting place to be as everyone was competing to be the first to find their way out. Some of us watched from the bridge of the maze and gave directions to those who can’t find their way out. We strongly believe in the saying “leave no man behind”. 🙂
The children continued playing in the park while some of us went for a long walk into the woods. The walk was guided by Priya who is a yoga instructor. She taught us breathing and meditation techniques and educated us on the importance of being close to nature.
 Scone Palace
We all had a wonderful time together. Many of us made new friends while some others got the opportunity to enjoy the summer fun with a group of lovely ladies. The children also enjoyed the day out in the Palace.

Have a peek at the video below and watch how we spent the day at Scone Palace:

Scone Palace2 from DIWC on Vimeo.

Filed Under: Blog, News & Announcements Tagged With: day trip, diwc, dundee international women's centre, scone palace

Celebrating Eid with a party at the DIWC

13 July 2016 by diwc-admin Leave a Comment

Celebrating Eid with a party at the DIWC

Eid festival is celebrated by Muslims around the world to mark the end of the month-long fast of Ramadan.

This year an Eid party was celebrated in the Boomerang Community Centre. The evening was celebrated with music, dance, and authentic middle eastern food, with our very own in-house DJ Dana entertaining the crowd with her mixing skills.

Watch the video below to see how we celebrated Eid.

 

Eid Party 2016 from Parv K. Jessy on Vimeo.

Filed Under: Blog, News & Announcements Tagged With: Celebration, diwc, dundee international women's centre, eid, ramadan

#WomenOfDundee: A 14 yr old’s perspective on beauty and being body-conscious

18 April 2016 by diwc-admin 2 Comments

#WomenOfDundee: A 14 yr old's perspective on beauty and being body-conscious

‘Beauty is in the eye of the beholder’ so why then are we so body-conscious? Here Sophie writes what she thinks about beauty and being body-conscious.

A 14 yr old’s perspective on beauty

Imagine two women walking towards each other on a crowded pavement. One of the women is tall, skinny, and confident and what society would say is beautiful. The other woman is short, curvy and insecure. Both these women have been affected by society’s idea of beauty, stereotypes and body shaming. The second woman has been told by society that she is not beautiful because she doesn’t fit their expectations of the ideal body.

As the women squeeze past each other, they inspect each other and their appearances. The skinny woman strides on with her head held high, feeling skinnier and more beautiful than ever, feeling lucky and thanking God that she is skinny and that she doesn’t look like that other woman. The curvy woman trudges on feeling fat, self-conscious and judged. She hangs her head and stares at the ground wishing and praying that she could look like the woman who just passed her. She feels ugly and like she will never be able to be comfortable in her own skin.

Now imagine that the second woman is your sister, cousin, mother, daughter or maybe even you. 91% of British women said that they are unhappy with their bodies and the way they look. Should people be made to feel self-conscious, insecure and miserable with their shape and size just because they aren’t considered to have the media and societies view of the perfect body?

Peoples’ bodies and sizes are labelled, put into boxes, objectified and discriminated against constantly. Society and the media have decided that if you want to be considered beautiful you have to tick all the right boxes and be exactly what they want you to be. For women to have what is deemed as the perfect body they must be tall, have skinny and long arms and legs, big breasts and bum, wide hips and a tiny waist. Although, hardly any women actually look like this and it is unlikely that a woman would look like this naturally. Millions of women strive to look like this but feel disappointed and defeated when they don’t achieve it. These women have been hypnotized into thinking that this is an achievable goal and that it is realistic that their body can tick every one of these boxes.

People, along with their body shapes and sizes are stereotyped every day. The public believes that because someone is overweight it automatically means that they’re lazy, unemployed, have never heard of a gym and are regulars at McDonald’s, when in fact this is not the case at all. There is a misunderstanding that diet and lifestyle are the only factors that contribute to a person’s weight or size. Everyone is born with a body that is unique to them. No two bodies are the same and yet society is still trying to put pressure on people to all look exactly the same and to not embrace their unique qualities.

It is automatically thought by society that if a person is skinny they are successful, exercise regularly, are on a vegan diet and are generally healthy people. However, this is not always true. Healthy and unhealthy are perceived to be related to fat and skinny. The media is obsessed with thin and skinny people who are apparently healthy but people with curvy and larger bodies are pushed aside and only ever spoken about in a negative way. Overweight people are ridiculed and seen as a joke just because of their weight and size, and on the flip side skinny people are seen as superior and are to be taken seriously.

Size discrimination is a serious problem in the UK but is often ignored and not seen as an issue. A survey carried out in the UK said that 93% of HR professionals would choose a “normal weight” person for a job over an overweight person who had the same qualifications and experience. Even if an overweight person is perfectly capable of doing their job they can still be fired or not hired simply based on their weight. Something about that is extremely wrong and unfair. People, who have what is believed to be a not “normal weight” whether that is to be skinny or overweight, are subject to discrimination.

One of the many reasons so many people feel dissatisfied with their bodies is because of body shaming. Body shaming is defined as inappropriate, negative statements or attitudes towards a person’s weight or size. We are born with a natural confidence and never seem to give the way we look a second thought, let alone think that we look the “wrong” way, yet as we grow older that confidence slowly slips away. It is 2016 but body shaming is still a major issue that doesn’t seem to be disappearing. Society seems to be able to find anything unique and different about a person and pick it apart to turn it into something negative.

It is getting tougher and tougher to be comfortable with who you are and how you look and be yourself without having other people judge and force their opinions onto you. People are now so used to criticising others or being judged themselves that people are starting to think it’s okay and completely normal. When actually it is not, it is incredibly damaging and hurtful. 68% of women blame their body insecurities on other women criticising them. People start believing what others are saying about them and it affects their health because they become self-conscious and insecure.

Society adds an awful amount of pressure on people to be skinny and it affects people from as young as 6 to as old as 106. From a very young age it is ingrained into our heads that to be beautiful you have to be skinny and that being overweight is possibly one of the worst things that could happen to you. People then become fixated on being thin because they think that is what is healthy and beautiful. People put their health at risk because they have been brainwashed to think that everybody’s bodies are supposed to be tiny and skinny. It pushes people to go on insane diets and do an unhealthy amount of exercise just so that they can fit the body ideals. When in fact it is extremely unhealthy and could put people at risk.

The reality is that as long as you’re happy, healthy, and confident in your own skin; size and peoples’ view of the perfect body doesn’t mean a thing. No one body type is beautiful and no one body type is ugly. People and their bodies come in all different shapes and sizes and everyone is unique.

Now imagine two women who live in a world without body shaming, stereotypes and a society that discriminates. The women are walking towards each other on a crowded pavement. As they squeeze past each other they look at each other and smile. Both of the women walk on with their heads held high feeling beautiful and confident, without having to worry about their bodies being put down and judged. Without this negative attitude that people have towards others who don’t look the same as they do, without the idea that there is only one way you can be beautiful, without body shaming, judging, and putting others down to make yourself feel better, the world would be a better place.

This article is written by Sophie

Filed Under: #womenofdundee, Blog Tagged With: #womenofdundee, beauty, body conscious, diwc, dundee international women's centre

#WomenOfDundee: How Amina got to fulfil her lifelong dream to read and write

2 March 2016 by diwc-admin

#WomenOfDundee: How Amina got to fulfil her lifelong dream to read and write

After many years as a full-time Mum, Amina Zaveri finally has time to do something for herself, fulfilling her lifelong dream to be able to read and write. Dundee International Women’s Centre made her dreams come true.

Amina and her husband migrated to London in 1986 from Malawi. Like many newly arrived migrants, Amina’s family worked very hard to survive. Amina worked as a factory worker for 5 years to support her family.

The early years in London were not easy as Amina struggled with the language and culture. She was desperate to learn English. As a child Amina never got access to education: “I never had the chance to go to school,” says Amina.

While in London, she took a short course in English but never got the opportunity to complete it. She learned a few words that helped her get by. At the same time, she learned how to sign her name for the first time. After spending 7 years in London, Amina and her family moved to Dundee. She was then a full-time mum taking care of her four children. Having less interaction with the outside world, Amina lost her self-confidence and self-esteem: “I used to be so afraid to go out and meet people, I became very sick,” she explains.

Realizing her problems, Amina’s children encouraged her to go out and do something for herself. Her daughter brought her to the centre so she could interact and spend time with other women.

The centre gave Amina a new meaning to life and hope. She attended English conversation classes and can now read and write. “I sometimes struggle with spelling, but my children and friends understand me well when I speak and send messages in English,” says Amina.

Amina gained her self-confidence and is now the soul of the centre. Her presence brightens the mood and she is well liked by everyone. “I love coming to the centre because I can learn so much and meet so many other people,” she says.

She also knows how to operate the computer and is brushing up on her Microsoft Office skills. “I always wondered what do people do on the computer and how that machine works but now I understand it.”

She is now confident to drive a car by herself and is not afraid anymore of leaving her house and going places. Amina admits that the centre helped her to overcome a lot of difficulties in her life mainly recovering from depression. She has reduced her medications and claims that the centre is the best cure for her.

As with many of the women who come to Dundee International Women’s Centre, Amina had a great will to learn, but did not know where to start – we were happy to help.

Amina is a great example of how a persistent woman with determination is able to achieve whatever she wants and be successful with the right support and guidance regardless of her age.

At the age of 63, Amina isUntitled-1 getting closer to fulfilling her dreams to be a teacher:“My advice to all women of my age is to work and don’t stay at home. We all need to be independent even at this age. I dream to be a teacher and share my knowledge with other women. Now I am so happy I can do something for myself” says Amina.

Her message to other women is that if they want to achieve something in their lives they need to believe in themselves and start doing it. “If I can do this- anyone can do this,” she says.

Below you can find what Amina has written about her experience with her IT class and other classes in the centre she attended:

Q. How do you think you will use what you have learnt in the IT class, out with the Centre?

A. I have learnt how to send Emails. It is easier to communicate with Friends and family. I improved my spelling and typing skills so I can Write letters. I make my letters look nice to do colours and Italics and enjoying lots. I feel better, I am enjoying so much. It was my Dream to learn Computing skills, my teacher Vicky give a full support and she help me – so now I am doing many things in my on. I am so happy by myself now I have full confidence to do further classes. A good luck for me now, I am so proud. By myself only I had spellings problem so I am learning. I am still Coming in Monday class and Tuesday morning English class. And I rarely ingoing myself and all volunteers are so nice and all staff are so friendly and my teachers Anna and Sue both are helpful, I hope I will improve my spelling.

 

Filed Under: #womenofdundee, Blog Tagged With: #womenofdundee, diwc, dreams, dundee international women's centre, education

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