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EGYPT - The Coptic Evangelical Organization for Social Services (CEOSS)
This tape was produced by a team of young women from Beni Ghani within months of their learning to use video equipment. It will be used to advocate for girls' education in a region where primary school attendance shows a gender disparity of over 14% in favor of boys. Partner Organization Profile The Coptic Evangelical Organization for Social Services (CEOSS) is an Egyptian non-governmental organization that provides wide-ranging community development assistance. Its social welfare-oriented approach emphasizes integrated programs and services in education, environment, health and agriculture. Volunteer-based, CEOSS fosters self-management of projects by community members.
Project Implementation Under the USAID-funded Partnership Projects for Girls and Young Women, CEDPA subcontracted Communication for Change to provide participatory communication training for NGO development field workers and young women in several "New Horizons" communities. The objectives of the project include:
Workshop participants gained familiarity with camera functions and techniques through shooting exercises. They developed their interpersonal skills by taping both real and role-played interviews. They learned the importance of production planning and storyboarding, and of working closely as a team while filming. By the workshop's conclusion, each team had produced sequentially-shot ("in-camera" edited) videos, and had screened them for community members. In several cases, apprehension was replaced by relief and pride when audiences expressed their admiration for the teams' work.
The approval and support of community members has been essential to the project's growth. Initially somewhat nervous and self-conscious about filming in their communities, many team members have spoken of the confidence they now feel in shooting, carrying out interviews with diverse individuals, and expressing their views in general.
"Video and Community Dreams" programs are effecting change. One of the first tapes produced by the team in Beni Ghani was about a polluted canal that has become a public health threat. Opening with images of the filthy waterway, the tape features interviews with a variety of community members - children, parents, elders, the local doctor and an engineer - all of whom address the problem. The finished tape was shown to over 200 villagers. A community delegation then screened it for a key official. As a result, filling in the canal has become a priority among local leaders and officials. Other tapes have advocated for the educational and recreational needs of village children, presented medical, religious and social arguments against the practice of female genital mutilation, and decried pollution of the Nile. In addition, the teams are using video to document local development initiatives, such as the building of new schools or small loan programs that help individuals start their own businesses. Preliminary indications suggest that these videotapes have been viewed not by hundreds but rather thousands of people in the project communities.
New team members, including girls ages 15-19, are now being trained by the original video workshop participants. These new recruits have offered many ideas for future program topics, including a woman's "right to choose" in matters of study, work, and her partner in life. Young trainees have expressed their excitement at being involved, and particularly at the prospect of learning to use the video gear. As one village girl put it, through this project "she can do whatever a boy could do." Another stressed, "I am not less than a boy," and said that because of her involvement in the project she will gain respect in her family and the community. |
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