In
the Italian capital Cinzia Palmi, SI representative at the UN organisation FAO
in Rome gave an interview to Christina Höfferer, this week´s SoroptiVoice
blogger. Christina is a Soroptimist from the Viennese Club Vivata. In her job
as a radio and culture journalist she combines her twin passions: travel and
communication. Christina is an expert on Italian literature and culture, she
has written a book called "Bella Arcadia" and has recently set up an office in
Rome, dividing her time time between the two UN centres in Rome and Vienna!
"What
I particularly like about Soroptimists is their way of facing life,“ says
Cinzia during our interview at the Club evening of Roma tre. We meet in a
beautiful flat on Corso Vittorio Emanuele in the heart of Rome. Cinzia
remembers that it was her mother who brought her to the Club, together with a Soroptimist
friend twenty years ago. Cinzia joined the Club, became Delegate, Vicedelegate and finally President of the Club Roma
Tre.
"Is
there a special project in your presidency that you particularly like to think
of?“, I ask Cinzia in the exquisitely furnished room with its homely atmosphere
so favourable to our conversation. "My focus was on education and culture,“
Cinzia replies, "in the two years of my presidency we would, for instance, give
scholarships to female students of the European University of Rome on
Soroptimist Friendship Day.“
Cinzia (right) with SI Programme Director Reilly (left), who was visiting during my interview.
Three
years ago the three Roman Clubs agreed that Cinzia, who oozes enthusiasm and
energy, should be SI representative at the FAO. How does Cinzia feel about this
important task? "I like it a lot and find it very stimulating. It is not easy
to understand the rules of the United Nations, there is a written protocol and
– maybe even more important – a non written protocol. They never say ‘No’ at
FAO – maybe you do not get an answer. Maybe the person you are looking for is
not available for you on the phone. But you will never hear ‘No’ from anybody
at the FAO.“
"Rural
Women“ is one keyword of Cinzia´s work at the FAO, as the agency is very concerned about the vital role of rural women in the world. "The
use of land is in many countries a big source of discrimination against women,“
Cinzia explains. "In many countries in Africa and in Asia, women can only
access land as wives or daughters or sisters of a man. When the man dies,
the woman loses everything. This is where we now put our focus at the FAO.“
Interestingly enough, Cinzia who is a lawyer and used to work as a professor of
legal studies and economy, has also private experience with the use of land:
Her mother was an owner of olive trees
and vineyards in the Italian region Puglia.
Web-Tip:
For more information about our work at the UN, please visit this month’s Monthly Focus!