The SOL Foundation ™

The SOL Foundation ™
Showing posts with label comments. Show all posts
Showing posts with label comments. Show all posts

Saturday, May 3, 2025

BREAKING BARRIERS

 Women in Leadership and the Path to Equality

When women lead, communities thrive. Yet across the globe, women remain significantly underrepresented in leadership and decision-making roles—from corporate boardrooms to community councils. At The SOL Foundation, our mission to empower women through #SOLEmpowernment includes dismantling the barriers that hold women back and paving the way for a more equitable future.

In this blog, we explore the challenges women face in stepping into leadership roles and the bold, necessary steps we can all take to close the gender gap in leadership.

The Reality: Underrepresentation in Leadership

Despite making up nearly half the world’s population, women are far from achieving equal representation in leadership. Consider the statistics:

  • Women hold only a quarter of parliamentary seats globally.
  • In the corporate world, less than 10% of Fortune 500 CEOs are women.
  • In many communities, women still struggle to have a seat at the table where critical decisions are made.

This gap isn’t about a lack of talent or ambition—it’s about barriers, both visible and invisible.


The Challenges Women Face in Leadership

Here are some of the key obstacles keeping women from leading:

🔹 Cultural and Social Expectations

Traditional gender roles often expect women to prioritize caregiving over career, limiting the time and support they need to pursue leadership.

🔹 Lack of Access to Networks

Leadership opportunities are often influenced by access to professional networks, mentors, and sponsorships—spaces where women are underrepresented or excluded.

🔹 Unequal Pay and Economic Disparity

The wage gap reduces women’s financial independence and limits their ability to invest in personal development or leadership training.

🔹 Bias and Discrimination

Women often face unconscious bias that questions their competence or leadership style, especially in male-dominated industries.

🔹 Limited Representation

The absence of women in high-level roles leads to a lack of role models, making it harder for young women to visualize and pursue similar paths.

Paving the Path to Equality in Leadership

At The SOL Foundation, we believe that breaking these barriers starts with intentional action. Here’s how we’re helping and what we believe is essential:

Empowering Through Education

Access to quality education is the first step. We support programs that teach leadership skills, public speaking, decision-making, and confidence-building, especially among young girls.

Mentorship and Peer Support

We connect women with mentors who can guide, support, and open doors. Mentorship is powerful—it breaks isolation and builds bridges to opportunity.

Promoting Inclusive Policies

We advocate for environments where inclusive hiring and leadership development practices give women equal opportunities to rise.

Championing Women Entrepreneurs

Through #SOLEmpowernment, we support women building and leading businesses, helping them create not only livelihoods but jobs and impact.

Telling Their Stories

We spotlight women leaders in our communities to inspire others. Representation matters—when women see other women lead, they know they can too.

Let’s Break the Barriers Together

The path to leadership equality isn’t just a women’s issue—it’s a societal necessity. Empowered women build stronger communities, champion justice, and drive innovation.

At The SOL Foundation, we’re proud to stand behind women with vision, passion, and purpose. Through #SOLEmpowernment, we are creating opportunities for women to rise, lead, and transform their world.

🔹 Support a woman. Sponsor her growth. Share her story.

🔹 Let’s break the barriers, one leader at a time.

.......................................................................................................................................

Website: https://www.the-sol-foundation.org/

Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/thesol_foundation/

Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/thesolfoundationorg/

X: https://x.com/the_solf_org

TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@thesolfoundation

Blog: https://the-sol-foundation.blogspot.com/

Email: coordinator@the-sol-foundation.org


Let's take a look at the comments received from our Instagram Platform: 

@lavingdelegend 

"Society discouraging them being criticize by people." 

@yvmi_02

"Not being heard"

@theadventglobal

"Oh My God! Where do  I start? Lol. As a woman in leadership roles, we face discrimination, harassment, underlying stabbing, comparisons online and offline, assumed that we “are” lucky and don’t deserve where we are and whatnot. It’s not easy being a woman in this world, let alone a leader."

@imahahanoors

"Not getting equal rights"

@_the_quotes_official 

"Gender discrimination and stereotypes"

@foodie__delight___

"That Social biases 👏"

@cozynook.affiliate

"People challenging their authority because of their gender 🙄"

@artventure_of_sam 

"Not considering women as a competition. So, women don’t get the same respect as men in the leadership role. I guess this is the biggest challenge."

@rabiya_shamim.official 

"Not getting their rights"



Tuesday, May 2, 2023

CHAPTER 5: ACTIONS WE CAN TAKE TO PROTECT ENDANGERED ANIMALS

 “What you can do in response to the ocean of suffering may seem insignificant, but it is very important that you do it.” – Mahatma Gandhi.

Here are some of the simple ways in which we can all contribute towards the protection of animals: 

1. Discard the use of plastics

Plastic is poison for our animals and marine life. They do not understand and consume plastic along with the food. If we stop using plastic, we will not just save the environment, but also, animals.

2. Feeding local animals

Giving food to cats, dogs, birds and other such animals in your vicinity is also one to protect animals and take care of them. Due to COVID, many such strays died in hunger. During the summer most animals die of thirst and heat waves, lets make a point to put out water for these animals. 

3. Wildlife habitat conservation

Governments around the world have set up national parks and wildlife sanctuaries. In these places, the animals have a completely natural habitat to live in but they are also protected from the threats in a normal jungle. Threats like hunting and poaching are rampant today and we cannot let animals fall prey to that. We have to respect these boundaries. When we go to visit these places, we should not leave garbage there. We should try to make as less of an impact as we can in these areas.

4. Create awareness

One of the best ways you can protect endangered animals is to know about them. Find out which are such animals in your area or country. So, if you spot one somewhere, you can help alert the authorities and protect them.

Another way to protect endangered animals is to create awareness about them. You can create local community groups that work for this cause. Having seminars is another way of creating awareness. Also, inculcating lessons in student’s academics on how to protect animals will go a long way.

5. Donating to Non-profits supporting this cause

Non-profits working to protect animals are short on funds often. They are trying to do a noble thing by working on how to protect animals. Therefore, donating resources to them can be very helpful. Resources can be of various types. You can donate money or even help them set up their infrastructure services.

6. Keeping water sources such as rivers clean

Animals depend on natural sources of water to quench their thirst. Nowadays, we have polluted our rivers so much that animals are getting sick drinking from there. Many even die because of it. Therefore, having river cleaning drives will help in solving this problem.

7. Plant more trees

Let us save trees and plant more of them. We also need to focus on planting native species. Native plants help maintain the ecosystem just the way it should be. When the ecosystem is functioning properly, endangered animals are also taken care of.

8. Stop using products that endanger animals 

Including herbicides, plastics, strong chemicals, products made from animal skin or fur or any other part of an animal's body such as horns, tusks. 

9. Avoid using herbicides

Although herbicides and pesticides keep your plants and yard looking nice, they can be dangerous to native plants and animals. They can get washed away, entering streams where animals drink or getting in the soil where endangered plants grow. 

Instead, use natural herbicides or begin composting with natural materials.

10. Keep your neighborhood safe for wildlife

To protect endangered species in your neighborhood, specifically animals, do your part by making your home and neighborhood wildlife-friendly. Often, animals are attracted to homes because of open garbage cans or pet food left outside. Make sure your garbage cans are secure and feed pets inside. 

You can also clean bird baths to prevent the spreading of disease, and you can add stickers or decals to windows so birds don’t fly into them. Tell your neighbors about these simple steps they can take as well. 

11. Be cautious while driving

This is a rule you should follow all the time, but if you’re in a wooded area, slow down. Animals live in developed regions as well, so be on the lookout when you’re driving for wildlife near the roads.

Roads present a hazard to wildlife, and so many animals are killed due to vehicle collisions. You never know when an endangered species could be crossing the road.


Here are other suggestions from our social media family: 

( Facebook ) 

AQ Omotola Rashidah -

There’s a need to create lots of awareness and educate people on the need to protect endangered species. Replicate these messages in local languages for proper understanding.

Depending on the type of specie, if there are alternatives to them, there should be sensitization as regards that as well.

Sometimes, using the people who are likely to threaten the existence of these endangered species should be made their gate keepers and protectors.

And lastly, there’s a need for compliance and enforcement on the policies, laws and punishments to those who do not abide by the rules."

Cecilie Mjelde -

" 1. Stop contributing to deforestation and drought.

2. Extend that compassion to all living creatures. "

( Instagram) 

@koech_jerotich -

" Protect their home." 

@rewireyourmindsetstrategy -

" Education, education and education. But not only book education but rather awareness education, hands on education and education to connect back to nature. Cause without nature and animal species, human species are doomed." 

@aisha_bagha -

" Avoid deforestation and protect their habitat "

@zainab_akadir -

" Recycle... Reduce, Reuse "



Thursday, February 16, 2023

Chapter 2 : REASONS FOR ENDANGERMENT

 Species become endangered for two main reasons: loss of habitat and loss of genetic variation. 

Let us take a look at them.

1. Loss of Habitat 

Loss of habitat can happen both naturally and influenced by human activities. 

Development for housing, industry, and agriculture reduces the habitat of native organisms. This can happen in a number of different ways.

Development can eliminate habitat and native species directly. In the Amazon rain forest of South America, developers have cleared hundreds of thousands of acres. To “clear” a piece of land is to remove all trees and vegetation from it. The Amazon rain forest is cleared for cattle ranches, logging, and urban use.

Development can also endanger species indirectly. Some species, such as fig trees of the rain forest, may provide habitat for other species. As trees are destroyed, species that depend on that tree habitat may also become endangered. Tree crowns provide habitat in the canopy, or top layer, of a rainforest. Plants such as vines, fungi such as mushrooms, and insects such as butterflies live in the rain forest canopy. So do hundreds of species of tropical birds and mammals such as monkeys. As trees are cut down, this habitat is lost. Species have less room to live and reproduce.

Loss of habitat may happen as development takes place in a species range. Many animals have a range of hundreds of square kilometers. 

Loss of habitat can also lead to increased encounters between wild species and people. As development brings people deeper into a species range, they may have more exposure to wild species. Poisonous plants and fungi may grow closer to homes and schools. Wild animals are also spotted more frequently. These animals are simply patrolling their range, but interaction with people can be deadly. Polar bears, mountain lions, and alligators are all predators brought into close contact with people as they lose their habitat to homes, farms, and businesses. As people kill these wild animals, through pesticides, accidents such as collisions with cars, or hunting, native species may become endangered.

Environmental factors can also contribute to habitat destruction more indirectly. Geological processes, climate change, introduction of invasive species, ecosystem nutrient depletion, water and noise pollution are some examples. 

2. Loss of Genetic Variation

Genetic variation is the diversity found within a species. Genetic variation allows species to adapt to changes in the environment. Usually, the greater the population of a species, the greater its genetic variation.

Inbreeding is reproduction with close family members. Groups of species that have a tendency to inbreed usually have little genetic variation, because no new genetic information is introduced to the group. Disease is much more common, and much more deadly, among inbred groups. Inbred species do not have the genetic variation to develop resistance to the disease. For this reason, fewer offspring of inbred groups survive to maturity.

Loss of genetic variation can occur naturally. For example Cheetahs cannot adapt to changes in the environment as quickly as other animals, and fewer cheetahs survive to maturity. Cheetahs are also much more difficult to breed in captivity than other big cats, such as lions.

Human activity can also lead to a loss of genetic variation. Overhunting and overfishing have reduced the populations of many animals. Reduced population means there are fewer breeding pairs. A breeding pair is made up of two mature members of the species that are not closely related and can produce healthy offspring. With fewer breeding pairs, genetic variation shrinks.

Monoculture, the agricultural method of growing a single crop, can also reduce genetic variation. Modern agribusiness relies on monocultures. 


Let us take a look at the reasons for endangerment shared by our Instagram family:

@aisha_bagha - 
"Invasion of their natural habitat by humans" 

@_nussy.nus_ -
"Degradation & loss of habitat mainly caused by deforestation, natural disasters due to climate change, human over-exploitation of species e.g. hunting & overfishing, pollution and spread of diseases."

@zainab_akadir -
"Degradation of natural habitat like deforestation. Hunting too" 

@_real_rizwana -
"People and their greed"

@souqbazaars -
"Lack of knowledge"

@rewireyourmindsetstrategy -
"Ignorance"

@leafypaths_freya -
"Human corruption"


REFERENCES:
www.natioanalgeoghraphic.org




Monday, February 7, 2022

HOW CAN CHILDREN HELP PREVENT GLOBAL WARMING

We have looked at simple steps we can take at home to combat climate change. So how can children help? There is an increasing importance of teaching our future generations on how to take care of our delicate planet after all they are going to be living in it! So why not start now. 

So here are a few ways in which children can actively take part in fighting climate change: 

1. Conserve energy 

  • Turn off the lights.
  • Close doors immediately so heat does not escape.
  • Take short showers.
  • Walk or bike if you can (instead of having your parents drive you).
  • Turn off your computer when not in use.
2. Convince people around you to save energy 

Ignorance has been one of the main roots of global warming . So share what you have learnt through words and actions. 

  • Replace incandescent with fluorescent lights. (This saves a lot of money!)
  • Ask your parents or adults around you not to leave the car running needlessly. 
  • Recycle  (this saves energy in manufacturing).
  • Run the dishwasher and other appliances on energy saver mode.
  • Keep the house at 68°F or less. And make sure the heat goes off at night and when everyone is away.
  • Start a conservation club at school to raise awareness. Get your fellow students and teachers on board to have the school reduce energy consumption.

3. Keep learning 

As much as we try to conserve and use sustainable methods and products in our day to day, finding and implementing sources of energy is also crucial. 
Kids are the future of our planet and they are the ones who will be finding better ways to conserve and save it, therefore education is the key to becoming a responsible Earth citizen and continue making good decisions for our planet in helping to find scientific, technological, economic and/or political solutions. 

Let us as parents, educators, siblings and guardians help us guide our young ones to a sustainable and greener future! 

Thank you to members of our social media family for your contributions: 

@real_rizwana (Instgram) -
"Teaching children of nature is extremely crucial for tomorrows world" 

@_sustainable_solutions (Instagram) -
"Not litter and taught to love the world, after all it's our home."

@counselor.hijabi (Instagram) - 
"Use public transport or carpool" 

@Linus Paul (Facebook) -
"Planting trees" 



















Monday, October 12, 2020

ZERO WASTE MANAGEMENT

 What is Zero Waste?

There is an urgent need of setting a new goal for how we live in the world; one that aims to reduce what we trash in landfills and incinerators to zero and to rebuild our local economies in support of community health, sustainability, and justice. This is where zero-waste management comes in. 

So what really is zero waste?

At its most basic level, zero waste is about significantly reducing (and eventually completely eliminating) the amount of resources that we send to disposal. Most of what we now waste can be safely and economically recycled, reused, composted, or turned into biogas through anaerobic digestion. We also need to simply use fewer disposable products and redesign our products so that they are toxic-free and built to last. 

But zero waste is about much more.

It’s really about redefining the system. We currently live in an economy where we take resources from the earth and then dump them in a giant hole in the ground (back to the earth). 

The goal of zero waste is to move to an economy where we write trash out of existence. So that there is no trash in nature. Instead of discarding resources, we create a system where all resources can be resumed fully back into the system.

We can hence conclude that, Zero Waste is a philosophy, a strategy, and a set of practical tools seeking to eliminate waste, not manage it. 



A huge thanks to all those who commented from on our Facebook page. Here is their your takes on Zero Waste: 

Resom Tesfamariam -

I think the concept of zero waste is clear, the challenge is how to start practicing it? What institution is needed? What system has to be install? Expertise required? Capital and what is the source of capital? etc. Are the most challenging issues in developing countries.

Rashidah Aasim Asad - 

Using environmentally friendly products and we recycle



Saturday, June 13, 2020

PROTECTING EXISTING TREES part 1

Before we start planting new trees we need to educate ourselves on how to protect the existing ones.Here is a list of the dangers to existing trees:


  • Adverse environment
  • Harmful insects and diseases such as Dutch elm disease and the chestnut blight have caused sudden death to entire forests in North America. 
  • Catastrophic events 
  • Timber harvest 
  • Staking (using ropes to support) a tree too much
  • Hanging bird feeders with screws or nails on the tree
  • Pruning your tree in the wrong season 
  • Filling tree cavities with concrete
  • Planting too many plants or trees in a small area
Some contributions from our The Seed of Life family from Facebook:


Diane M Tuttle -
Invasive pest, poison ivy, English ivy

Gk KNature - 
Powerful cyclone due to imbalance in sea temperature

Muhammath Zizz - 
Personal gain, cutting trees for sale i.e. timber/charcoals etc..before cutting down one tree, plant at least 3-4

Elizabeth Larkin -
Rot, lightening, climate change, humans and beetle invasions. 

Gwen R. Christopher - 
I think humans upsetting the balance is the root cause of the killing of existing trees, whether it's disease, insect infestation, invasive species or deforestation. Humans are the enemy.

Annette Hein - 
Excessive use of salt in water, constant exposure to herbicides and pesticides for trees that grow in urban and suburban environment. Introduction of invasive vines and insects that kill off our trees. 

Tom Swift - 
Roundup on the ground within the drip line will destroy trees. 






Monday, June 1, 2020

REASONS FOR PLANTING TREES

There are infinite amount of reasons for planting trees however, we are going to list some of the major ones :


  • Trees improve air quality by producing oxygen. They also store carbon, offsetting harmful by products of fossil-fuel burning. 
  • They moderate the effects of sun and wind, they clean the air by trapping dust, pollen and other pollutants. 
  • Planted in the right places around buildings, trees can significantly reduce air-conditioning costs. Meaning less Freon (an inflammable and odorless chemical emitted from air conditioners) which is considered to have damaging effects to ozone layer.
  • Trees generate jobs hence increasing the standard of living 
  • Trees provide shelter and food for wildlife
  • Landscape that includes trees help relax us, lower heart rater and reduce stress and anxiety 
  • Trees regulate the water cycle. The water cycle is the process by which water falls to the ground as rain which is then absorbed by trees and other plants, then released back into the air. 
  • Trees improve the soil quality. 
  • Trees prevent soil erosion 
  • Trees act as a food source
  • As well as combating air pollution, trees have a role in combating the negative impact of noise pollution and light pollution.
  • Trees fight climate change 
  • Trees create a sense of place. Trees can give a place unique character and beauty that only can be found in that specific place. 
  • Trees are an investment for our communities and for future generations
  • Planting trees is a great way to add a touch of beautiful nature to your property and improve the aesthetics of a place. 
  • Trees also trap dust in their leaves which helps with the overall health of an environment. Less dust means less respiratory issues. 


Here are contributions from The Seed of Life family on Facebook:

Leslie Shepherd -
To clean the air, provide shelter for insects and birds, lowers temperature around my house, preserves native species...

Maureen E Donovan- Mclaughlin -
To save our planet i.e. clean air, fertile soil, homes for wildlife and insects and to make our planet beautiful again. I want my descendants to have the joy of trees around them. I think that every older person should plant trees for posterity. I think that this quote says the best " The one who plants trees knowing that he will never sit in their shade, has at least started to understand the meaning of life" Rabindranath Tagore.

Crysta Enders Brock - 
So more birds have places to nest 

Jimmy Gatt -
A tree is "a meadow in the sky". You will get so much more nectar from a nectar bearing tree, with less effort, than you ever will by planting shrubs and forbs

Elaine Hines - 
Increased biodiversity, planting native trees