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Category: Women in Mexico

Letter to Angella Nazarian

Posted on March 3, 2021March 10, 2021by JC AgidLeave a comment

Letter to Angella Nazarian
On the eve of Visionary Women Summit 2021 – https://www.visionarywomen.com
(Quotes below, unless in italics, are invented, and the attribution to people is purely fictional)

Dear Angella;

Do you remember the cobblestone streets of Coyoacán in Mexico City, a far cry from the busy double deck jammed highways that drive across the megalopolis? I am sure you remember the first time you pushed the double green doors of the Blue House—Casa Azul, the home of Frida Kahlo. I do, and I have returned there so often.

Continue reading “Letter to Angella Nazarian”

Posted in Amazing Women, Byline JC Agid, Culture, Gender Issues, Marion Naufal, Society, Women can have it all, Women Empowerment, Women Entrepreneurs, Women in Africa, Women in Mexico
Tagged Alaa Salah, Alyse Nelson, Amanda Gorman, Angella Nazarian, Aretha Franklin, Assouline, Beijing UN Conference on Women, Betsabee Romero, Biden Administration, casa azul, Casa Estudio, Cheek to Cheek, Christane Amanpour, Condoleeza Rice, condoleezza rice, Creative Couples, Diego rivera, Ella Fitzgerald, Frida Kahlo, Hillary Clinton, Jacqueline Novogratz, Janacek, Janet Yellen, Joe biden, kamala harris, Kandisky, Katalin Kariko, Katie Couric, Leymah Gbowee, Madeleine Albright, Marie Curie, Marie-Agathe Charpagne, marionnillustrations, Martine Assouline, Mary Alice Williams, McKinsey, Melanne Verveer, Miró, Museo Frida Kahlo, Nancy Pelosi, Nickolas Muray, Nobel Peace Prize, Noguchi, O'Keefe, Pat Mitchell, Picasso, Pioneers of the Possible, Tehuana Dress, Tracy K. Smith, Trotzky, Twakkol Karman, Visionary Women, Viva la Vida, Women's Forum, Women's Forum for the Economy and Society, Women's Forum Mexico

One Hundred Women to Inspire Us to Change

Posted on September 14, 2020September 21, 2020by JC AgidLeave a comment

One Hundred Women to Inspire Us to Change
Vital Voices: 100 Women Using Their Power to Empower (Assouline)


On September 6, 2020, French philosopher Elisabeth Badinter wrote an editorial in Le Journal du Dimanche, one of France’s main Sunday’s paper to denounce a dangerous post #metoo radical neo-feminism, which she says transforms all women into victims and all men into presumed aggressors. At the same moment in the United States, Assouline and the American foundation Vital Voices published a groundbreaking book with 100 portraits and texts of women ‘using their power to empower.’

Women belong in all places where decisions are being made. It shouldn’t be that women are the exceptions.

Ruth Bader Ginsburg, lawyer and former Justice, United States Supreme Court


Their names are Ruth Bader Ginsburg (RBG passed away a few days after this article was published), Melinda Gates, Ellen Johnson Sirleaf, Nancy Pelosi, Michelle Bachelet, Geena Davis and Jacinda Ardern. Some have led countries, some head a foundation, one is a US Senator, while another is one of the most powerful judges in the United States. The book also features Panmela Castro, Xiye Bastida, Yin Myo Su, Hindu Oumarou Ibrahim, Andeisha Farid, Amani Ballour, and Tarana Burke. Less known in the Western media, they too run foundations, corporations, paint large murals, engage in politics, and transform the healthcare delivery landscape of their communities.


There are 100 of them in this book edited by Alyse Nelson, President and co-founder of Vital Voices Global Partnerships, along with Hillary Rodham Clinton, Melanne Verveer, and Madeleine Albright. This Washington-based non for-profit organization works with women in 182 countries to help them become professionally empowered, visible and heard. One hundred portraits painted by Gayle Kabaker, one of the greatest American illustrators, known especially for her New Yorker covers. One hundred women who share their visions, their ambitions, and raise their voices. They could be a thousand, a hundred thousand, millions. In fact, these 100 women leaders, activists, lawyers, politicians, entrepreneurs, diplomats, financiers, biologists, journalists, athletes and artists are de facto ambassadors of half of the world’s population.

Continue reading “One Hundred Women to Inspire Us to Change”

Posted in Amazing Women, Byline JC Agid, Gender Issues, Mujeres, Uncategorized, Women can have it all, Women Empowerment, Women Entrepreneurs, Women in Africa, Women in Mexico
Tagged Alyse Nelson, Amanda Gorman, Assouline, Christine Lagarde, Diane Von Furstenberg, DVF, Gayle Kabaker, Hafsat abiola, Hillary Clinton, Jacinda Adern, Lucha Libre, Madeleine Albright, Martine Assouline, Melanne Verveer, Panmela Castro, Ruth Bader Ginsburg, Sara blakely, Saskia Niño de Rivera, Saskia Nino de Rivera, spanx, Vital Voices, Vital Voices for Global partnership, Vital Voices: 100 Women Using Their Power to Empower, WIA, WIAphilanthropy, Women in Africa

At Your Home Without Me: The Artistic Mankind of Betsabeé Romero

Posted on May 11, 2020June 16, 2020by JC Agid1 Comment

At Your Home Without Me: The Artistic Mankind of Betsabeé Romero

“Art needs to express itself to safeguard humanity.” These are the words of Betsabeé Romero, a Mexican fixture, sculptor, and a generous, greedy painter who is exhibited around the world. She is a poet and activist too. This humanity—a damaged, confused and self-reflecting humanity—was not prepared to face the brutal consequences of the Covid19 pandemic.

Betsabeé Romero is now listening to the suddenly silent streets of Mexico City, North America’s largest city.

From her little street house in the Villa de Cortés district, the artist is on the lookout for the sadness that invades the world faster than the disease. The absence of funerals. the hidden violence against the women and children in her country. And of course, her own personal fight fight for female artists. 

Confined, she writes, draws, and reads, mostly philosophy at the moment. She is thinking about art installations to illustrate the staggered mourning that many people will experience. Incidentally, she has been invited to create and speak on this topic at the Frieze in London this Fall, as well as in Sydney and Rome.

Continue reading “At Your Home Without Me: The Artistic Mankind of Betsabeé Romero”

19.4326077-99.133208
Posted in Amazing Women, ART, Byline JC Agid, Covid-19, Culture, Fire Chat With, Gender Issues, Mexico, Mexico City, Mujeres, Not At Home With, Women can have it all, Women in Mexico
Tagged Agustín Lara, Agustín Lara Veracruz, AMLO, André Breton, André Comte-Sponville, Art Paris, Betsabee Romero, Calavera Catrina, casa azul, Catrina, Colonia Condesa, Condesa, Condesa df, Confinement, Conquistadors, Covid-19, COVID19, CSIS, Día de Muertos, Diego rivera, Dora Maar, Elena Reygadas, feminicide, FRIDAKAHLO, Frieze London, Grand Palais, H1N1, infanticide, Jackson Pollock, Jacqueline Lamba, jaracandas, Jose Guadalupe Posada, Jose Posada, Julian Levy, Kandisky, La Condesa, Lardo, Le Louvre, Marcel Duchamp, Marea Verde, Mary Reynolds, Mexico, Mexico City, Miró, Museo Frida Kahlo, Octavio Paz, Parque España, Picasso, Toña La Negra, trajineras, Trotsky, Veracruz, Yves Tanguy, Zocalo

At Your Home Without Me with Vanessa Serrano: Confined Bodies, but Free Souls

Posted on March 28, 2020July 25, 2022by JC Agid2 Comments

At Your Home Without Me with Vanessa Serrano
Confined Bodies, but Free Souls. At Last

‘When I bared my soul it seems you did not hear‘
Joe Jackson | Body and Soul

Singer and songwriter Erykah Badu recently posted on Instagram a drawing of a person seated in a lotus position. “If you can’t go outside,” the caption read, “go inside.”

“A sound advice,” wrote Diane Von Furstenberg who shared the post @therealdvf.

‘If you can’t go outside, go inside’ is exactly what Mexican author and entrepreneur Vanessa Serrano—who has developed her professional work as a path to search for her own purpose—invites people to focus on.

“I believe we should take today’s opportunity to observe our minds,” Vanessa told me in a phone interview.

To ease people’s confinement, Serrano has created a series of free online sessions in Spanish  called Healing Detox and Spiritual Awakening. 

Continue reading “At Your Home Without Me with Vanessa Serrano: Confined Bodies, but Free Souls”

Posted in Amazing Women, Byline JC Agid, Mexico, Mexico City, Mujeres, Not At Home With, Spirituality, Ten Questions With, Uncategorized, Well Being, Women in Mexico
Tagged Awakening, Awareness, Confinement, Coronavirus, Covid-19, Empathy, Jacques Attali, JC Agid, Meditation, Mexico, Soul, Spirituality, Vanessa Serrano, Wake Up, Well Being, Women Empowerment, Women's Forum Mexico, Yuval Noah Harari, Zertu

A Hug to Humanity

Posted on July 24, 2019February 10, 2022by JC Agid2 Comments

A Hug to Humanity


Fire-chat with Saskia Niño de Rivera, founder of Reinserta in Mexico

Saskia Niño de Rivera was the first of the Vital Voices Gala evening’s honorees to walk back on stage at Washington D.C.’s Kennedy Center Opera on April  24th, 2019.

The Mexican activist went straight to Hillary Clinton, and without hesitation, hugged the former Secretary of State and co-founder of Vital Voices, a global foundation launched in 1997 to support women who advance economic opportunity, increase political and public engagement, end gender-based violence and promote human rights across 180 countries and territories.

A few moments before, the audience saw a video of children playing in Lucha Libre disguises (the famous masked Mexican wrestlers). One them, drawing, is heard wishing: “I want to go to the zoo; when I am big, I want to be a fireman; and when I am really big–yeah–if I am really big, I will be The Hulk.” 

A childhood fantasy, indeed, except this child cannot even go to a zoo. This child is one the 700 children born and raised in a Mexican jail.

 

Saskia Nino de Rivera and Hillary Clinton | (c) Lancer Photography | 2019
Saskia Niño de Rivera and Hillary Clinton | (c) Lancer Photography | 2019

(more…)

Posted in Byline JC Agid, Fire Chat With, Mexico, Mujeres, Women Empowerment, Women in Mexico
Tagged Alyse Nelson, Amanda N'Guyen, bozoma saint john, Children, Diane Von Furstenberg, Firechat, Habiba Ali, Hillary Clinton, Imprisoned Women, Kennedy Center, Melanne Verveer, Mexican jails, Reinserta, Rising TAlents, Rouba Mhaissen, Saskia Nino de Rivera, Vital Voices, Vital Voices for Global partnership, Washington DC

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