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Like Martin Luther King, Prof. Omenugha Has a Dream

If Kate Azuka Omenugha had allowed the limitations normally imposed on the girl child in Nigeria’s rural settings weigh her down, she will not today be a Professor of Mass Communication. Her life’s narrative, therefore, is a classical example of a local village woman who brazed the odds of socio and cultural limitations not only to attain the topmost height in her profession but to intellectually engender women’s’ concerns. It was with passion that she spoke on ‘reckoning with the gender factor in election reporting’ as a resource person during the IPC/UNDP DGD11 training workshop for journalists in Enugu last February. Shortly after, in this interview, she offered more insight into her thoughts and perspectives on the empowerment and development of women in the context of gender. Having held sway as the Director of the campus radio of Nnamdi Azikiwe University (UNIZIK fm), Akwa, Anambra state, and Head of Department of Mass Communication of same institution, she currently serves as the Commissioner for Education in Anambra State. Excerpts: On the issues with women and gender equality Globally, there are gender perspectives on issues, which most times favour men to the disadvantage of women. Also, all over the world, there have been agitations with efforts to eliminate all forms of violence and discrimination against women, but we are aware that a lot of factors have actually impeded the transformation that we so much desire. Some of these impediments are cultural issues within the society which put women down in so many areas. We also have a lot of gender based violence like rape which affects women, but there is a lot of resistance mainly from the men folk who want the status quo to remain. Men see any effort you make as a form of competition; that is, women competing with men. But what we are asking is that we be treated equally as human beings. On how gender advocacy affect the market or village woman Gender issue affects her because what we are advocating for is that she, as a woman be treated equally as human beings; that her husband treats her with love and she be treated as a human being. I have lived in the village all my life. My father was a school principal going from one village to the other and I lived in the village and got married in the village. It is in the village that I had operated all these years and it is from there that I got my scholarship to Britain. When I finished, I came back and stayed in the village and it is from there that I got my professorship and all other things. I have been a leader of Catholic Women Organization in my village and have brought a lot of changes to their lives by the way I talk and relate with them and by the role modelling I do and the structures I put in place for them. On what keeps her connected to the grassroots despite being a professor It is my passion for women and my love for people who are dis-empowered in so many ways. When people see me, they ask, ‘why are you in the village, why not come and live in the city? I tell them: ‘I am a role model for many people who seeing me drive past them in the village say to themselves, I want to be like her’. Some times when I am driving and see an old woman on the road, I stop and ask her to come inside the car, and this makes me connected to them because I understand their plight. I understand what it means to be a woman in every sense of the word and I understand what it is to feel a form of dis-empowerment. I have been staying there for twenty five years and I have a connection with them. On the common view that women are women’s enemy When people say that, I tend to see their point of view but I know that most times, women don’t act alone. They have a lot of pressure from their husband and their own family members so it is not only about them taking decisions. Most women would need to ask the husband or ask a male friend or male relative before they take a decision because right from time, it has been imbued in them that women lack voice and a will of their own. So it is not that women do not want to support women, but it is a result of the pressure that they have from men; their husband, a male companion or relative, a male son, etc, and this is an endemic problem. Unless women are aggressively educated to take decisions on their own that will continue. So it is not that women don’t support their fellow women, but it is due to pressures from male influences. On the values that keep her going My parents were very close and carried each other along. I learnt that from them. So I call or send several text messages to my husband each day. This is one of the things that I learnt from my parents and that is why he could allow me to leave him and my six children to go and study in the UK all alone and he was able to support himself and keep the family together till I came back. So it is a question of trying to balance the two. My husband supports my gender and feminine cause and he lets me be at anytime and I also let him be. On the question of women not confronting men in order to keep the peace I don’t know whether it is a general thing but perhaps most people do, but this is because from childhood, women have been told and taught to keep quiet. “Don’t talk, you are a woman, sit like a woman”, and this and that. So it

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Children are the future of our world

At time when the focus many in Nation’s Capital is on youth gangs and violence, historic Metropolitan AME Church in down town will spot light youth who are achieving academically and will display their creativity in music and dance  at Youth Day 2014. The community is invited to share the joy of this event on Sunday, June 8 at 11 am at the church, located at 1518 M St. NW. The church will hold its usual 7:45 am worship service; however,  the congregation and community will gather at 11 a.m.  in a  special service tp spotlight their youth. Rev. Rodney Barnes, pastor of Gethsemane AME Church, Landover, Md. will be guest preacher. With the theme of “God’s Gift Looks Good on You,” the worship service will feature the youth choir, small youth orchestra and Liturgical Dancers.  Metropolitan’s 2014 graduates will also be recognized. A new future vision for youth was stated by the Rev. William H. Lamar IV, who was named  Metropolitan’s new pastor  on April 11.  When asked in an interview if he had any specific plans for Metropolitan’s youth, he responded with his philosophy. “(I plan) first of all to listen to the youth and not tell them who they are; give them permission and support to do the kinds of ministry that speaks to their generation.  We have to be a permission-giving culture for the young.  …We have to speak to who (they) are or aspire to be.    The best and healthiest churches are multigenerational. Our biggest mission is to build a stronger Metropolitan for today, bringing generations together– doing things together.  One of Metropolitan’s greatest assets is that we have people over 100 and we have babies too.

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Education Plan at Anglican Church

The officers invite Church of the Brethren members to join them in prayer on Wednesday mornings at 8 a.m. (each in their own time zone) until the start of next year’s Conference. The officers have provided an online prayer calendar guide for this time of prayer each week. “The Great Commission of Matthew 28:19-20 stands at an important intersection of New Testament faith,” writes moderator Tim Harvey in his theme statement, in part. “Jesus has just completed his earthly ministry, a time when his life and teaching gave evidence of another kingdom among us. This kingdom is hidden from those who will not see, and yet made clearly present through his life and ministry. Jesus taught, healed, felt deep sorrow at the suffering of others, confronted injustice, invited other persons into this kingdom life, and finally was crucified. Three days later, he was raised. And now, perhaps moments before his ascension into Heaven, Jesus gives the disciples this instruction, words that will serve the Brethren as the theme verses for the 2012 Annual Conference: ‘Go therefore and make disciples of all nations, baptizing them in the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit, and teaching them to obey everything that I have commanded you. And remember, I am with you always, to the end of the age’ (Matthew 28:19-20, NRSV). “As 2012 Annual Conference moderator, I look forward to hearing stories of how the Brethren are ‘Continuing the Work of Jesus’ in our congregations around the world,” Harvey’s statement concludes. “Along the way to St. Louis, we will be reminded of the way Brethren of years past continued the work of Jesus in their time. And I will strive to challenge all of us to greater faithfulness. The world needs the testimony of Jesus. Brothers and Sisters, let us dedicate ourselves to ‘Continuing the Work of Jesus. Peacefully. Simply. Together.’” In addition to the overall theme for the Conference, daily themes and scriptures also have been announced, drawn from the newly identified “Directional Goals” of the Church of the Brethren Mission and Ministry Board. “The directional goals have the potential to become the spiritual disciplines of our denomination,” Harvey writes, “faith practices that both nurture us in our faith and challenge us to continue the work of Jesus in very specific, disciplined ways.” Daily themes and scriptures are as follows: Saturday, July 7, “International Mission,” Philippians 1:3-6; Sunday, July 8, “Brethren Voice,” Matthew 28:19-20, Luke 1:79; Monday, July 9, “Congregational Vitality,” Hebrews 10:23-25 and 1 Corinthians 12:13-27; Tuesday, July 10, “Service,” 1 John 3:16-18; Wednesday, “Church Planting,” 1 Corinthians 3:6.

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Youth Sponsorship Program

Christian and Jewish leaders from the United States have committed to “developing an effective and ongoing national dialogue” during a March 27 summit in New York City. Among the Christian leaders were the Rev. Elizabeth A. Eaton, presiding bishop of the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America (ELCA), and the Rev. Mark S. Hanson, former ELCA presiding bishop who co-convened the summit along with Rabbi Steve Gutow, president and CEO of the Jewish Council for Public Affairs. In a mutually agreed-upon statement, leaders at the summit discussed strategies to strengthen and maintain relationships “even in the face of significant disagreements.” “We affirm a strong commitment to continue working together on domestic and international issues of common concern. We will aspire to genuine and ongoing dialogue related to Israeli-Palestinian issues, seeking to identify and discuss, in respect and humility, areas of real or potential disagreement and of real and potential cooperation. “As people of faith we enter the holy season of Easter and Passover to celebrate the gift of our renewed relationship and look to the future to enhance our closeness and our commitment to serve the common good.” The Jewish and Christian leaders who met today committed to meeting at least annually and to “reconstituting the traditional Jewish-Christian roundtables” suspended in October 2012, after an Oct. 5, 2012 letter by Christin groups calling on Congress to investigate Israel’s use of U.S. military aid. Other Jewish leaders in attendance were:  Abraham Foxman, national director, Anti-Defamation League  David Harris, executive director, American Jewish Committee  Rabbi Rick Jacobs, president, Union of Reform Judaism  Daniel S. Mariaschin, executive vice president, B’nai B’rith International  Rabbi Julie Schonfeld, executive vice president, Rabbinical Assembly  Rabbi Steven C. Wernick, chief executive officer, United Synagogue of Conservative Judaism  Rabbi David Saperstein, director and counsel, Religious Action Center of Reform Judaism  Other Christian leaders were:   The Rev. Geoffrey A. Black, general minister and president, United Church of Christ  The Rev. Gradye Parsons, stated clerk, General Assembly of the Presbyterian Church (USA)  Bishop Mary Ann Swenson, ecumenical office, Council of Bishops of the United Methodist Church  Rev. Dr. Sharon E. Watkins, general minister and president, Christian Church (Disciples of Christ) in the United States and Canada

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