Tag Archives: Morocco

TechWomen Morocco Delegation – Day 4 – Rabat

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The TechWomen delegation gave workshops on careers in Science, Engineering, and Technology to the girls at the Khalil Gibran School in Rabat today.  Mohna Dhomse and I gave a talk called “How to Start a Blog and Share Your Voice… Safely!”. We enjoyed lunch at the Cosmopolitan Restaurant with local dignitaries, then went shopping for ceramics at a local atelier de poterie (pottery workshop). In the evening, the entire delegation spoke at length with Mrs. Hakima El Haité, Minister in Charge of Environment, and Delegate to the Minister of Energy, Mines, Water and Environment, who generously invited us into her lovely home.  I am sad that tomorrow night is our TechWomen Morocco delegation farewell party.

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Images Copyright 2014 by Katy Dickinson

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TechWomen Morocco Delegation – Day 3 – Casablanca

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This morning, the TechWomen delegation toured the impressive Hassan II Mosque in Casablanca – the largest mosque in Morocco. My favorite comment by our tour guide: “This is the largest chandelier – it weighs 1,400 pounds, plus four pigeons.”

We ate lunch at  Rick’s Cafe. Then, in the afternoon, we heard and gave presentations on entrepreneurship at the Technopark Casablanca, Morocco’s first industrial park. My presentation is tomorrow: Mohna Dhomse and I are giving a talk called “How to Start a Blog and Share Your Voice… Safely!” at the Khalil Gibran School in Rabat.

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Images Copyright 2014 by Katy Dickinson

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TechWomen Morocco Delegation – Day 2 – Rabat

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To start our first day of TechWomen delegation meetings in Rabat, Morocco, we asked many questions at our US Embassy briefing (held at the lovely and delicious Riad Dinarjat restaurant). We then visited the Rabat Technopolis to hear from local entrepreneurs, followed by a lively discussion with women students of the University of Rabat (IUR). Our official photographer Kelsey Brannan generously sent me the Technopolis group photo above to include here.

In the evening, the mentors participated in a form of musical chairs called “Speed Geek” to hear seven of our own TechWomen Emerging Leaders from the classes of 2011, 2012, and 2013 telling us of their startups, ideas, and adventures in business and technology.  It is one of the great joys of professional life to hear from successful mentees – we are so proud of them!

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Images Copyright 2014 by Katy Dickinson – except for group photo at top: by Kelsey Brannan, US State Department Copyright 2014

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TechWomen Morocco Delegation – Day 1 – Rabat

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Yesterday was the first delegation day for the TechWomen in Morocco – we enjoyed a bus and walking tour of Rabat, followed by a wonderful party (complete with a drum band and kaftan fashion show) at the house of Nezha, one of the remarkably generous local mentees. “Touristic” sites we visited included:

  • Chellah – A large ancient cemetery with elaborate tomb monuments – includes a Roman ruin and an Islamic burial place, with many resident storks, egrets, and cats.
  • Kasbah des Oudaias (“the qasbah“) – Site of Rabat’s original ribat or fortress.
  • Old Medina – Hassan Tower – Minaret of what was, at the time of construction, intended to be the world’s largest mosque – left unfinished.  Royal guards with horses in elaborate dress included.
  • Mausoleum of Mohammed V – masterpiece of modern Alaouite dynasty architecture containing the tombs of King Mohammed V and his two sons, the late King Hassan II and Prince Abdallah.

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Images Copyright 2014 by Katy Dickinson

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Touring Morocco with TechWomen – Fez

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Pictures from our day in Fez Morocco before the official start of the TechWomen delegation.

Two wheeled donkey carts are common on the roads:

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A truck of sticks for firewood:

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We stopped for directions and to buy oranges from a roadside produce vendors:

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Most windows in the old city feature lovely ironwork:

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Many streets are so narrow only pedestrians, motorcycles, and donkeys can get through:

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Dar Zaoula carpet sellers where I bought a vintage Berber kelim:

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The ancient leather tannery in Fez is famous and very smelly:

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Fez is also famous for its metal work:

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Images Copyright 2014 by Katy Dickinson

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Don’t You Have Any Friends?

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A group of us TechWomen US State Department mentoring program delegates arrived in Rabat, Morocco, yesterday and we have been having delightful adventures ever since. Unfortunately, I can upload my photos to my TechWomen photo collection but the hotel wifi is flakey so I mostly cannot see them once uploaded.

We have made a friend in Lamia Bounahmidi (CEO of startup venture Looly’s Couscous) who has been showing us her home country. Today we got very lost driving to Fez. Apparently, the Fez road signs were removed for a construction project. When Lamia asked for directions, the toll taker asked “Don’t you have any friends? They should have told you!” We ended up following signs to Kinitra and then signs to Khemisset and then signs to Fez by using what Lamia calls Moroccan GPS – rolling down the window and asking for help frequently. Finally in Fez, we went shopping and walked miles among the lovely old buildings. I bought spices in the souq, and a rug at Dar Benhayoune (also called Dar Zaoula) in Fez, then we drove back to enjoy an amazing traditional dinner at Dinarjat in Rabat.

Our TechWomen official tour is tomorrow.

Image Copyright 2014 by Katy Dickinson

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We Are Citizen Diplomats

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Last month, I attended a reception in San Francisco for IVLP (The International Visitor Leadership Program – the U.S. Department of State’s premier professional exchange program). At that event, I sent this tweet:

State Dept Intl Visitors program since 1940s hosted 200,000 to US (7,000 by @IVLPSF) 330 later were heads of state: We are citizen diplomats
07:04 PM – 20 Nov 13 @katy_dickinson

I was surprised when this tweet was redistributed several times.  After each retweet, I considered what it means to be a citizen diplomat. I learned about IVLP through the TechWomen program and the Institute of International Education (IIE West Coast). I was pleased to be an ILVP event host myself – having a group from the Middle East and North Africa for dinner and a WP668 caboose tour in April 2013.

The phrase citizen diplomat was used by the State Department speaker to describe those who support the IVLP program. The State Department website defines citizen diplomacy as:

Citizen Diplomacy is the concept that the individual has the right to help shape U.S. foreign relations “one handshake at a time.” Citizen diplomats can be students, teachers, athletes, artists, business people, humanitarians, adventurers or tourists. They are motivated by a desire to engage with the rest of the world in a meaningful, mutually beneficial dialogue.

This week, I have been making travel arrangements for my first visit to Sub-Saharan Africa, as part of the TechWomen delegation to Rwanda in February 2014. This will be my third time as a delegation member, having also traveled to Morocco (2011) and Jordan (2013) with the US State Department’s TechWomen program. While it feels presumptuous to call ourselves so, I think the hundreds of remarkable and generous Silicon Valley women professionals who have served as TechWomen mentors since 2010 are indeed citizen diplomats.

When our 78 mentees from the Middle East and Africa were working with us in October 2013 here in California, the US federal government shut down for 16 days. It was an embarrassing but excellent example of both the good and bad sides of the American democratic system. The bad side was watching some of the world’s elite and most powerful leaders squabbling in public. The good side was watching America continue to function pretty well without them. I imagine the other TechWomen mentors got to discuss all of this as often as I did with our international guests. If that isn’t citizen diplomacy, I don’t know what is.

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Images Copyright 2013 by Katy Dickinson

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