The Board of Directors of Global Woman P.E.A.C.E. Foundation convened in their 2019 Year-end meeting this past Saturday. The members met over lunch in an area restaurant to review their annual reports, events, and activities in 2019. They also strategically planned their calendar and budget for the upcoming year. The members look forward to the coming year, and the new implementations they discussed.
They have agreed to a few changes in the organization in the upcoming year, 2020. Some of the expected changes are future improvements to the monthly support group, the annual Walk To End FGM, fundraising campaigns, their website, and the Global Woman Newsletter (GWN). All of these changes are more on an improvement basis in the interest of the women and girls GWPF services, and the supporters.
It was agreed that the GWPF’s website does not do justice to the many activities in which the organization engages. Therefore the website will be going through reconstruction sometime in 2020. GWPF asks your patience, understanding and support while they undergo all of the changes they have planned for 2020.
Being mindful of you, their readers, the organization has decided to reduce the frequency of the newsletter to a monthly publication. Since the inception of the Global Woman Newsletter in 2015, it has been a weekly publication. However GWN wants to hear from you in this decision; share with them on FaceBook or send them an email at info@globalwomanpeacefoundation.org and tell them if you would like to see the newsletter remain weekly or see it moved to a monthly publication. The deadline to send in your vote is Saturday, December 28, 2019. Please visit the FaceBook page of Global Woman P.E.A.C.E. Foundation at https://www.facebook.com/globalwomanpeacefoundation and vote either “monthly” or “weekly” to determine the frequency of the newsletter publication in 2020. GWN looks forward to hearing from you with your vote.
Seen in the photograph are some members of the Board of Directors. Missing from the photograph are Amie Jallah, Arnold DeShield and Lisa Brett.
Did you know that when you shop for the holidays at Amazon, AmazonSmile donates to Global Woman P.E.A.C.E. Foundation?
In your charitable contributions and donations in 2019, please consider Global Woman P.E.A.C.E. Foundation by either through the DONATE BUTTON or by sending a check to Global Woman P.E.A.C.E. Foundation, 14001-C St. Germain Drive #453 Centreville, Virginia 20121. Your generous donations are tax deductible. Global Woman P.E.A.C.E. Foundation is a 501c3 nonprofit organization.
Do you enjoy playing with words? This is a fun way to see how well you can unscramble the following words. We will reveal the unscrambled words in next week’s edition of the newsletter. If you enjoyed this, write and give us your feedback to info@globalwomanpeacefoundation.org.
Can you unscramble the following five words?
This Week’s Scrambled Words
DRAOB GNITEEM (2 WORDS)
RAEY DNE (2 WORDS)
KOOBECAF
LABOLG NAMOW RETTELSWEN (3 WORDS)
GNISIARDNUF SNGIAPMAC (2 WORDS)
Last Week’s Scrambled WordsLast Week’s Unscrambled Words
ETANOD DONATE
NOZAMA ELIMS AMAZON SMILE
GNIVIG YADSEUT GIVING TUESDAY
ETIROVAF YTIRAHC FAVORITE CHARITY
SNOITUBIRTNOC CONTRIBUTIONS
We give you five scrambled words each week. We hope you enjoy playing.
The month of November comes with the theme of gratitude, giving thanks, appreciation, sharing and giving. Everyone thinks of Christmas as the time for giving and exchanging gifts but Thanksgiving sets the theme a month prior to Christmas.
The question is asked, “Why do Americans eat turkey on Thanksgiving?” Records show that the 1621 settlers went on a turkey hunting trip just before they sat down to eat with the Wampanoag natives. Since it is known that their meal consisted of foul and beef, it is assumed that the foul was turkey. After President Lincoln declared Thanksgiving a national holiday in 1863, the turkey became the American meal of choice for that day. But Thanksgiving is not only about a meal of turkey and trimmings. It is also about giving thanks for the accomplishments and blessings of that year. It is traditional for some families to have everyone around the table take turns in stating why he or she is thankful. The reasons for being thankful vary from each member of the family.
Recently, Global Woman Newsletter asked some young Virginia students what Thanksgiving means to them and why they are thankful this year. Here are some of their responses:
“Thanksgiving means eating turkey, pies, ham, and ice cream. I am thankful for my parents.”
“Thanksgiving is not only about a meal. It’s about giving and being thankful. I’m grateful for my dad.”
“It’s all about gratitude. I’m just thankful and grateful for everything.”
“I like Thanksgiving because we go to visit my grandparents, and my grandma cooks nice foods. I am thankful for my sister who always gives me her turkey leg.”
“I start getting excited about Thanksgiving when I go to stores and see Christmas decorations. That’s when I know Thanksgiving is on the way. I usually eat a lot for Thanksgiving because I’m too busy with my presents on Christmas Day to eat a lot. What am I thankful for? I’m thankful for having a nice home and everything I need. Many children my age in the world don’t have much.”
Well, you heard the children; it is all about being thankful and giving. Global Woman P.E.A.C.E. Foundation asks you this holiday season to help support their programs. They have four main programs; the Wholesome Organic Relief program, which covers the restorative surgery, counseling, and the support group. The Survivor Resettlement program facilitates survivors’ asylum applications, job applications and references, ESL education, and assimilation to American society. The Kids Reach Shield program educates law enforcement, school nurses, teachers and communities through the stages of prevention and protection. The Just4You program assists women and girls in Africa through a scholarship fund and the distribution of sanitary pads. Many girls in Africa miss up to 5 days of school each month due to lack of sanitary pads. Will you help a girl or young lady during this Thanksgiving season, as they strive to accomplish their goals in the coming year? They will be thankful for you.
When the Executive Director of Global Woman P.E.A.C.E. Foundation was asked for what she is thankful this Thanksgiving, she said, “Naturally, I am thankful for my biological family, but I am grateful for the Global Woman P.E.A.C.E. family; the wonderful board members and the women who call me their mom, because they are a part of this GWPF family.” She continued, “I am also thankful that Kameel Ahmady, our 2018 Literary Awardee is free on bond, and is with his family, finally.”
In the spirit of giving on this #GivingTuesday, Global Woman P.E.A.C.E. Foundation asks that you join them in that spirit by supporting them. When you shop again on Amazon, please choose Global Woman P.E.A.C.E. as your charity of choice. As you their supporters make your purchases from www.Amazon.com please do so by supporting them at: https://smile.amazon.com/ch/42-1690778 and Amazon will donate to Global Woman P.E.A.C.E. Foundation. Remember to use the hashtag, #StartWithaSmile athttps://smile.amazon.com/ch/42-1690778. The organization appreciates your donations and wish you safe and happy shopping!
Global Woman P.E.A.C.E. Foundation wishes you and your family a Happy and Safe Thanksgiving!
When you shop Black Friday deals at Amazon, AmazonSmile donates to Global Woman P.E.A.C.E. Foundation!
In your charitable contributions and donations in 2019, please consider Global Woman P.E.A.C.E. Foundation by either through the DONATE BUTTON or by sending a check to Global Woman P.E.A.C.E. Foundation, 14001-C St. Germain Drive #453 Centreville, Virginia 20121. Your generous donations are tax deductible. Global Woman P.E.A.C.E. Foundation is a 501c3 nonprofit organization.
Do you enjoy playing with words? This is a fun way to see how well you can unscramble the following words. We will reveal the unscrambled words in next week’s edition of the newsletter. If you enjoyed this, write and give us your feedback to info@globalwomanpeacefoundation.org.
Can you unscramble the following five words?
This Week’s Scrambled Words
GNIVIGSKNAHT YAD (2 WORDS)
UOY4TSUJ
EMOSELOHW CINAGRO FEILER (3 WORDS)
ROVIVRUS TNEMELTTESER (2 WORDS)
SDIK HCAER DLEIHS (3 WORDS)
Last Week’s Scrambled WordsLast Week’s Unscrambled Words
TROPPUS PUORG SUPPORT GROUP
GNIVIGSKNAHT TSAEF THANKSGIVING FEAST
ERAC DNA EVOL CARE AND LOVE
FOLOJ ECIR JOLOF RICE
AIBMAG GAMBIA
We give you five scrambled words each week. We hope you enjoy playing.
Next Thursday, November 28th, Americans will celebrate a day of thanksgiving. The first Thanksgiving is known to have taken place in the year 1621. It was a feast between the Pilgrims and the Wampanoag Tribesmen at Plymouth Colony. According to Wikipedia, that first Thanksgiving meal consisted of waterfowl, venison (deer), fish, lobster, clams, berries, fruit, pumpkin, and squash. The most popular item in next week’s Thanksgiving meal will be turkey. What sets this holiday apart from others is that it is non-religious and is not restricted to any one ethnicity. It is the one holiday in America that all religions and all ethnicities, regardless of citizenship come together to celebrate and give thanks. According to travel agents and airlines throughout the country, Thanksgiving is the heaviest traveled holiday in the United States. It is when everyone finds his/her way to families or friends to sit down to a traditional Thanksgiving dinner, regardless of Christian, Jewish, Muslim, Hindu, Buddhist or no religion at all.
Global Woman P.E.A.C.E. Foundation (GWPF) had barely recovered from their busy 2-day event last month, but they found the time to host a Thanksgiving Feast this past Saturday for their monthly Support Group of FGM survivors. The Support Group has met every 3rd Saturday of the month since January of 2018. To date, it is the only support group for FGM survivors in the Washington, D.C. metro area. GWPF demonstrates care and love for the young women and girls whom they service, by sharing a special meal with them and their families each year. Attending the feast were board members, Amie Jallah and Angela Peabody, Psychologist and 2019 Global Woman Awardee, Willa Jones, FGM survivors, and GWPF’s intern, Charbene Williams.
The menu comprised of a combination of conventional American Thanksgiving meal and a touch of West African cuisine. They had a baked roaster, stuffing, baked potato, stewed green beans and tomato, baked salmon and jolof rice. Jolof rice is a traditional West African dish, originated in the Gambia but most countries in that region have made the popular rice dish a favorite on their special occasion menu. Dessert was apple and pumpkin pies.
Executive Director, Angela Peabody told the group how when she first suggested a support group a few years ago, Amie Jallah, their Vice President asked her where would they find FGM survivors. She said, she told her, “If we start it they will contact us.” She was right; their phone began to ring with women who had experienced FGM. They realized how much in need of a support group the Washington, D.C. area was. Peabody told the group that they are now a family, not just a group of women that meet once a month. She said they are not just candidates for the restorative surgery and therapy. They make up the family of the organization. GWPF has gained the women’s trust, and it is vital to the organization that the women have confidence in them. Confidentiality and respect are key factors in servicing them. Therefore they are not shown in photograph without their approval, and their names are never mentioned without their approval.
The afternoon was pleasant and enjoyable. Prior to their meal, each person around the table said for what she/he was thankful. Everyone dined heartily together, laughing, joking and telling stories of years prior. Peabody said she hopes the support group can continue to give the women the love and care that they need in post-FGM years.
GWPF wants to share with you why the organization is thankful this Thanksgiving. They are thankful for all of the survivors of FGM who are willing to stand with them in the campaign to end the practice. They are thankful this year for the success of the 6th annual Walk To End FGM. They are thankful for their many supporters, partners, donors and sponsors; they are also thankful for each person who stops and takes the time to listen as they explain what FGM is. They are thankful for the continued partnership of the Milken Institute for Public Health of George Washington University. They are thankful for the Commonwealth of Virginia and Senator Richard H. Black for supporting their efforts against FGM, and passing legislation year after year against FGM. They are thankful most especially for you.
As families gather around their dinner tables next Thursday, what will they be grateful for this Thanksgiving? Has it been a fruitful year for them? Has it been a year of drought, unemployment, or violence for them and their families? Or perhaps they overcame a terrible illness, and they’re thankful. Whatever the reason is for being thankful, let’s think about the injustices around the world that women and girls suffer every day. Let’s think about the little girls that will be hauled off into the remote bushes on that very day and parts or all of their external genitalia will be excised. Please think about the more than 200 million women and girls in the world that have been violated through female genital mutilation.
Peabody said that beginning in 2020 the support group will strive to implement various ways to expand its service to additional women in other regions of the U.S. During this year the support group asked the women to complete a feedback form to help the facilitators of the support group know how to improve their services. GWPF has taken some of those responses into serious consideration for its 2020 plans. The group is excited at the prospect of the plans for the upcoming year.
December 3rd is #GivingTuesday. GWPF asks that you join them in the spirit by supporting the organization and the support group. When you shop this season on Amazon, please choose Global Woman P.E.A.C.E. as your charity of choice. As you, GWPF’s supporters make your purchases from amazon.com, please do so by supporting the organization at: https://smile.amazon.com/ch/42-1690778 and Amazon will donate to Global Woman P.E.A.C.E. Foundation. Please use #StartWithaSmile. We appreciate your donations and wish you happy shopping, and a safe and happy Thanksgiving!
Did you know that when you shop for the holidays at Amazon, AmazonSmile donates to Global Woman P.E.A.C.E. Foundation?
In your charitable contributions and donations in 2019, please consider Global Woman P.E.A.C.E. Foundation by either through the DONATE BUTTON or by sending a check to Global Woman P.E.A.C.E. Foundation, 14001-C St. Germain Drive #453 Centreville, Virginia 20121. Your generous donations are tax deductible. Global Woman P.E.A.C.E. Foundation is a 501c3 nonprofit organization.
Do you enjoy playing with words? This is a fun way to see how well you can unscramble the following words. We will reveal the unscrambled words in next week’s edition of the newsletter. If you enjoyed this, write and give us your feedback to info@globalwomanpeacefoundation.org.
Can you unscramble the following five words?
This Week’s Scrambled Words
TROPPUS PUORG (2 WORDS)
GNIVIGSKNAHT TSAEF (2 WORDS)
ERAC DNA EVOL (3 WORDS)
FOLOJ ECIR (2 WORDS)
AIBMAG
Last Week’s Scrambled WordsLast Week’s Unscrambled Words
GNIVIGSKNAHT THANKSGIVING
KCALB YADIRF BLACK FRIDAY
SREPPOHS SHOPPERS
REBYC KEEW CYBER WEEK
YTIRAHC CHARITY
We give you five scrambled words each week. We hope you enjoy playing.
The Friday after Thanksgiving is referred to as Black Friday. It is when most Americans take to the stores to capture the countless discounted items for the upcoming holiday season. Black Friday has become so popular in recent years; some shoppers shorten their Thanksgiving dinners and risk missing the excitement of the traditional football games, only to camp out in the cold for hours. They want to be the first in queue or line when the doors of the stores open.
Many shoppers prefer to skip the madness of Black Friday and shop online. If you are one of such shoppers, and there are items you select from Amazon, please go to Amazon Smile & donate to Global Woman P.E.A.C.E. Foundation (GWPF):As you make your purchases from Amazon.com, please do so by supporting GWPF at: AmazonSmile and Amazon will donate to Global Woman P.E.A.C.E. Foundation. #StartWithaSmile atAmazonSmile; Amazon will donate a percentage of what you spend to Global Woman P.E.A.C.E. Foundation, when you select GWPF as your favorite charity.
If you ever wondered about the origin of Black Friday, it dates back to as early as the 1800s. The day after Thanksgiving was not termed Black Friday in that century. The name was associated with September 24, 1869 when two speculators, Jay Gould and James Fisk created a “boom and bust” in gold prices. The first recorded Black Friday was not applied to holiday shopping, but to financial crisis, most especially, the crash of the gold market in the United States on September 24, 1869. Then gold market crashed, and those two men left Wall Street’s barons bankrupt on that day. In the early 17th century, Black Friday was known to be a slang term used by students, in the sense that examinations were held on Fridays.
Almost a century later, the day after Thanksgiving earned the name, Black Friday due to the volume of shoppers that created traffic accidents, and sometimes even violence. In the 1950s, employees began to call in sick the day after Thanksgiving, to give themselves a four-day weekend for shopping. The term became even more common in the 1960s, as it was referred to the congestion created by shoppers; it was later explained that the day after Thanksgiving was the day when retailers’ accounts went from being ‘in the red’ to being ‘in the black’. The earliest evidence of the phrase Black Friday applied to the day after Thanksgiving in a shopping context suggests that the term originated in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania where it was used to describe the heavy and disruptive pedestrian and vehicle traffic that would occur on the day after Thanksgiving.
Now in 2019 in the U.S., the day after Thanksgiving (Friday) is known as Black Friday. It has almost become a national holiday, as it is even marked on some calendars. The day was once unofficially or officially the start of the holiday shopping season. However revenue-wise, it is reported that Black Friday is not the biggest day for stores. It is reported that in recent years, the biggest sales day include the actual Thanksgiving Day, Green Monday (the online retail industry term – the second Monday in December), and Cyber Monday (the day after Thanksgiving). Green Monday was coined by eBay in 2007 to describe the best sales day in December, usually the second Monday of December. EBay christened it Green Monday for two reasons. First, green meant revenue for their company. Second, eBay markets online shopping as environmentally friendly, or greener than brick-and-mortar stores. However Green Monday is no longer considered the busiest day, as shoppers are attracted to deals throughout Cyber Week.
Whether it is Black Friday, Giving Tuesday, Cyber Monday or Green Monday, Global Woman P.E.A.C.E. Foundation (GWPF) asks you to keep them in mind during this holiday season as you spend in physical stores or online. Please remember that with each dollar you spend on these days, a percentage could go to your favorite charity. Would you inform the clerk at checkout that you would like to donate a percentage of your payment to your favorite charity? Would you make GWPF your favorite charity this holiday season? When you do, please feel free to inform the organization that you have chosen it as your favorite charity, and you will be provided their tax identification number.
Global Woman P.E.A.C.E. Foundation is a registered 501c3 not for profit organization with the Internal Revenue Service, and as such 100% of your donation is tax deductible. Thank you and have a safe and pleasant shopping on Black Friday.
Did you know that when you shop for the holidays at smile.amazon.com/ch/42-1690778, AmazonSmile donates to Global Woman P.E.A.C.E. Foundation?
In your charitable contributions and donations in 2019, please consider Global Woman P.E.A.C.E. Foundation by either through the DONATE BUTTON or by sending a check to Global Woman P.E.A.C.E. Foundation, 14001-C St. Germain Drive #453 Centreville, Virginia 20121. Your generous donations are tax deductible. Global Woman P.E.A.C.E. Foundation is a 501c3 nonprofit organization.
Do you enjoy playing with words? This is a fun way to see how well you can unscramble the following words. We will reveal the unscrambled words in next week’s edition of the newsletter. If you enjoyed this, write and give us your feedback to info@globalwomanpeacefoundation.org.
Can you unscramble the following five words?
This Week’s Scrambled Words
GNIVIGSKNAHT
KCALB YADIRF (2 WORDS)
SREPPOHS
REBYC KEEW (2 WORDS)
YTIRAHC
Last Week’s Scrambled WordsLast Week’s Unscrambled Words
AIRAM ALOIV ZEHCNAS MARIA VIOLA SANCHEZ
YROSIVDA DRAOB ADVISORY BOARD
EHT AIRAM ZEHCNAS WOHS THE MARIA SANCHEZ SHOW
EVITAN NAINROFILAC NATIVE CALIFORNIAN
YGOLOHCYSP PSYCHOLOGY
We give you five scrambled words each week. We hope you enjoy playing.