American Jewish World Service, Inc.

American Jewish World Service, Inc.


CHARITY STORY
Claiming A Seat At The Table: The Feminization of Politics in Senegal
Photo Caption
Gueule Tapée District in Dakar 3rd Deputy Mayor inside the Town Hall discussing local and national issues with local women.
Photo Credit
Maroussia Mbaye

In Senegal, women were largely excluded from politics until recently. A collective of women activists that AJWS supports, Association des Juristes Sénégalaises (AJS), has worked to change this — and is shifting Senegal’s entire political landscape in the process.

Over the years, AJS's fierce advocacy has led to Senegal requiring political parties to ensure that at least half of their candidates are women. When parties and election officials refuse to comply, AJS takes legal action to enforce the law. AJS has also organized leadership workshops and trainings for women about Senegalese government and elections. They’ve sparked advances in women’s rights, including the election of Adama Mbengue as a deputy mayor of Gueule Tapée, a borough of Dakar.

One Senegalese woman who has stepped into leadership with AJS’s support, Ndeye Khady Diagne, says proudly: “We will be the ones to let other women know: You have the ability. You have the strength. Now come and take your power.”

While Senegal values women for their roles in leading households and communities, they have been largely excluded from the realm of politics. But our partner organization Association des Juristes Sénégalaises (AJS) is helping usher in a shift in Senegal’s political landscape. In 2010, Senegal passed a gender parity law, requiring political parties to ensure at least half of their candidates are women — guaranteeing equal access to decision-making bodies. While AJS has worked to promote the law’s full implementation, they’re also addressing the other end of the equation: training more women community leaders to step up and run for office.

AJS calls the initiative “The Feminization of Politics.” Through 2021 and 2022, it has trained 150 women across Dakar in leadership and government, and today, many are involved in local politics and have assumed both elected and appointed positions. Adama Mbengue is one such example. In January 2022, after participating in the training, she ran for and was elected as the third deputy mayor of Gueule Tapée, a borough of Senegal’s sprawling capital city. Adama says her grandfather told her that, “as a woman, it’d be hard for me in politics. So I’d need to fight, and to believe in myself. That advice is how I got here.”

Another AJS advocate, Ndeye Khady Diagne, advises women who seek to step into leadership: You have the ability. You have the strength. Now come and take your power.”


CHARITY VIDEO
A Time for Hope and Action
Transcript

[people sitting down to be interviewed]
People speaking in one on one interviews:
My grandmother was a survivor of Auschwitz.
Video: a woman looking into the camera
My dad was an immigrant.
Video: a man looking into the camera
My parents are from Russia.
Video: a woman talking into the camera
I'm a first generation Iranian American Jewish woman.
Video: a woman talking into the camera
As an LGBT person,
Video: a man talking into the camera
As a black Jewish feminist,
Video: a woman talking into the camera
I think it's super important for Jews to stand up for justice in the world.
Video: a person talking into the camera
We start with ourselves, but we don't end with ourselves.
That's what Martin Buber said.
Video: a woman talking into the camera
There's a quote in the Torah that says that you should love your
neighbor like you love yourself.
Video: a woman talking into the camera
This idea that we can be more than our history of oppression is so
important in this moment.

American Jewish World Service, Inc.
CFC Number
11108

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Cause Area