Tag Archives: South Africa

TechWomen Delegation Reunion: South Africa and Tunisia

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Thanks to TechWomen mentor Terri Khonsari for hosting a delicious Persian dinner for the South Africa and Tunisia TechWomen Delegation mentors last weekend. It was delightful to watch the mentee greeting videos presented by our remarkable IIE program staff. We are all looking forward to the 2015 mentor applications opening next week!

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Images Copyright 2015 by Katy Dickinson

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Touring with TechWomen Tunisia Delegation

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This week, I am a member of a TechWomen Delegation for the sixth time – having been on every delegation since the program started. It has been my honor and pleasure to visit Emerging Leaders in Morocco (2011), Jordan (2013 – with a side trip to Lebanon), Rwanda (2014), Morocco (2014), South Africa (2015), and now, Tunisia. As always, we travel with a U.S. Department of State Bureau of Educational and Cultural Affairs representative, in addition to Institute of International Education (IIE) staff. I begin my ten days in Tunisia with local tours, both informal and formal, to provide cultural context. Last weekend, we visited:

Dougga
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Sidi Bou Said
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North African American Cemetery and Memorial
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Carthage
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Bardo Museum
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Images Copyright 2015 by Katy Dickinson

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Notable Technical Women Project

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I am happy to report that the Notable Technical Women Project – creators and distributors of the “Notable Women in Technology” and “TechWomen Emerging Leaders from Africa and the Middle East” educational playing cards and posters – is thriving!

Keep our history
Women have been leaders in tech from the start, but not enough of our contributions are remembered.
These cards can help.

“TechWomen Emerging Leaders from Africa and the Middle East” was the first publication of the TechWomen Alumnae group, and is the first daughter of the “Notable Women in Computing” project. Between them, we are distributing information to the world about 108 technical role models! You can get involved in the project through the Duke University “CRA-W and Anita Borg Institute Wikipedia Project – Writing Wikipedia Pages for Notable Women in Computing” website: http://www.cs.duke.edu/csed/wikipedia/

Recent Notable Technical Women Project developments:

  1. Dr. Susan Rodger (Duke University) offered “Notable Women in Computing” cards to about 1,300 SIGCSE (ACM Special Interest Group on Computer Science Education) conference registrants – and 800 placed orders (in both regular and jumbo size – for classroom use).  The conference starts next week.
  2. Great Press from Julie Bort of Business Insider on 12 February 2015, including all of the Notable Women cards: 54 Women Who Rocked the World – thanks for your many retweets!
  3. Reach and Teach bookstore in San Mateo CA is the first to put our “Notable Women in Computing” cards on their physical shelves. Thanks to Craig Weisner and Derrick Kikuchi for their support!
  4. Internet sales are brisk at  http://www.notabletechnicalwomen.org/ – We had enough interest to place a big production order for the “TechWomen Emerging Leaders in Africa and the Middle East” posters and cards.
  5. Jessica Dickinson Goodman is minding our online store and recording photos of educators and students all over the world using “Notable Women” cards and posters.  You can see photos of cards and posters in the wild at: https://www.kickstarter.com/projects/jessidg/notable-women-in-computing-card-deck/posts.
  6. We have distributed over 3,000 cards since October 2014 (they were originally sold at the Grace Hopper Celebration of Women and Computing -aka GHC14- conference). Our first full production shipment of TechWomen cards just arrived today! The first thirty decks were printed last month through the generous donations of TechWomen mentors – and Symantec sponsored the first poster printing. Today’s shipment is being paid for by actual customers.
  7. Eileen Brewer (Symantec) and I took cards and posters on the TechWomen Delegation to South Africa last month and will take them on the Delegation to Tunisia next month also.

Thank you for your ongoing support!

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Zimkhita Buwa, Seven of Diamonds, South Africa . Nomso Faith Kana, TechWomen Eight of Clubs, South Africa

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Images Copyright 2015 by Katy Dickinson

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Race, Townships, and Tour Guides in South Africa

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The January 2015 TechWomen mentoring program Delegation to South Africa rode from place to place in a big bus. Because traffic was often heavy, IIE arranged for tour guides to give background and tell us more about what we were seeing on the long drives. During the week, we had three guides with very different perspectives:

  • One guide was from an old Afrikaner family who did not seem happy about many of the changes since Apartheid ended (around 1994).
  • Another was (I think) what South Africans call Coloured (“people of mixed ethnic origin who possess ancestry from Europe, Asia, and various Khoisan and Bantu tribes” – according to Wikipedia).
  • The third was a European immigrant.

I don’t know if we were purposefully given guides with such varied points of view but it was very interesting nonetheless.

One of the many fascinating exhibits at the Apartheid Museum in Johannesburg addressed the complex question of what it meant and means to be in part of a South African ethnic/racial group. For example, here is a quote from the South Africa “Population Registration Act” of 1950 on display in the museum:

“A white person is one who in appearance is, or who is generally accepted as, a white person, but does not include a person who, although in appearance obviously a white person, is generally accepted as a coloured person.  A native is a person who is in fact or is generally accepted as a member of any aboriginal race or tribe from Africa.  A coloured person is a person who is not a white person not a native.”

Each of our Apartheid Museum tickets was randomly printed “White” or “Non-White” on the back – dividing the delegation in two. The halves of the delegation had the disturbing experience of entering the museum through different doors and seeing the first exhibit from separated walkways. I grew up during the Civil Rights Movement in America. It was hard to explain to my TechWomen colleagues from the Middle East why splitting of the Delegation by race made me feel angry and ill.  We have worked so hard to build a community of sisters from the Silicon Valley, Africa, and the Middle East in TechWomen – intentionally dividing us felt very bad, even for such a brief educational experience.

In getting to all of our meetings and events, almost every day the Delegation was driven past many miles of Townships which showed varying degrees of infrastructure quality (roads, electricity, fences, garbage pickup) and prosperity. I think South Africa Townships are something like American suburbs but not as ethnically integrated as what I see in California suburbs.  From what the guides said, there are very active, expensive, and controversial government programs to upgrade and sometimes relocate the Townships. In just a week, I could not possibly understand the subtleties of these programs and their politics but it did seem that South Africa has a great deal of work ahead of it.  One of my take-aways from the trip was a new context in which to think about America’s own race and ethnic complexities.

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Images Copyright 2015 by Katy Dickinson

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Crafts in South Africa

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During the January 2015 TechWomen mentoring program Delegation to South Africa, I was able to see (and buy!) many remarkable crafts. Even though I try to buy directly from the craft workers (rather than from brokers), or at least buy local rather than imported goods if possible, within Africa craft sales are quietly international. Some of the crafts for sale in Cape Town were clearly imported from Kenya and Rwanda (confirmed by the shop keepers) but I also realized that a wood carving I purchased in May 2014 in Ethiopia was probably from South Africa. All of the cloth I purchased in Rwanda last year was from Congo, and the cloth I purchased last month in South Africa was from Zimbabwe (again, confirmed by the shop keepers).

The most remarkable crafts I saw in South Africa involved glass beads: jewelry, pottery with beads, bead and wire animals. Some notable craft sources:

  • Arts on Main in Maboneng Precinct, Johannesburg – a location for dozens of small craft shops and food stalls in an old warehouse, including a very creative photo vendor called iwasshot in joburg – “a platform for former street children to learn skills and generate an income”
  • Streetwires in Cape Town – first rate creativity and execution in a wide variety of designs.  I liked the animals and angels best!
  • TheBarn incubator and community center (in Khayelitsha, Cape Town) – featuring several small craft shops, including the work of notable potter Martin Mayongo whose beaded raku ware pottery is superb.
  • MzansiStore – a popup store inside of a hotel in Cape Town
  • Greenmarket Square, Cape Town – a location for dozens of small craft stalls under awnings outside, some staffed by craft workers but most run by brokers

If you don’t have much time to shop, the Out of Africa store in the Johannesburg airport has a good selection.  Pictures from my craft hunting:
guineafowl, hoopoe glass bead and wire from Streetwires, Cape Town South Africa

Streetwires, Cape Town South Africa

Streetwires, Cape Town South Africa

Martin Mayongo pots with beads, TheBarn,  Khayelitsha, Cape Town South Africa . Martin Mayongo plate with beads, TheBarn,  Khayelitsha, Cape Town South Africa

TheBarn,  Khayelitsha, Cape Town South Africa

beadwork jewelry bought at Greenmarket Square and TheBarn,  Khayelitsha, Cape Town South Africa

beadwork jewelry bought at Greenmarket Square Cape Town South Africa

cloth from Zimbabwe, bought at Greenmarket Square Cape Town South Africa . tablecloth from Zimbabwe, bought at Greenmarket Square Cape Town South Africa

Greenmarket Square Cape Town South Africa

Greenmarket Square Cape Town South Africa

bead and wire kudu head from Greenmarket Square Cape Town South Africa

MzansiStore craftworkers and TechWomen, Cape Town South Africa

Out of Africa store in the Johannesburg airport
Images Copyright 2015 by Katy Dickinson

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TechWomen Delegation to South Africa

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I am still catching up from my trip to South Africa with the TechWomen Delegation. Some of the highlights for me of this inspiring trip to Johannesburg, Pretoria, Cape Town and nearby Townships were spending time in a professional workshop or coaching session with girls and women, particularly at the Phateng Secondary School (in Mamelodi, Pretoria), TheBarn incubator (in Khayelitsha, Cape Town), and at the African Institute of Mathematical Sciences (in Muizenberg, Cape Town) where I was honored to give a talk on mentoring. It was a great pleasure to spend the week with the other two 2011 TechWomen Alumnae in the SA Delegation – my dear friends Sukaina Al-Nasrawi and Maysoun Ibrahim. We have not seen each other in-person since Jessica and I visited them in Beirut in 2012.

Eileen Brewer and I gave away dozens of “TechWomen Emerging Leaders from Africa and the Middle East” posters and card decks (now for sale!) – often in a brief formal presentation at the end of the Delegation’s visit. We hope that these educational materials will continue to inspire women in their technical aspirations for many years to come.  This trip marks the farthest South I have ever been!

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Our Delegation was all technical professional women with the addition of two brave husbands!

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Images Copyright 2015 by Katy Dickinson

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TechWomen 1st Day of Meetings in Johannesburg and Pretoria

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The TechWomen Delegation spent the morning of this first day of formal meetings at the The University of the Witwatersrand (“Wits”) campus speaking with US diplomatic, economic, cultural, and political staff about South Africa.  We then traveled by bus to Pretoria for a fascinating afternoon hosted by the African Development Bank discussing a wide variety of technical-women’s issues in Africa, including: access to technology, workforce capacity building, and leadership development.

There was interest both in the “TechWomen Emerging Leaders from Africa and the Middle East” posters and playing cards (now available for purchase thanks to Jessica creating our new ecommerce website!), and in the Mentoring Best Practices materials I have published. Eileen Brewer and I presented posters and card decks to our hosts at each of the sites we visited.

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Images Copyright 2015 by Katy Dickinson

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