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RWC2021 ends with a resounding victory for all women and girls in rugby

Auckland, New Zealand – At Eden Park stadium, no seat was empty as more than 40,000 people cheered on teams during the finals of the Rugby World Cup 2021. One team emerged victorious, but for child rights organisation ChildFund, this was also a victory for women and girls in rugby everywhere. ChildFund Rugby is the first ever Principal Charity for the women’s edition of Rugby World Cup.

“The RWC Women’s Edition broke so many records and the sell-out final was a perfect end to the event, which has supercharged the women’s game around the world. Seeing these athletes in action on and off the pitch has inspired women and girls across the world – including young women in New Zealand as part of leadership development across ChildFund Rugby partners,” said ChildFund Australia CEO, Margaret Sheehan.

“This event showed that rugby is truly a game for all – the levels of excitement generated from the event and the work of athletes off the pitch to be positive role models has been incredible, and we are proud to have played a part in the event.”

Playing for impact

In-line with RWC2021 and in the lead up to the finals, ChildFund Rugby started a campaign calling for gender equity through rugby. Titled Play for ImpACT, the campaign underscored the significant role women and girls play in the world of rugby and the importance of challenging negative gender stereotypes on and off the pitch.

ChildFund Rugby Partners, Ambassadors, and other supporters echoed the call for gender equity. The likes of rugby superstars Honey Hireme-Smiler, Mandisa Williams, and Charlotte Caslick talked about the impact of ChildFund Rugby’s partnerships on women and girls in rugby, after visiting the child rights organisation’s partners in Fiji and South Africa.

“The girls are starting to speak up for themselves on how this impacts their lives and their development into a young strong woman,” said Hireme-Smiler in an interview, after visiting the girls of Get into Rugby PLUS – Fiji.

For ChildFund Rugby’s part, the support of Hireme-Smiler, Williams, Caslick, ChildFund Rugby Ambassadors Aimee Sutorius, Mere Baker and Emily Chancellor, along with the rest of the global rugby family can do so much to help future rugby superstars – at all levels of the game.

“By supporting ChildFund Rugby’s partnerships, you can create positive, evidenced impact through rugby. Your support will help young people, girls and boys, learn and practice skills that lead to positive decision making, gender equity and it will inspire the next generation of leaders through rugby,” said Chris Mastaglio, ChildFund Rugby Director.

WHANGAREI, NEW ZEALAND – OCTOBER 15: During the Pool C Rugby World Cup 2021 match between France and England at Northland Events Centre on October 15, 2022, in Whangarei, New Zealand. (Photo by Fiona Goodall – World Rugby/World Rugby via Getty Images)

Going global

A week before the last 80 minutes of RWC2021, dozens of women rugby leaders from different corners of the world travelled to New Zealand for Grassroots to Global Connect – a forum bringing together community leaders in rugby from around the world to build their leadership and advocacy skills.  The women leaders from Laos, Vietnam, Cambodia, Philippines, Brazil, Mexico, USA, New Zealand, Fiji, Samoa, Cook Islands, Australia, Kenya, and Nepal are all part of the Grassroots to Global Series.

The Grassroots to Global Series unites female community rugby leaders from across countries and regions to improve the environment for girls and women at all levels, toward achieving World Rugby’s ambition of equity on and off the field.

The G2G Global Connect Forum held in New Zealand gave opportunity to the community-based women leaders to identify and challenge barriers to their participation in rugby. The forum also strengthened the community leaders’ global network of women in rugby.

“The past nine days had been physically exhausting but emotionally fulfilling. It feels so empowering and humbling to be working with a group of women from all over the world who face the same challenges in sport,” said Lia Calingacion after the forum. Calingacion is a G2G representative from the Philippine Rugby Football Union.

“In the past four to five years of getting to know women’s rugby and finding my place in it, I now know why the sentence ‘I’m with you’ exists in rugby. Women rugby athletes and movers back each other up through challenges on and off the field. Women’s rugby is a fast-growing sport, and other people have yet to know that there is an awesome community behind this sport,” she added.

Rugby World Cup 2021 may have already ended with those 80 herstory-making minutes, but for ChildFund Rugby Partners, Ambassadors, and the global rugby family, this is just the opening whistle to the continued rise of women and girls in rugby.

As Afghanistan edges closer to economic collapse and winter closes in, nearly half the population are facing extreme hunger. Nearly 19 million people living across 34 provinces are facing crisis or emergency levels of acute food insecurity.

Sixteen months after the Taliban took control of the country, political instability has crippled the economy and decades of drought have made it impossible to continue the agricultural and farming practices that once sustained communities.

Right now, nearly 4 million children are malnourished. Without urgent treatment and long-term support to access nutritious food, many of these children will die.

In the Herat province, almost 15 per cent of households are run by women, mostly single mothers, or widows, living with little to no income. It is common for husbands leave the home to find work or to be killed in political violence. With limited opportunities to work, this puts women-led households at particular risk of extreme hunger.

ChildFund Alliance member WeWorld is working in partnership with Rural Rehabilitation Association for Afghanistan, in Herat to provide women-led households with the cash so that they can buy the necessities they need to get them through the winter.

Winter in Herat is harsh. Temperatures will plummet below zero degrees Celsius and snow will blanket the towns.

The six-month long program has supported 180 vulnerable households with cash for food assistance. The project supported 1,260 people to access adequate nutrition.

In Herat, 95 per cent of households in the province said that they experienced days where they had no food at all. These cash transfers give families with flexibility and dignity, allowing them to decide and buy the food they need. It also allows them to access health care when they need it the most.

Over the course of the distribution, there were many challenges to overcome and WeWorld has had to find new ways of working in an everchanging political landscape.

Through the course of the project, they also learned that many women are not able to attend the distribution sessions because of caring duties in the home.

To address these challenges, WeWorld has developed a WhatsApp group to advise when they will be distributing cash so they can arrange caring duties for their children.

Emergency food assistance is another vital intervention to reduce malnutrition for those populations unable to cover their food cost needs. The cash provided to families will be enough for them to buy food and water and pay for health care for their children during the crisis.

With winter closing in we have 400 households to that we need to reach urgently and support to put food on the table. Learn more about how we’re supporting children and their families facing extreme hunger in Afghanistan.