Arab News

Jordan’s women plumbers fix pipes as men leave puddles Tradeswome­n have tools to confront gender bias in male-dominated jobs

- OLIVIA CUTHBERT

Bjorn Zimprich, project manager at German Developmen­t Agency GIZ, which initiated the Water Wise Women’s Initiative to train female plumbers in the country.

“There have been a lot of awareness campaigns and people know that water is scarce but with regards to behavioral impact there is limited impact.”

Most Jordanian households subsist on just one water tank a week so fixing a burst pipe quickly can make all the difference for families dependent on limited supplies.

With between 40 and 50 percent of Jordan’s water lost through its aging distributi­on network, due in large part to leakages and theft, there is an urgent need for more efficient maintenanc­e.

Conservati­on is a key concern on the training program, which aims to raise awareness surroundin­g water scarcity among local and refugee communitie­s across Jordan.

“People from Syria, Iraq and Palestine are all living in this country and sharing the water,” said Ababneh, pointing to the additional pressure on Jordan’s limited resources created by a refugee crisis.

“We go into schools and tell them how to stop leakages and advise households on using watersavin­g devices,” says Ababneh, who is now part of a profession­al female plumbing cooperativ­e.

The women work in pairs, with different teams responding to calls around the country.

Plumber Ala Abu Heja, 32, hopes that this could help pave the way for more diversity in Jordan’s labor force.

“Before, a female plumber is not something people here would accept.

Now we’re seeing some females working in electricit­y, plumbing and mechanics so these initiative­s will influence the entrance of women into other occupation­s traditiona­lly dominated by men.”

More than 160 women have now graduated from the program, which runs separate sessions for male trainees.

Nargis Al-Mahmoud, 23, arrived in Jordan in 2013 after bombs destroyed her home in Dar’aa, Syria. With little means of generating an income in Jordan, her husband signed up for the course.

“He was really struggling to understand the theoretica­l part but reading his notebook one time I said, are you kidding? This is something I can do.”

The daughter of a handyman, Al-Mahmoud already knew her way around a toolbox and she enrolled in the program, eager to pursue a career in plumbing. “The first time I went to a house they started to make fun of me and I ran out crying. It was really bad. I told my husband and he said just stay at home, we don’t need this.

But Al-Mahmoud was determined to put her new skills to use. “I didn’t do all this training just to sit at home,” she said. After fixing a few things for free to showcase her skills, Al-Mahmoud’s client base began to grow and she is now working alongside her husband to expand their budding family business.

For Abu Heja, the opportunit­y to earn and contribute to the household budget has had a personal as well as a financial impact. “I now have a source of income and a greater sense of selfrespec­t,” she said, a feeling shared by many graduates of the program. “In the past, we felt shy and restricted, but now we’re working, we feel we can go wherever we like and do what we want. It’s really built our confidence in a way that we never thought it would.”

 ??  ?? Trainee plumbers fix a sink in a program run by German Developmen­t Agency GIZ.
(GIZ photo)
Trainee plumbers fix a sink in a program run by German Developmen­t Agency GIZ. (GIZ photo)
 ??  ?? A plumber trained by German Developmen­t Agency GIZ is busy at work.
A plumber trained by German Developmen­t Agency GIZ is busy at work.
 ??  ?? Israa Ababneh, 27, is one of a growing number of women in Jordan taking up plumbing. (An photo by Olivia Cuthbert)
Israa Ababneh, 27, is one of a growing number of women in Jordan taking up plumbing. (An photo by Olivia Cuthbert)

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