• Multiple handwritten notes pinned to a bulletin board with small round pushpins. The notes contain messages of love, peace, hope, gratitude, and encouragement in English and Arabic, some with small heart and flower illustrations.

    Our Blog

    Welcome to our safe space for storytelling, reflection, and resistance, where climate, land and memory meet. We publish pieces that center indigenous knowledge, climate justice, and the lived experiences of women across the SWANA region, especially those working with the land, water, and ancestral practices. We warmly invite young women from SWANA who are interested in writing to share their voices with us.

    If you have a story, essay, or reflection connected to climate, indigenous knowledge or women’s relationships with land and heritage, please reach out to climatesirens@gmail.com with a short pitch.

    Submissions should be no more than 2,000 words, and we are flexible with formatting, what matters most is your voice, clarity, and connection to the region. 

Politics4Her . Politics4Her .

Yennayer, The Amazigh New Year: The Beginning of the Agricultural Season

Every 13th of January, the Amazigh people celebrate their New Year, marking 2975 according to the Amazigh calendar in 2025 AD. Known as Yennayer, this celebration coincides with the start of the agricultural year where each region has unique traditions and rituals to welcome the new year.

Read More