Campaigns, surveys and shared reports

An illustration of a blackhole. Artwork by Haisam Al Saiegh
Artwork by Haisam Al Saiegh
  • Radio Arta participated in the Media4Women campaign launched by Free Press Unlimited, in cooperation with international organisations, with the aim of establishing an international media movement to highlight the importance of gender equality in and through the media. Arta *
  • “Public Space and the Body” is a report produced by the Syrian Female Journalists Network (SFJN) with the aim of producing intersectional feminist content.
  • Syria Untold published a collection of articles within the “Let’s Do Justice” campaign, in cooperation and partnership with the Institute for War and Peace Reporting.
  • Ongoing cooperation and partnership between Syria Untold and the Syrian Female Journalists Network, including the “Women, Peace and Security” programme. Syria Untold *
  • Many women and civil society organisations hold empowerment courses for Syrian women in the Turkish city of Gaziantep so that they become ready to enter the labour market, but the question always arises: “Are these training activities made just about funds and grants, or do they actually achieve the goals for which they are organised and carried out?”

Rozana distributed a questionnaire to more than 60 women as a follow up on the impact of these training activities and listened to women who participated to compare the results of these reports on the ground. Rozana *

– Another questionnaire directed to Syrian women looks at available access to the law on exposure to violence or to human rights organisations concerned in this regard. Rozana*

– Suggestion of a questionnaire from guest editor Yamam: if you answer 10 questions with yes instead of no, you may only be a carrier of an unconscious male inheritance shared by 80 percent of men. This is not evil, just that it needs a bit of struggle, knowledge building, care and increased sensitivity to these issues, but if you answered yes to more than 15 questions, you are closer to being misogynistic. Aljumhuriya *

The gender section of Aljumhuriya.net will host, for an indefinite period, an editor who volunteered to respond to our readers’ many messages on various topics related to the section. From the first moment we called on this editor, she immediately announced her volatile, dry and sharp temperament, her generally “anxious frame” and her lack of particular fascination with feminist, queer and liberal theories and political correctness, despite her knowledge of all of them. She also stipulated that we should not force her to always be correct in this difficult media and journalistic exercise in which we imprisoned her. However, we will try to frame her as correctly as possible knowing that she is always trying to find answers to our questions and those of our readers, although sometimes she asks more questions than the original question. We ask our readers to be bold, as there is no shame in science, but also to be kind in their questions, because she might become someone else if she gets angry over unexpected things. We could not commit her to a specific rhythm for answering questions in her corner because of her temperament, and she suggested that she refer questions to knowledgeable experts and consult friends if she did not have satisfactory answers. Our guest editor, as we said above, is named Yamam. We invite you to welcome her with us and wait for her during the coming weeks and to not hesitate to ask your questions from now on.

Ask Yamam: courting

Rahaf, a Syrian immigrant woman who has been based in a European capital for years now, wrote to Yamam a few weeks ago with a statement and an inquiry: “Hello, madam, my teenage son surprised me with a question that made me sad when he asked me: Is inviting a classmate to a coffee considered harassment?”

“Before I let you talk to your son, I suggest you listen to Scheherazade’s piece by Koraskov, a piece that suggests this beautiful verbal fanfare that we call courting.” Aljumhuriya *

Please accept marketing cookies to see this video.

Ask Yamam: swipe left

We received from a young expatriate, Huyam, who recently moved to eastern Germany, the following question: “I am new to dating applications and I would like to get your tips on making use of these apps as much as possible and avoid disasters.”

Here we can summarise the first rule: if the online dating platform requires you to sit on a chair and deal with a laptop, then this means that you are sitting in front of a passage into the past, and you will meet people who smell the fragrance of history. This in itself is not a problem, especially if your taste is vintage, which is something we respect, and as such dedicate to you this immortal song by ABBA.” Aljumhuriya *

Please accept marketing cookies to see this video.

Ask Yamam: I really love women

Ismail wrote to us from the city of Batna in eastern Algeria asking: “What exactly is meant by the word misogynist? Bearing in mind that I adore women and consider them goddesses and embodiments of angels on earth, and knowing that my neighbour and childhood friend Ahmed does not desire women – let’s leave it at that to avoid saying anything else – and he was not subjected to this charge before, to the best of my knowledge.”

“Dear Ismail, I wanted to ask you two questions as well, but I have smoke shooting out of my ears at the moment unfortunately. I will suggest that you listen with me to a nerve-wracking piece by a nineteenth-century composer – you certainly didn’t hear about it, because she is a woman, not because you are ignorant or something, and her name is Marie Jaëll.” Aljumhuriya *

Please accept marketing cookies to see this video.

Ask Yamam: get out of my head

L.Q. wrote to us from the Al-Khazzan neighbourhood in an Arab coastal city, inquiring about the meaning of the expression “mental burdens”, which her friends used to tell her since she began complaining of clouds that always hover over her brain and prevent her from concentrating, along with other symptoms such as permanent fatigue, bad mood, anxiety and sleep disturbances. Meanwhile, her husband is open to helping her around the house and she doesn’t think that the burdens fall exclusively on her. L.Q. is newly married, working and has a three-year-old child.

Finally, if you are reading this short text, or if you are gathering and collecting for the 60th time the stockings and other stuff of your children, I advise you to listen to Raphael’s Bolero, you will definitely remember me and guess why I suggested it. Aljumhuriya *

Please accept marketing cookies to see this video.

XwhY

XwhY is a reader of gender and sexuality related-content that represents the problems and challenges faced by women and LGBTQIA+ communities in Syria and the region.

xwhy cover with logo, an illustration of two people against a black background with a road and the XwhY logo in the top corner. Illustration by Haytham Al-Sayegh
Introduction XwhY
Metamorphosis of the body and sexuality
How the tale starts…
Again in other plastic boxes
A religious undertaking or a patriarchal tendency
Inflicting harm based on difference
Female detainees face a social stigma
A harassment-infested region
Between two camps… and solitude
Tarps fly away with the first gust of wind
Reality and hopes between laws and social traditions
Empowerment vs “slow change”
Syrian women’s path towards political participation…
Women's sports in the face of conservative social norms
Campaigns surveys and shared reports
Audience interaction…breaking the silence.
Sexual diversity star instead of the binary slash
Gender and sexuality reader Visit page

Since they were united in the embrace, they became two no more

A pair they had become

But we cannot say if a woman or a man they were

They appear sexless

But of two sexes each all the same.Visit page

I was 13 years old when I learned how to cook pasta at school. Meanwhile, my boy friends were playing football in the schoolyard. Visit page
How would it feel if we try to put you inside a plastic box with a transparent lid, and let you watch the world from there as much as the world is watching you? Visit page
Al-Hisba / Muhrim / the Branch / abominations / morals / do-gooders / right and wrong / veil and chastity / morality police … “Do we have Islamic feminism? Visit page
Women and the confrontation of violence… between the injustice of society and lacking protection alternatives. Visit page
Mending what has been broken, Female detainees face social stigma after their release from the Syrian prisons. Visit page
when these relations are imposed, in a space that feeds on fears that grow in the heart and mind. Visit page
After this long life, how can you want to preserve the right to life for yourself? You are already destroyed, even God cannot untangle your internal destruction. Visit page
In these forgotten camps, our concern was to secure many of the missing simple and basic things, the most important is how to get water, showers and hygiene. Visit page
Societal traditions prevent the progress from being put into practice, so how can we get out of this deadlock? Visit page
It was funny to read that more than a quarter of women would rather criticize their partner’s sexual performance than talk about money. Visit page
I am specifically calling for intersectional thinking, not to “adaptation”, the intersection between feminist and gender issues with all political issues. Visit page
Professional training, with the aim of supporting local women against extremist and conservative values. Visit page
despite the lack of data, interactive alternatives were in place. Visit page
The impact of breaking the silence and shifting from bullying to dialogue. Visit page
The most challenging aspect we faced while preparing the content was using appropriate language, but it wasn’t the only one. Visit page
xwhy logo
Intro
xwhy cover no logo
Part 1
An illustration of child sitting in the road. A small toy is to their right.
Part 2
Artwork by Haisam Al Saiegh
Part 3
Artwork by Haisam Al Saiegh
Part 4
Artwork by Haisam Al Saiegh
Part 5
Detention person standing by a table against a black background. Illustration: Haytham Al-Sayegh
Part 6
An abstract painting of a woman being harassed by a man Artwork by Haisam Al Saiegh
Part 7
an abstract painting of a tent in a refugee camp. Artwork by Haisam Al Saiegh
Part 8
an illustration of a woman looking concerned while trying to use a toilet under a tarp Artwork: Haytham Al-Sayegh
Part 9
an illustration of a bird hunched over and walking away. Artwork: Haytham Al-Sayegh
Part 10
Artwork by Haisam Al Saiegh
Part 11
An illustration of a woman sitting in the dark, a microphone to her left and purple shoes in front of her. Artwork by Haisam Al Saiegh
Part 12
An illustrations of athletic shoes on a road. One of the shoes appears to have a stiletto heal. Artwork by Haisam Al Saiegh
Part 13
An illustration of a blackhole. Artwork by Haisam Al Saiegh
Part 14
An abstract illustration of a person tangled up. Artwork by Haisam Al Saiegh
Part 15
An illustration of an asterix against a bright blue background Artwork: Artwork by Haisam Al Saiegh
Part 16