Grebel celebrates HeForShe Impact

Friday, January 31, 2020

Students, staff, and faculty at Conrad Grebel University College took time during their weekly Community Supper on January 22 to reflect on what HeForShe has meant for them at the University of 蓝莓视频 and in their personal lives. The HeForShe movement is 鈥渁n invitation for men and people of all genders to stand in solidarity with women to create a bold, visible and united force for gender equality.鈥 In 2014, U蓝莓视频 was invited to be a part of the HeForShe Impact 10x10x10 campaign. This campaign involved men in positions of power (CEOs, heads of state, and university presidents) taking a stand against gender discrimination.

As part of its participation in the campaign, U蓝莓视频 set three goals to achieve within a five year timeline. These were: to increase participation for girls in STEM outreach programs, enhance female faculty representation at the University of 蓝莓视频, and advance women into positions that lead. At the end of the five years, the University has met, and even slightly exceeded, the criteria set for these goals. However, as Grebel faculty representative for HeForShe Paul Heidebrecht said, 鈥渢here is so much left to do.鈥

The completion of these goals presented a timely opportunity for Grebelites to speak about what HeForShe meant to them. Each of Grebel鈥檚 HeForShe faculty representatives (Paul Heidebrecht, Lowell Ewert, and Alicia Batten 鈥 whose comments were read by Ed Janzen) shared about their experiences in that position. Lowell said it is important that men are taking responsibility for the changes that need to happen. 鈥淚 commend the HeForShe movement for opening up a dialogue for the ways in which power may still be used unfairly today.鈥

Rachel Reist, academic advisor and internship coordinator for Peace and Conflict Studies, reflected on the micro-aggression workshop she ran as part of the campaign. She shared how 鈥渕icro-aggressions harm us all by creating an environment where we are not all shown the same respect and treated as having the same value.鈥

One fourth year Grebel apartment resident and engineering student explained the importance of the HeForShe movement for females in STEM (Science, Technology, Engineering, and Math) careers. On a recent co-op term, she worked on a two-person team to implement a project at a client鈥檚 site 鈥淓ngineering is in no way gender balanced,鈥 she explained. 鈥淭he company I was working for had five women working for it out of 60-70 employees.鈥 Upon entering one board meeting, this student鈥檚 co-worker introduced her to a director of the client company. The director then asked, 鈥渋s this your wife?鈥

As she processed what had just happened, her co-worker responded 鈥渘o, I tend not to bring my wife to board meetings.鈥 She said this comment was just what she needed in the situation. 鈥淚t called out exactly how ridiculous that question was and it gave us an opportunity to laugh it off and move on with the board meeting.鈥 She shared that having co-workers who will stand up for her in sexist situations meant she isn鈥檛 forced to 鈥渨eigh my desire to work as an engineer against the fact that I鈥檒l be one of the few women there.鈥 She said this is a perfect example of the importance of the HeForShe movement. 鈥淭here is still sexism in STEM, and until that changes, women need allies to help them exist comfortably in places that are male-dominated.鈥

By Elizabeth Robertson

Group of grebel students poses at he for she rally