WUNRN
IMS – International Media Support
http://www.mediasupport.org/photos-challenging-male-dominance-media/
Middle East & Danish Media Women Consider Portrayal of Women by Media
Seven Arab media
professionals: Challenging existing perceptions of women in the media - Photo: Rasmus
Steen
27 May 2015 - “You
can choose to portray a woman as a victim, or you can choose to focus on the
fact that she once was a victim, but was able to overcome it. Then she becomes
a heroine. Most media portray Arab women as victims. We want to portray them as
heroes,” says Nadine Nimri at a public debate at the Danish Women’s Museum.
Nadine Nimri is
one of seven Arab media professionals who visited Denmark as part of a road
trip aiming at establishing meetings between media professionals engaged in
gender issues in the Middle East and Denmark. The road trip Challenging male dominance in the media was
organised by International Media Support (IMS), with support from the Danish-Arab
Partnership Programme.
The opinions were
many when IMS and the Danish Women’s Museum in Aarhus invited for a public
debate on how to challenge male dominance in the media. Part of the panel
was Nafisa Al-Sabagh from Egypt, editor-in-chief of the women-oriented
website, Masreiat. She also has experience from several Egyptian media outlets
and as media expert and trainer for international NGOs. She believes change in
the Arab world has just gotten started.
“After 2011, women
in Egypt started speaking out against rights violations. After they felt
empowered by the revolution, they started rebelling against sexual harassment,
which had grown in Egypt since 2005. They took to the streets and
demonstrated,” she said. “Change in the Middle East will not go away. People
have changed.”
Seven Arab media
professionals: Challenging existing perceptions of women in the media
The group of media
professionals included Sara Alzawqari from Yemen, radio host with one of the
country’s most popular programmes called ‘Tea with Milk’. Her sarcasm-filled
take on Yemen’s crisis builds bridges between people and
communities from all walks of life.
“There was a
barrier between different communities and I realised that slang and sarcasm is
a good method to establish common ground. Sarcasm is already integrated into
Yemeni society. It brings people together.”
She is impressed
by the media environment in Denmark.
“What shocks me
the most in Denmark was the level of objectivity in the media. There is so much
responsibility in the media on what is provided to the public,” she said.
Hala Bejjani, the
Lebanese founder of a children’s newspaper in Beirut and the Planet News
Business in Qatar, criticised the general opinion of the Arab spring.
“People say the
Arab spring has not lived up to their expectations, but I believe it is too
early to judge. Even if there are no political results yet, the changes have
grown strong into our DNAs.”
Hala is also the
co-founder and former editor-in-chief of the Lebanese daily Al-Akhbar. She
emphasizes the strength of Arab women.
“We currently see
a lot of new companies being founded by women, with 300 new companies on a
yearly basis just in Lebanon.”
She further
criticises the Western way of portraying the Arab world.
“I do not like the
way we are often portrayed in the media, with religion being decisive.
In these crucial times of conflict and upheaval in the Arab world, it is important to create some sense and understanding of what remains of the Arab uprisings that started in spring 2011. It is clear from the perspectives of the visiting female media workers that change has taken place in the minds of both men and women and that this change despite violence and the return of authoritarian regimes is irreversible. And that it is the responsibility of western media to also seek out and portray this change whenever possible in their coverage of the Arab world.