In the past year, we’ve been touring Lebanon and meeting with young children in more than 35 schools to organize debates and discussions on issues of anti-discrimination, lives and cultures of migrant workers, stereotypes and why we should and how to move past them, etc… That is the part we enjoy most about our work:)
Claude and Seble smile mischievously as they recount how they met five years ago. Husband and wife, they sit on the couch in their home in the quaint town of Ebrin, Batroun, overlooking the sea, and exchange a sly look as the question is raised.
The MWTF team is very pleased to invite you to “Shebaik Lebaik” a play that is starring our students and that comes as a joint project between Catharsis and MWTF. The play will be performed on the 13th and the 14th of December at 8 PM, and both performances will be followed by a Q&A session on legal and social issues involving migrant workers in Lebanon.
So badly did she want to pull her mother, Werkitu Delesa, out of poverty that, at the age of just 16, she was prepared to travel to the Middle East to work as a housemaid.
Join us for the opening of “Mixed Feelings: Racism and ‘Othering’ in Lebanon from a Lebanese Perspective”
It may just be ‘cricket in a car park’ but, on the 21 September, the International Cricket Council have chosen the St. George’s Cricket Club’s next tournament to be part of their weekly programme
ترفض بيروت العنصريّة. تكثُر الممارسات العنصريّة فيها، لكنّ الشارع يقول لا.
At the Anti-Racism Movement (ARM), we are constantly working on a multitude of different activities and initiatives. Most of our activities are only possible with the help of dedicated and passionate volunteers who work in collaboration with our core team.
The Anti-Racism Movement (ARM) was launched in 2010 as a grassroots collective by young Lebanese feminist activists in collaboration with migrant workers and migrant domestic workers.
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