Now is the perfect time to join AAWE with our “Red, White and New” member rate, available from the first day of summer, June 21st to July 15th.
We would love for you to join our amazing group of bicultural, dynamic and diverse women living in France.
Join us this summer and start your new adventure with AAWE!
The Details
- This offer includes all the benefits of our annual membership at our special 76€ “Red, White and New” rate.*
- Annual membership is usually 90€ for members over 35 years old.
- Members 35 and younger are welcome to join at the membership rate of 40€* .
- Membership duration is until May 31, 2022.
- The “Red White and New” special offer is available until July 15, 2021.
Please complete the new member application form below and then click on the appropriate “Red, White & New” PayPal button to the right to take advantage of our offer today!
We are so looking forward to welcoming you!
*Please note:
1. 2020 /2021 year members cannot use this special rate to renew.
2. An addition 2€ will be charged for PayPal convenience fee.
This special “Red, White & New” rate is available June 21st to July 15th for an AAWE Membership that will run until May 31, 2022.
Bigger, better, stronger!
500+ diverse members are ready to welcome you to your happy place!
After 60 years and two generations of experience, AAWE is here for you to connect, engage and thrive!
Our members join for many reasons: social activities, support, networking, educational resources to name a few. Mostly to create that all encompassing network lifeline with other women for support on how to live our best lives in a country where navigating is tricky and not our original culture.
We are confident that when you join us your journey with AAWE will be fruitful; an environment that fosters the ability to create bonds, develop supportive networks and lifelong relationships.
Take a peek at our detailed list of member benefits listed just below.
We invite you to take a look at our Activities page to see the various types of programming. social activities and support groups we have ongoing throughout the year.
Some of our more recent initiatives include Les Historiennes French history programming, an Empowered Women’s Speaker Series and See You at 6 an online and in-person casual meetup.
We’ve added a Diversity and Inclusion executive board position as well as a Welcoming Diversity work group and started an “Introduction to Rewiring your Racial Consciousness — Rewire” group.
We recently launched an Education Insights blog covering preschool through secondary schooling in France.
At present, most of our “events” are via Zoom, but our committees are working together, even if remotely.
There is always something to do!
We’d love for you to join our bicultural community of American women! Add your voice to ours! Join today!
Click the +’s to Learn About All Our Member Benefits.
Balancing Bicultural Lives
- Quarterly AAWE News magazine with club news, photos from events, profiles of members, and all the details on happenings in the club.
- Weekly emails with upcoming event announcements.
- Guest speakers and resources on: filing US taxes, citizenship for children born in France, US voting, financial planning, applying for French nationality, bilingualism and biculturalism.
- Members-only website with resources for living a bicultural life in France.
- Networking opportunities with the authors of AAWE’s book: Vital Issues: How to Survive Officialdom While Living in France.
- Divorce Support Groups, Bereavement support.
- Professional skill-building workshops and guest speakers; plus volunteering opportunities on Global Issues and topics related to the United Nations through FAWCO.
- Professional networking in in-person events and the private AAWE LinkedIn Group; plus international networking through FAWCO events and its Facebook Group.
Family and Educational Resources
- American holiday celebrations for children: annual Halloween parties and visits with Santa
- Education resources for parents and students: a bi-annual “What School is Right for My Child” Fair that highlights bilingual education options, and an annual University Fair
- Academic awards for AAWE members and their children : dev.aaweparis.org/awards and www.fawcofoundation.org
- In-house library of college prep workbooks and information on summer camps and programs in the US.
- Youth programs through your FAWCO membership *see the Introduction to FAWCO.
- Networking opportunities with the authors of AAWE’s books on education: AAWE Guide to Education in France; Beyond the Bac: Higher Education in France and Abroad.
Fun and Social Activities
- Cocktails, annual all-member parties and a holiday market.
- Running teams: La Parisienne (in September) and Les Rochambelles (in Caen in June).
- Book club, writing group, film club, cultural tours, bridge lessons.
- Younger Wonders group (members under 50) with evening and weekend gatherings.
- BBX Sisterhood group gathers “members in the middle” (born 1955-75 approx.).
- Guest speakers or workshops on (for ex.) health, wine, gastronomy, culture, menopause, sexology…
- Monthly Saturday morning Coffee Meetups and regular weekday Happy Hours.
- Seniors group: lunches, caroling, social events, bridge games, workshops on using social media and the internet and a bi-annual Retire and Thrive Fair
- Handicrafts groups: making American-style homemade crafts.
- Volunteer opportunities with local charities, church meal program, refugees…
Plus!
- Member discounts for American Library in Paris, Amis du Louvre, Carte Sésame and other local businesses.
- Free FAWCO Membership (please see the back of the Book Order Form for benefits).
And, most importantly, lifelong friendships!
Click the + to read a testimonial about AAWE from a daughter of an AAWE member.
Testimonial
Two years ago, my mom handed me an AAWE membership registration, with the words: “…join AAWE; if you have an American passport and dual nationality, it is thanks to them.”
My mother never considered AAWE to be just a social club. For her, it was a “cause” – an association that exemplified a bicultural, bilingual world in which my parents believed. Until the political ramifications of 2016, it was a world I rather took for granted and considered my just due. Interestingly, it is only now, when the whole idea of “dual nationality” seems to strike fear in those who believe in politically-closed borders, that I realize just how much I have at stake. Or, how ridiculous an idea it would be for me to be forced to choose one nationality over the other.
I am a 26 year-old graduate student at the University of Cambridge. Whilst I can’t participate in AAWE activities (other than reading the News and the weekly e-announcements, which for some reason make me terribly nostalgic), I will be sending in my membership fee once again this year out of support for what AAWE stands for.
A lot of effort went into making me bilingual and bicultural. My mom spoke English to me, my dad French; my parents stood patiently hopeful as my monolingual cousins seemed to be passing me by in the language lane. My mother dragged me to AAWE children’s events so I could get that taste of Americana and socialize with other young practitioners of franglais. The AAWE Guide to Education was a well-thumbed addition to our home library. Functioning in two languages and two cultures became the norm for me, not the exception.
Passport renewals at the US Consulate were a special time. I knew my mom was proud to take me to that little American island in the middle of Paris. I wouldn’t even have had that American passport to renew (and you wouldn’t either) if it weren’t for a group of AAWE women who started a group lobbying against US citizenship law 301 (b) which stated that I would lose my American nationality if I didn’t live there five consecutive years before age 23. If I am a bicultural “world citizen”, it is thanks in part to the support and activism my mother found in AAWE. And now, if my bicultural status or dual nationality is questioned, I know that AAWE will rally as an association to be out there “protecting the American citizenship of members and their children, especially in cases of acquisition of another nationality” (AAWE By-Laws Article 2 Purpose).
So…AAWE adult children and grandchildren, if you are in possession of more than one passport, if you speak more than one language, join AAWE out of support for what the association historically stands for. Add your single voice to their chorus of experienced citizenship rights advocates – AAWE has been at it since 1961. Our strength will be in our numbers. Support your mom’s courage to have taken the richer “road less travelled” to biculturalism. The AAWE membership fee is a small price to pay to acknowledge your thanks and support.
Believe in biculturalism, I do.
-Daughter of AAWE member
Please complete the “Red, White and New” application form below and then click on the appropriate PayPal payment button to take advantage of our offer today!
Please note, amount includes 2€ PayPal convenience fee.
Please note, amount includes 2€ PayPal convenience fee.