Author: laurenwise

Savera UK Youth Exhibition for UK Parliament Week

Savera UK Youth welcome you to the launch of their new exhibition, which explores and communicates the impact of ‘honour’-based abuse (HBA) and harmful practices and the work of Savera UK. The exhibition has been expanded from the Savera UK Youth #ENDFGM Exhibition, which was first developed in 2019.

Thursday 9th November, 4-6pm

Free entry

Register here

The event will be held in LJMU, John Foster Moot Room, John Foster Building, Mount Pleasant, Liverpool L3 5UZ

If you have any accessibility requirements, please contact [email protected] at least one week in advance of the event, so we can facilitate your needs.

 

This event is delivered by Savera UK Youth in partnership with LJMU.

Savera UK Youth Summer Art Workshops

Join Savera UK Youth’s Summer Art Workshops 2023

Savera UK Youth Summer Art Workshops

This summer, Savera UK will be hosting free art, poetry and photography workshops for young activists in the Liverpool area aged 11-25.

Each year Savera UK Youth members take part in creative workshops with facilitators where they’ll develop skills like team-working and creative thinking as well as learning about art, poetry, and photography.

The project will focus on the impact of ‘honour’-based abuse (HBA) and harmful practices, including forced marriage, virginity testing and breast ironing. During the sessions you will learn more about the issues from the CEO of Savera UK, a charity which works to end HBA and harmful practices. You will also have the opportunity to speak with survivors to discuss their experiences and ask questions.

Members will then take part in art, poetry and photography workshops with facilitators Ali Harwood and Andrew ‘AB’ Abrahamson, where they’ll learn how to tell a story creatively and technical skills of the craft.

You’ll work with like-minded young people to join together and create an exhibition of work, which will be toured across schools in Merseyside from September 2023 to help raise awareness of ‘honour’-based abuse and harmful practices.

The workshop is perfect for those in the Liverpool area who are interested in social activism and art, poetry and photography.

If you would like to join us, please find a timetable for the projects below:

Date Session Time
Thursday, 3rd August Introduction to HBA, discussion with survivors 6pm
Tuesday, 15th August Introduction to storytelling through art 2pm – 4pm
Thursday, 17th August Art and Poetry 2pm – 4pm
Tuesday, 22nd August Art and Poetry 2pm – 4pm
Thursday, 24th August Photography 2pm – 4pm
Tuesday, 29th August Photography 2pm – 4pm

 

Workshops will take place in Liverpool, and the location will be confirmed once you have registered.

To register, please complete this form. We hope to see you there!

Malcolm, Savera UK Young Ambassador

One of my main motivations for joining the Youth Advisory Board is to have the opportunity to speak out about these harmful practices and what we can do as young people to prevent them for a better future alongside organisations such as Savera UK.  I want to speak out for those whose voices cannot be heard.

I would like to continue to make a change using creative ways such as photography and poetry, and I also want to pass on the knowledge I have to other young people as the future is ours.

Elias

I am currently a university student studying law.

I Joined the YAB because it was a perfect opportunity to meet other young people whilst undertaking projects that would help make a positive change within the community. One of the highlights of being part of the group was being able to to do photography as part an exhibition we were working on. I look forward to further help the younger generation to understand the existence of harmful practices in fun and creative ways.

Beth

Hiya, I’m Beth! This is my first year at YAB so I’m excited to begin working with the group and start serving in our local community. I became interested in joining after recently starting a voluntary position at Savera UK where I’ve been really energised by the inspiring people and powerful work the organisation is defined by. I am most excited by the opportunity to begin campaigning for policy change and the durable impact this will have for people who have experienced ‘honour’-based abuse and harmful practices.

Anushka

I joined YAB after doing a student placement at Savera UK and realised that after placement, I still wanted to help Savera UK and be part of the wonderful change they are making. I am really looking forward to working with other passionate young people to further raise awareness of HBA through creative means.

Gayatri

Hi! I’m Gayatri, and I’m currently a 2nd year Economics student at university in London. I joined the YAB around 2 years ago when I was on my gap year and was looking for volunteering opportunities that aligned with the topics I am most passionate about. Discovering more about the kind of work Savera UK does, I felt like the YAB was the perfect place for me to join. A highlight of being part of the team has been the countless opportunities to learn from inspiring speakers at events hosted by Savera UK. As for the rest of the year, I’m looking forward to all the new projects that will come our way, and meeting all the new members of the group!

Adele

Hello! I’m Adele, a Year 11 student from Hong Kong, now living in Gloucestershire. I joined the YAB to back a grassroots mission: supporting those impacted by harmful practices, with an approach from a standpoint of shared humanity. The little we know about HBA is in part sustained by a sense of collective detachment – when such a phenomenon isn’t spoken about and publicly condemned, it goes under the radar. Knowledge is power and as is silence. I intend to lend my voice in educating the wider public about HBA as a malpractice, but most of all to centre lived experience in my efforts, as its innate complexity is something I can neither replicate nor translate.

Laura

Hi, I am Laura. Earlier this year, I became YAB member for Savera UK as I wanted to be part of something that has a positive impact on people’s lives. Before joining the YAB, I had little understanding of HBA but since being part of the team I have learned a lot! There are many people that have no understanding of HBA but being part of the YAB allows us to share survivors’ experiences, advocate for change and help prevent future HBA crimes.

Shamsa Araweelo has speaks out against female genital mutilation (FGM) on her TikTok and YouTube accounts to raise awareness among young people of the practices

Savera UK Youth: An Interview with Shamsa Araweelo

Shamsa Araweelo has speaks out against female genital mutilation (FGM) on her TikTok and YouTube accounts to raise awareness among young people of the practices
Shamsa Araweelo has speaks out against female genital mutilation (FGM) on her TikTok and YouTube accounts to raise awareness among young people of the practices

This International Day of Zero Tolerance for Female Genital Mutilation Savera UK Youth Advisory Board member Ayo Folarin interviewed female genital mutilation (FGM) survivor Shamsa Araweelo to talk about her experience and the work she is doing to raise awareness and help end FGM for good. Read Ayo’s interview with Shamsa below. 

Female genital mutilation (FGM) is a procedure in which the female genitals are partially or totally removed, without health benefits or medical reasons. This is a violation of human rights and as a survivor of the practice, Shamsa Araweelo is working to raise awareness by talking about her own experience. Shamsa is currently training to become a police officer. She shared with us how she is still facing consequences from the procedure she had undergone 16 years ago, and despite her personal traumatic experience she is driven to advocate for change, with the aim to see FGM eradicated one day. Something that we all wish to see happening.

One of the campaigns Shamsa is passionate about, is changing the name of FGM to ‘female genital cutting (FGC)’. Explaining her reasons, Shamsa said she feels FGM doesn’t take into consideration how survivors might feel and perceive themselves as being “labelled mutilated”.

Shamsa, who is also a survivor of forced marriage, said: “The name doesn’t really change anything, the practice is still just as horrendous – you’ve just described them as mutilated.”

She shares her fears on how survivors may not seek professional help if they are constantly referred to as being mutilated, speaking on her personal experience. Shamsa explained struggled with it while growing up, which prevented her from attending her GPs, a gynaecologist or even the emergency room.

As we continue our conversation, we went more into depth on how FGM has affected Shamsa on a psychological and physical level. She said: “I was really insecure. I was terrified of speaking to anybody about it because there’s ‘shame’ linked to that procedure, if you talk about it it’s ‘shameful’, if you try to get it changed it’s still ‘shameful’. Keep it and just suffer basically.”  Her wider family were the perpetrators, with Shamsa’s mother strongly against FGM, but out of the country when it took place.

Talking about the aftermath, she tells us she did not resent her family members who carried it out. Shamsa said: “I was just confused. When I got to realise that it was a crime essentially and a child abuse, sexual abuse, I started to question my family.”  She was also able to confront her family member who held her down during the procedure when she was only six, to which they responded, ‘‘it is something we all did, we did not know any better” showing a lack of understanding of the gravity of what had happened.

Shamsa said: “I had to really sit back and think I’m talking to somebody who is traumatised and who has never had any type of help in any way, shape or form. There isn’t anything that I can say that will make them apologise or feel any type of sympathy or empathy as to what they did to me. It was very hard for me to deal with.”

Speaking about living with FGM, Shamsa refused to be intimate with anyone for a long time due to the procedure. She speaks on the hardship, of being sexually assaulted especially when FGM had been performed, causing great pain and a sense of violation.

Shamsa is still currently suffering due to FGM, which made her attend her GP, sharing that doctors and nurses do not get a lot of training, even though the practice is illegal in the UK. Shamsa describes the lack of training among professionals as a form of discrimination and institutional racism. She tells us she has encountered professionals who may not even know what FGM looks like, raising the question on how protection can occur for those who are at risk or a survivor. Shamsa speaks on the importance of more training for medical professionals, even if they number of victims of FGM is low, it is still vital.

Shamsa talks about FGM on her TikTok page

As well as calling for more education for professionals, Shamsa tells us even survivors she has spoken to who have undergone the procedure haven’t recognised FGM as a crime. She said: “Some didn’t even know that it was wrong and they live in the UK, because it’s so normalised and if you live within a community that normalises a type of abuse, you’re never going to think that it’s wrong until you hear somebody say it. Only when I started talking about it she said she never thought it was wrong – she’s 24-years-old.”

“I was absolutely gobsmacked but I shouldn’t be surprised because there’s not really much education on the topic. People talk about it because they want the attention and then it just dies out completely and the survivors are left to deal with the implications for the rest of their lives. No one is going to help, defend, so it continues to be normalised, it continues to be normal.”

It might be presumed that a survivor of FGM would receive support around their mental health and wellbeing, however, Shamsa reveals how she receives more support from her social media platforms – TikTok and YouTube, with viewers having the drive to educate themselves. She said: “I’ve received the most amazing support I could never have imagined. The kindness, men, women, doesn’t matter sexual orientation there is pure kindness.” Her videos and socials create a sense of community and empowerment for survivors, as they are able to see the support she gets opposed to hate, encouraging them to speak out without fear or receiving judgement, but worth being in recipient of love and respect.

Shamsa feels like professional support is “not accessible” for survivors and often finds survivors do not want to keep seeking support, as they are passed around so much, from one organisation to another. She shared her personal experience with us and said: “I was told to call an organisation. I did. They said ‘Okay, tell us your story’”. Shamsa explained she felt uncomfortable going into detail about her experience and instead asked for support, however they simply provided her with another number to call.

We asked Shamsa, as a trainee police officer what gaps she felt there were in the judicial system around cases of FGM, and what steps could be taken. She said trust between survivors, doctors and police needs to be built and made stronger, adding, it is hard for police officers to get involved in crimes against FGM, as they require medics to identify that an individual went through it recently, before they can intervene. Shamsa deems education on FGM among professionals and within communities as really important in ending the practice.

Shamsa talks to us about the discussions she has had about FGM with her seven-year-old daughter, who she describes as a “young activist”. Shamsa said, although the topic was not brought up by her, she spoke openly about the procedure she had to go through, to which her daughter replied “But mummy that’s so horrible why would they do that to you?” Shamsa said: “I was so proud of her. It was really sweet to see she understands.” Her daughter is now teaching her peers and teachers in school on what FGM is, showing how you can speak out on harmful practices at any age.

Shamsa ends with saying how women who had to endure FGM “are so strong, for not only have endured FGM, but having to live with the complications, and going to school, having full time jobs, having children, raising those kids and trying their absolute best to function.”

Written by Ayo Folarin, Savera UK Youth Advisory Board.