Colleagues. I've attached a flyer that announces the death of Rev. Zan White, the husband of Jan Peterson, the Chairperson of the Huairou Commission's Secretariat. Zan died last week in a drowning accident. I understand from Dick Alton that Jan and her husband have been colleagues who lived in a religious house many years ago. I wonder if others know of the Zan White-Jan Peterson family and have any memories they could share. David ps. I'm currently working with two of Jan's staff members on a Grassroots Women's Community Justice Guide, a resource for facilitating women's land and property ownership in Africa, to be published by the Huairou Commission next month. David Dunn 740 S Alton Way 9B Denver, CO 80247 -- dmdunn1@gmail.com 720-314-5991
I recall a man with reddish hair, perhaps at a summer program. Jim Wiegel Jfwiegel@yahoo.com “One cannot live in the afternoon of life according to the program of life’s morning; for what was great in the morning will be of little importance in the evening, and what in the morning was true will at evening have become a lie.” – Carl Jung Partners in Participation Upcoming public course opportunities: ToP Facilitation Methods, Sept 11-12, 2012 ToP Strategic Planning, Oct 9-10, 2012 The AZ Community of Practice meets the 1st Friday- Sept 7, 2012 Facilitation Mastery : Our Mastering the Technology of Participation program is available in Phoenix in 2012-3. Program begins on Nov 14-16, 2012 See short video http://partnersinparticipation.com/?page_id=55 and website for further details. On Aug 13, 2012, at 14:37, David M Dunn <dmdunn1@gmail.com> wrote:
Colleagues.
I've attached a flyer that announces the death of Rev. Zan White, the husband of Jan Peterson, the Chairperson of the Huairou Commission's Secretariat. Zan died last week in a drowning accident.
I understand from Dick Alton that Jan and her husband have been colleagues who lived in a religious house many years ago. I wonder if others know of the Zan White-Jan Peterson family and have any memories they could share.
David
ps. I'm currently working with two of Jan's staff members on a Grassroots Women's Community Justice Guide, a resource for facilitating women's land and property ownership in Africa, to be published by the Huairou Commission next month.
David Dunn 740 S Alton Way 9B Denver, CO 80247 -- dmdunn1@gmail.com 720-314-5991
<Zan flyer.pdf> _______________________________________________ Dialogue mailing list Dialogue@lists.wedgeblade.net http://lists.wedgeblade.net/listinfo.cgi/dialogue-wedgeblade.net
David, What is the HuaiRou Commission? Five of us traveled as the ICA official Observers Delegation, led by then-ICAI Pres Shizuyo Sato, to the UN Women's Conference in Beijing in 1995, and, with the others in our delegation, I led an ICA ToP workshop in HuaiRou at the Shadow (NGO) Conference there (standing room only even though we were competing in the same time slot with Hillary Clinton and/or Gloria Steinham, as I recall). So I'm very curious about the HuaiRou Commission. Susan From: oe-bounces@lists.wedgeblade.net [mailto:oe-bounces@lists.wedgeblade.net] On Behalf Of David M Dunn Sent: Monday, August 13, 2012 1:38 PM To: Dialogue' Listserv; Order Ecumenical Community Subject: [Oe List ...] The death of Rev. Zan White Colleagues. I've attached a flyer that announces the death of Rev. Zan White, the husband of Jan Peterson, the Chairperson of the Huairou Commission's Secretariat. Zan died last week in a drowning accident. I understand from Dick Alton that Jan and her husband have been colleagues who lived in a religious house many years ago. I wonder if others know of the Zan White-Jan Peterson family and have any memories they could share. David ps. I'm currently working with two of Jan's staff members on a Grassroots Women's Community Justice Guide, a resource for facilitating women's land and property ownership in Africa, to be published by the Huairou Commission next month. David Dunn 740 S Alton Way 9B Denver, CO 80247 -- dmdunn1@gmail.com 720-314-5991
On Aug 13, 2012, at 1:55 PM, Susan Fertig <susan@gmdtech.com> wrote:
David, What is the HuaiRou Commission? Five of us traveled as the ICA official Observers Delegation, led by then-ICAI Pres Shizuyo Sato, to the UN Women’s Conference in Beijing in 1995, and, with the others in our delegation, I led an ICA ToP workshop in HuaiRou at the Shadow (NGO) Conference there (standing room only even though we were competing in the same time slot with Hillary Clinton and/or Gloria Steinham, as I recall). So I’m very curious about the HuaiRou Commission. Susan
You'll recognize the connection immediately in this narrative from the Huairou Commission's website: ---- The founding members and leaders of the Huairou Commission came out of the global women’s movement, working relentlessly to advance women’s meaningful participation in UN conferences and other global processes. Grassroots women’s groups were largely absent from these global processes for years. A common concern was growing among women committed to advancing grassroots women in development that the global women’s movement was not ensuring processes for including grassroots women themselves in their agenda-setting and advocacy, and that the issues poor communities were dealing with on a daily basis such as basic services, access to food, livelihoods, water and sanitation, etc, were not being prioritized. The Women, Homes and Community Super-coalition, consisting of GROOTS International, Women and Habitat Network, International Council of Women and WEDO joined together at the 4th World Women’s Conference in Beijing to ensure that issues women were dealing with in their homes and poor communities were addressed. GROOTS International organized a Grassroots Tent as a space for grassroots women’s organizations to gather and share. The other super-coalition members joined GROOTS in the tent, located in the civil society village in Huairou, a suburb of Beijing. It was in this tent where Wally N’Dow, then Executive Director of the UN Commission on Human Settlements (now UN Habitat) announced the formation of the Huairou Commission. He “Commissioned” the members of the Super Coalition to monitor Habitat II in 1996 from a women’s perspective, and he named them the Huairou Commission. He appointed 50 women leaders to the Commission including high level women leaders within the UN. For the first time, an organized group of women had a central role to play in the human settlements arena. Our relationship with UN Habitat remains strong as we ensure space for women to organize and participate with a women’s voice in UN Habitat initiatives. From its original position as an advisory body to Habitat II in Istanbul, HC over the years has evolved into a global movement for grassroots women’s empowerment in development cutting across diverse themes, sectors and actors. We have grown into a partnership entity, focusing on grassroots women taking leadership, linking them with partners and facilitating peer learning. HC believes that a paradigm shift needs to occur in how development policies are made and implemented, for people and institutions to stop thinking of grassroots groups as projects and start thinking of them as change agents and partners in development. HC has grown to implement and model this paradigm shift. Eventually, thematic areas of work began to emerge from the work across different networks, and our thematic Campaigns were developed and operationalized. The work grew from the work that grassroots women’s groups were doing and from the joint priorities of the Member Networks of the Huairou Commission. ---- David David Dunn 740 S Alton Way 9B Denver, CO 80247 -- dmdunn1@gmail.com 720-314-5991
Fascinating. One of the frustrations I felt at the main UN Women's conference in Beijing was the large numbers of Arabic and predominantly Muslim African nations whose delegations were headed by men, who probably coerced all the votes of their female delegations. Every morning those male heads of delegations would go through the area where there were tables where organizations could put their literature, and they would scoop up and throw away the literature on women's rights that they didn't approve of. I was appalled and yet no one stopped them even when officials were notified. I know we'd hoped to see a resolution denouncing female genital mutilation at that conference, but the voting delegates couldn't get it passed. The main resolution that did succeed was one demanding inheritance rights for women. Susan From: oe-bounces@lists.wedgeblade.net [mailto:oe-bounces@lists.wedgeblade.net] On Behalf Of David M Dunn Sent: Monday, August 13, 2012 4:38 PM To: Order Ecumenical Community Subject: Re: [Oe List ...] The death of Rev. Zan White On Aug 13, 2012, at 1:55 PM, Susan Fertig <susan@gmdtech.com> wrote: David, What is the HuaiRou Commission? Five of us traveled as the ICA official Observers Delegation, led by then-ICAI Pres Shizuyo Sato, to the UN Women's Conference in Beijing in 1995, and, with the others in our delegation, I led an ICA ToP workshop in HuaiRou at the Shadow (NGO) Conference there (standing room only even though we were competing in the same time slot with Hillary Clinton and/or Gloria Steinham, as I recall). So I'm very curious about the HuaiRou Commission. Susan You'll recognize the connection immediately in this narrative from the Huairou Commission's website <http://www.huairou.org/history> : ---- The founding members and leaders of the Huairou Commission came out of the global women's movement, working relentlessly to advance women's meaningful participation in UN conferences and other global processes. Grassroots women's groups were largely absent from these global processes for years. A common concern was growing among women committed to advancing grassroots women in development that the global women's movement was not ensuring processes for including grassroots women themselves in their agenda-setting and advocacy, and that the issues poor communities were dealing with on a daily basis such as basic services, access to food, livelihoods, water and sanitation, etc, were not being prioritized. The Women, Homes and Community Super-coalition, consisting of GROOTS International, Women and Habitat Network, International Council of Women and WEDO joined together at the 4th World Women's Conference in Beijing to ensure that issues women were dealing with in their homes and poor communities were addressed. GROOTS International organized a Grassroots Tent as a space for grassroots women's organizations to gather and share. The other super-coalition members joined GROOTS in the tent, located in the civil society village in Huairou, a suburb of Beijing. It was in this tent where Wally N'Dow, then Executive Director of the UN Commission on Human Settlements (now UN Habitat) announced the formation of the Huairou Commission. He "Commissioned" the members of the Super Coalition to monitor Habitat II in 1996 from a women's perspective, and he named them the Huairou Commission. He appointed 50 women leaders to the Commission including high level women leaders within the UN. For the first time, an organized group of women had a central role to play in the human settlements arena. Our relationship with UN Habitat remains strong as we ensure space for women to organize and participate with a women's voice in UN Habitat initiatives.
From its original position as an advisory body to Habitat II in Istanbul, HC over the years has evolved into a global movement for grassroots women's empowerment in development cutting across diverse themes, sectors and actors. We have grown into a partnership entity, focusing on grassroots women taking leadership, linking them with partners and facilitating peer learning. HC believes that a paradigm shift needs to occur in how development policies are made and implemented, for people and institutions to stop thinking of grassroots groups as projects and start thinking of them as change agents and partners in development. HC has grown to implement and model this paradigm shift. Eventually, thematic areas of work began to emerge from the work across different networks, and our thematic Campaigns were developed and operationalized. The work grew from the work that grassroots women's groups were doing and from the joint priorities of the Member Networks of the Huairou Commission.
---- David David Dunn 740 S Alton Way 9B Denver, CO 80247 -- dmdunn1@gmail.com 720-314-5991
Thanks, Susan. It's wonderful when colleagues share their stories. Those not shared may be lost. What amazing adventures we all have had through the years - and this conference delegation and workshop was one of them. Janice Ulangca ----- Original Message ----- From: Susan Fertig To: 'Order Ecumenical Community' Sent: Monday, August 13, 2012 3:55 PM Subject: Re: [Oe List ...] The death of Rev. Zan White David, What is the HuaiRou Commission? Five of us traveled as the ICA official Observers Delegation, led by then-ICAI Pres Shizuyo Sato, to the UN Women's Conference in Beijing in 1995, and, with the others in our delegation, I led an ICA ToP workshop in HuaiRou at the Shadow (NGO) Conference there (standing room only even though we were competing in the same time slot with Hillary Clinton and/or Gloria Steinham, as I recall). So I'm very curious about the HuaiRou Commission. Susan From: oe-bounces@lists.wedgeblade.net [mailto:oe-bounces@lists.wedgeblade.net] On Behalf Of David M Dunn Sent: Monday, August 13, 2012 1:38 PM To: Dialogue' Listserv; Order Ecumenical Community Subject: [Oe List ...] The death of Rev. Zan White Colleagues. I've attached a flyer that announces the death of Rev. Zan White, the husband of Jan Peterson, the Chairperson of the Huairou Commission's Secretariat. Zan died last week in a drowning accident. I understand from Dick Alton that Jan and her husband have been colleagues who lived in a religious house many years ago. I wonder if others know of the Zan White-Jan Peterson family and have any memories they could share. David ps. I'm currently working with two of Jan's staff members on a Grassroots Women's Community Justice Guide, a resource for facilitating women's land and property ownership in Africa, to be published by the Huairou Commission next month. David Dunn 740 S Alton Way 9B Denver, CO 80247 -- dmdunn1@gmail.com 720-314-5991 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ _______________________________________________ OE mailing list OE@lists.wedgeblade.net http://lists.wedgeblade.net/listinfo.cgi/oe-wedgeblade.net
participants (4)
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David M Dunn -
James Wiegel -
Janice Ulangca -
Susan Fertig