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iiDebate in JID2017 : WORK WITH YOUTH, NOT ON YOUTH

Youth. Arts. Justice. Human Rights. Education. Freedom of expression. Representation. Media. Etc… All of these issues are the pieces of one puzzle: DEMOCRACY.

Several organizations around Tunisia got together to try and put these pieces together during “Let’s Celebrate Democracy!” It is a 4-day event in which different individuals and organizations can participate. It is an open invitation for different parties to demonstrate democratic values and principles. It is an open invitation for different parties to demonstrate democratic values and principles through filling out a form on the JID website to suggest an activity that could be part of the festivities from the 15th to 18th of September 2017.

The international day of democracy which coincides with Tunisian students’ favorite day is on September 15th. It was a decision taken by the UN back in 2007 in order to put democratic practices in different countries under scrutiny and to provide the civil society organizations with a reminder of their broader goal which is achieving justice and freedom for the people. In Tunisia, it was celebrated for the first time in September 2016.

Different activities ranging from artistic performances to political debates took place all over the country. The event was a national movement that included a high level of participation from youth. Since debates were among the suggested activities by JID, the International Institute of Debate showed interest and collaborated with other organizations in the event.

WHAT DID THE INTERNATIONAL INSTITUTE OF DEBATE DO?

Along with ICTJ (International Center for Transitional Justice), the International Institute of Debate organized two café talks the topic of which was youth marginalization especially in rural areas in the process of transitional justice. Based in New York, the ICTJ was founded in 2001. It aims at spreading awareness about the importance of and the need for justice and accountability as well as addressing and redressing the most severe violations of human rights. It works primarily with societies emerging from repressive rule, conflict, or countries with legacies of abuse that remained unsolved hence their presence in Tunisia.

The first cafe talk took place in Arena space in Lac and represented an opportunity for the International Institute of Debate and ICTJ to get together and explore how interconnected their visions are and how their collaboration can help in solving the issue of youth marginalization. ICTJ actually brought four photographers that took part of the open debate in the first day and they exhibited their work which is relevant to youth marginalization. There was also an intervention made by Abderahmen Hdhili the president of the Tunisian Forum for Economic and Social Rights (FTDES) who mentioned a research that he made. The research stated that the most academically brilliant youth want to leave the country to search for better opportunities and the youth on the other end of the spectrum of academic excellence want to leave the country too for the same reason. This intervention by Abderahmen Hdhili was a wake-up call and signaled an urgent need for an urgent change.

In the second day, there was a cafe talk about the same topic along with Jamaity Organization in Habib Bourguiba Street as part of the Khaymati Program. In this context, the project coordinator of iiDebate Firas Gam who moderated the second café talk summed up the solution to several youth problems in Tunisia when he said “civil society organizations have to work WITH youth, not ON youth.”

 


About the writer

Atef Amri :

Hello! I am Atef Amri. I am 21 years old and I go to Tunis Higher Institute of Languages as an English student. I am a member of the communication team interns. What I do in iiDebate is fundamentally content writing which means covering and writing about the projects and the main events that iiDebate is involved in, in order to give people insight into what we are doing and how we are doing it. Also, I am helping in the creation of a newsletter that will include iidebate’s activities in the last semester that will hopefully be ready by the beginning of 2018. My message to youth is “appreciate the good things around you in life and love yourself. Because if you can’t love yourself, then what’s the point of loving anything or anyone else

About the video editor  

Ahlem Naceur,

I am Ahlem Naceur, a junior student at Tunis business school majoring in marketing with a minor in business analytics. I am in charge of editing all video for iiDebate. During the past two years I managed to become very active within clubs. Also I managed to have a part- time internship within a startup, that experience made me learn more about how to manage time between school and working, managing stressful situations and being successful in both.I participated in TBS MUN where I represented China. That was a challenging experience speaking with the name of a different country and defending it policies until the end. Currently a team leader of ICO_TBS (international cultural organization).

 

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Cafe Talk 3.0 Final event : 5 TEAMS, 2 DAYS, 1 MAJOR AWARD, AND A LOT OF PASSION

In a few words, that was the third edition of Café Talk Competition

Five 3-member teams from Bizert, Tozeur, Sousse, Zaghouan, and Mannouba got together for two days – 22nd and 23rd of December – to finalize the café talk competition that had violence in educational institutions as a major theme and that lasted for 4 months. The first day was a series of workshops and debates in Karmel Hotel and the second day was the closing ceremony in Majestic Hotel.

FIRST DAY: A LOT OF PASSION, A LOT OF STORIES

After all the participants gathered together, the workshops started at 2PM. They took place in a small cozy room where different themes under the theme of education were discussed. There were debates about the gender equality in terms of attire in schools, the psychological and sanitary issues of pupils, the funding of NGOs in schools, etc … Through these debates, the participants were asked to find problems that surround the discussed issues and try to come up with solutions using the information they gathered from the café talks during the 4 months of the program. The Youth Convention was also part of the workshop which is a final holistic report of the competition.

A lot of stories that the participants shared with each other about the marginalized schools in rural areas were touching and eye-opening. Long distances, deadly roads, unsafe infrastructure, limited human resources, no funding, lack of motivation and more were the repeated words throughout these stories. The participants talked about these stories with a lot of passion and they shared how the four months of the Program managed to make them more aware of the Sustainable Development Goal 4 which is QUALITY EDUCATION.

SECOND DAY: AS ONE STORY ENDS, A NEW ONE STARTS

In Majestic Hotel, the five teams gathered together with the presence of a panel of four judges: Aida Robbana – a UN Representative, Refka Nsiri – a US embassy representative, Sondes Zouaghi – A professor in the University of Paris, and Elyes Guermazi – the executive director of International Institute of Debate. The teams pitched their project ideas in an attempt at winning 1,000$ to help them initiate the project. They had 5 minutes each to present the final concept of the final project with a 10-minute period for questions by the judges.

The tension was governing the room as the participants were defending their projects and explaining how beneficial and relevant it is to the main theme of the competition, but only one project was going to win. The projects manifested a high degree of innovation, of devotion and of a strong desire to make a change in the education sector of Tunisia. From café talks junior to creating apps that promote scholarships for students to creating an app that allows students to express dissatisfaction and concerns, the projects were interesting and captivating, but it was Tozeur’s proposal that got the attention of the judges and that got a chance to start their story.

TEAM TOZEUR: CONGRATULATIONS!

“علمني نعلمك”

is the name of the project that won the competition. It is going to be destined to around twenty 4 to 5 year-old children in the region of Rmitha which is deemed as one of the most marginalized areas in Tozeur. The project consists of three main steps. First, there will be a campaign to promote the project in which posters, pins, stickers, online marketing and more will be done to draw the attention of the people to the project. There will even be backpacks and comic books designed for the pupils. The second step is recruiting some of the participants from the café talks done throughout the four months of the program to go through a training program of soft skills, public speaking skills, and session moderating skills in order for them to be ready to moderate weekly session to the pupils.

The third step is starting the project with having a teacher (an unemployed graduate from the region) who will have gone through a training himself that will deliver two sessions a week to the children along with the weekly sessions delivered by the café talk participants. The class is going to involve creativity and innovation and the prospect of sustaining the project is very plausible since the winning team showed that they have full support from local governmental institutions and NGOs along the support of International Institute of Debate and the US Embassy.

THIS YEAR’S CAFÉ TALK COMPETITION COMES WITH A TWIST

You wanted a twist? Because we have one! This edition there are TWO winners of the challenge and the second winner is Zaghouan Team! Their project’s name is “غدوة نقريك ليوم ما نخليك” and it consists of three main axes. The first one is creating a moving library in “Sidi Farjallah” primary school in Zaghouan and creating a book club which will harness the kids’ desire to read and discuss books. The second part is creating a sanitary center in the school which will help compensate for the lack of sanitary and medical resources. The third axe is to provide the children with necessary equipments like clothes, shoes, coats, etc …

The competition was described as stressful and energy consuming by the participants but they also accounted for how it made them more solution-oriented, and more aware of the situation of education in Tunisia. Also, the participants shared with each other how grateful they are for the friends they made throughout this program. Whether it’s the participants or the people that assisted the café talks, each one of them got the chance to discuss openly critical topics and to express their opinions. At the end of the event, participants got their certificates and with that the competition ended, but it was in fact the beginning, not just for Tozeur and Zaghouan, but for the other participants as well.


About the writer

Atef Amri :

Hello! I am Atef Amri. I am 21 years old and I go to Tunis Higher Institute of Languages as an English student. I am a member of the communication team interns. What I do in iiDebate is fundamentally content writing which means covering and writing about the projects and the main events that iiDebate is involved in, in order to give people insight into what we are doing and how we are doing it. Also, I am helping in the creation of a newsletter that will include iidebate’s activities in the last semester that will hopefully be ready by the beginning of 2018. My message to youth is “appreciate the good things around you in life and love yourself. Because if you can’t love yourself, then what’s the point of loving anything or anyone else?”

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دعوة لإقامة شراكات مع منظمات المجتمع المدني في إطار برنامج حديث قهاوي

 يطلق المعهد الدولي للمناظرات الدورة الثالثة من المسابقة في شهر سبتمبر2017 حول ظاهرة اجتماعية تهم المجتمع التونسي و هي ظاهرة العنف داخل المؤسسات التعليمية و ستدوم هذه المسابقة 4 أشهر بداية من سبتمبر إلى ديسمبر 2017 و ستكون مخصصة للجمعيات والمنظمات المحلية في كامل الجمهورية

يسعى المعهد الدولي للمناظرات إلى توقيع شراكات مع العديد من الجمعيات و النوادي في الجهات من أجل تشريكهم في هذه الدورة من المسابقة و كذلك التخطيط لمشاريع و برامج مستقبلية معا وبالتّالي نشر برامج و نشاطات المعهد على أكبر نطاق ممكن و تمكين الشباب في جميع الجهات من المشاركة في برامج المعهد

موضوع هذه الدورة من المسابقة

تهدف المسابقة في دورتها الثالثة إلى تنظيم مجموعة من جلسات حديث قهاوي في العديد من الجهات حول ظاهرة العنف داخل المؤسسات التعليمية من خلال عدة مواضيع تهم علاقة التلميذ بمحيطه الدراسي , وضعية المؤسسات التعليمية و النظام الدراسي بشكل عام
يسعى المعهد الدولي للمناظرات من خلال هذه المسابقة للخروج بتقرير نهائي يلخص أراء المشاركين في هذه الظاهرة و الحلول المطروحة للتصدي لها.. وضمن هذه المدة ستنظم الفرق المشاركة 6 جلسات حديث قهاوي حول المواضيع التالية

علاقة التلميذ بالمحيط المدرسي

تأثير الايدولوجيا السياسية في المناهج الدراسيّة

النظام الدراسي الغير مشجع على الإبداع الفكري

تهميش المؤسسات التعليمية في الوسط الريفيّة

تأثير مواقع التواصل الاجتماعي في التلميذ التونسي

غياب الإحاطة الصحية و النفسيّة و الجنسية داخل الفضاء المدرسي

كيفية المشاركة ؟

المشاركة في هذه الدورة مخصصة للجمعيات و النوادي في الجهات. كل جمعية ترغب في المشاركة عليها ترشيح 3 شباب أعضاء في الجمعية و من ثم تعمير الاستمارة التالية في أجل أقصاه  12 سبتمبر 2017

مراحل المسابقة

سيتم اختيار فرق تتكون من 3 أشخاص (مدير جلسة , مقرر, مسؤول إعلامي) ممثلين لجمعية محلية في الجهات ليشاركوا في المسابقة

ستتلقى الفرق المختارة دورة تكوينية لثلاث أيام في شهر سبتمبر حول كيفية تنظيم جلسة حديث قهاوي, إدارة الحوار , كيفية كتابة تقارير و كيفية القيام بتغطية إعلامية للجلسات

كل فريق مطالب بتنظيم 6 جلسات حديث قهاوي حول المواضيع المقترحة من المعهد الدولي للمناظرات

كل فريق مطالب بإرسال تقرير و صور كل جلسة حديث قهاوي يتم تنظيمها , إلى فريق البرنامج

بعد تنظيم جلسات حديث قهاوي , يقوم الفريق بكتابة مشروع يمثل حلا لظاهرة العنف داخل المؤسسات التعليمية

سيتم اختيار5 مشاريع لتشارك في الحفل الختامي للمسابقة في شهر ديسمبر2017

تختار لجنة التحكيم مشروع واحد ليقوم المعهد الدولي للمناظرات بتمويله بمقدار 2300 دينار من أجل تطبيقه على أرض الواقع

حول برنامج حديث قهاوي

أطلق المعهد الدولي للمناظرات برنامجه “حديث قهاوي” Café Talk  في فيفري 2016 بهدف تنظيم حوارات و نقاشات مفتوحة في الفضاءات العامة لتطوير قدراتهم القياديّة و روح المبادرة لديهم من خلال منحهم الفضاء الملائم للتعبير بكل حرّية والعمل المشترك لإيجاد حلول مناسبة لمشاكل مناطقهم . و منذ إطلاق البرنامج، انتظمت  300  جلسة “حديث قهاوي”Café Talk  في  21 ولاية  بحضور أكثر من 3214 مشارك لمناقشة مشاكل مختلفة تهم شباب الولايات المعنيّة

www.cafetalks.org

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Cafe Talk competition second edition

This week, the second edition of the Cafe Talk competition will start off, with the participation of 10 teams representing 10 states: Kasserine, Gafsa, Sousse, Monastir, Nabeul, Tunisia, Ariana, Sfax, Gabes and Medenine, and will last for 3 months June, July and August 2017.

What is new in this edition is the partnership signed between IIDebate and the Tunivisions Foundation, which will allow the Tunivisions clubs in the respective states to participate exclusively in this edition

As for the theme of the second edition of the Cafe Talk competition, it will be about the phenomenon of “violence against women” in Tunisia due to the spread of this fact in our society and the failure of all parties to find solutions for the protection of women. So iiDebate and Café Talk team has choosen this phenomenon to be the topic of the second edition of the competition in order to come up with simple and realistic solutions where the 10 teams will organize 5 cafe talks each on the following topics:

Women in the political scene between absent and marginalized

– Rural women between marginalization and discrimination

– Violence against women inside  the family

– Role of legislators and civil society in reducing violence against women

– Women victims of sexual harassment in Public transportation

Then the  teams will come up with project ideas that represent their own solutions to the problem of “violence against women” in Tunisia and compete with the rest of the teams to win the prize money to finance their project.

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Cafe Talk Competition Awards : March 2017

By March , Cafe Talk program has reached its last month of its Cafe Talk competition first edition which has started in December 2016  in the aim of organizing cafe talks in 10 different regions on the topic of Preventing Violent Extremism 

Learn more about the competition: http://iidebate.org/cafe-talk-competition-kick-off/

Follow our next cafe talks: https://goo.gl/EB9mHu

22 cafe talk were organized in March by the 10 teams participating in the competition to reach 45 cafe talk in all

Reward & Recognition: Cafe Talk Competition for March 2017

 

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iiDebate Newsletter February 2017

Dear iiDebate followers, through this article , iiDebate communication Department would like to introduce you to our first Newsletter 2017. It will summarize our activities during the month of February 2017. In addition, we will provide you with a brief introduction to our new projects, partnerships , Trainings and iiD chapters updates.

Here you can download the iiDebate Newsletter February 2017

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Café Talk Competition kick-off

Café Talk program aims to bring young people together to discuss social issues in cafés and public spaces in order to achieve the following goals: Preventing violent extremism, Supporting young people in making a positive contribution within their communities and engaging civil society organizations, corporation and media outlets to collaborate together in order to face community challenges.

In order to continue its work on those goals, the International Institute of Debate has launched the “Cafe Talk competition on PVE” on December, 2016 by recruiting 12 teams of 3 members  (moderator, Reporter, Community Manager) from 12 different tunisian regions to participate in the competition .

This competition aims to conduct a series of Café Talks on PVE (Preventing  violent extremism) related theme for 3 months (from January to March 2017) in order to develop a youth declaration on “Preventing violent extremism” and a full report on the different topics and results of the organized Cafe Talks.

After conducting those Cafe Talks, each team has to submit a project idea as their solution to the PVE Theme to compete with other teams to win a grant to finance their project.

The competition will last for 5 months starting from December 2016 and covers 12 Tunisian regions: Tunis, Bizerte, Monastir, Sousse, Sfax, Gabès, Medenine, Gafsa, Kasserine, Siliana, Bèja and Kairouan

On December 22nd, 23rd and 24th , the Cafe Talk team has trained  The 12 selected team leaders from every concerned region on Moderation, Community management , reporting and Cafe Talk process .

And starting from this week those teams will organize the Cafe Talks on the different topics set by iiDebate team so by the end of March we will have more than 84 Cafe Talks on PVE Theme

Theme and topics

For this first edition, The International Institute of Debate chose Preventing Violent Extremism as the main theme of the competition.

The topics chosen to be discussed during the Cafe Talks are inspired from the “7 Priority Areas” of “The United Nations Plan of Action to Prevent Violent Extremism”:

  1. Dialogue & Conflict Prevention.
  2. Strengthening Good Governance, Human Rights and the Rule of Law.
  3. Engaging Communities.
  4. Empowering Youth.
  5. Gender Equality and Empowering Women.
  6. Education, Skill Development and Employment Facilitation.
  7. Strategic Communications, the Internet and Social Media.

To know more about the competition please follows this link http://cafetalks.org/cafe-talk-competition

And to pursue the teams achievement and activities during the Café Talk Competion, please consult our Facebook page:  https://www.facebook.com/cafetalks.org

 

Cafe Talk Platform Launch

On Saturday, June 4th, the International Institute of Debate and the Cafe Talk teams organized the Cafe Talk Platform Launch at the American Corner in AMIDEAST Tunis. Our teams welcomed Mr.Micheal Macey and Miss Refka Nsiri, who represented the US embassy as well as guests from The ministry of education and civil society representatives.

The project was kicked off by welcome remarks from the project coordinator Nizar Ben Salah and the AMIDEAST director Mr. Chris Shinn. The event was then shifted to presenting the project that started in February 2016 and explaining its phases since the initiation back in June 2015 with three young students from Sfax.

The highlight of the event was the platform so, a big amount of time was dedicated to presenting www.cafetalks.org. Jihad Rahmouni, the communication consultant at IIDebate, had the opportunity to present the user’s experience through the website, explain the utilities it offers and the way it is going to facilitate the Cafe Talk Registration process for those who are interested in either hosting or joining a Cafe Talk in their region. The Platform available, both in English and Arabic, also contained reports from previous Cafe Talks that had various topics like education and women’s rights but dealt mainly with CVE and suggested a big number of solutions.

The event was also an opportunity other organizations to talk about their experiences working on CVE and how the Cafe Talk concept can help develop the strategies we follow to solve the problems in the communities. In a panel, moderated by Mr. Elyes Guermazi, the executive director of IIDebate, representatives from IDEA , IRI, and the ministry of education explained why such initiatives are very important for our youth and why they consider them the first step to move forward as it is crucial for people to learn how to communicate effectively in order to agree on feasible solutions.

After welcoming  the ambassadors from different regions like Mellasine, Gabes and Sousse, Mr.Elyes Guermazi, executive director of the International Institute of Debate, announced that the application was open for everyone to be a Cafe Talk Ambassador. This year long fellowship is yet another opportunity for people to be involved with the Cafe Talk community in Tunisia and

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Cafe Talk it’s about a good cup of coffee

When anyone proposes to me “let’s go have a cup of coffee”, I think “yes, that person might have interesting things to talk about…” I had the best conversations in my entire life around CUPS OF COFFEE… and it’s certainly not just because of the caffeine effect.

coffee-cup-mug-cafe

A cup of coffee shared with a friend is happiness tasted and time well spent.

When you sit with a person around a cup of coffee, you’re not distracted by the food you’re eating, you’re not distracted by the movie you’re watching, you’re not distracted by the music, the people, the dancing, the body connection, the physical chemistry, so basically, when you’re just with a person sitting around a cup of coffee and talking, it is probably among the most valuable moment and conversation you can really have, because it really stimulates your mind by offering just the minimum needed to truly mentally connect with a person.
I’m not saying people go all philosophical around a cup of coffee, but it’s the place/time to think, to talk, to share ideas, to debate, to connect and to truly 100% be with the other person sitting in front of you.

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Some coffee + some thinking = some great ideas.

On the other hand, it’s really too bad for you if you’re not the coffee drinker type, you’re so missing out on life because caffeine is the most popular drug in the world and it’s legal!!! (I know there are tea and other drinks, but it’s really nothing close to the coffee experience.)
We always need a cup of coffee when we want to concentrate, when we want to properly wake up in the morning, when we are too tired and need to rest, when we have an assignment etc.. It’s simply because consuming caffeine enhances our senses, focuses and clears our mind, sharpens memory and simply energizes the brain!

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Good night everyone and don’t forget to share this with coffee addicts.