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Displaced Women Build New
Lives, Brick by Brick
By: Gloria Helena Rey
August 1, 2006 - (IPS) "The City of Women",
in the northern Colombian municipality of Turbaco, 11 kilometres
from the fortified walls of this tourist resort city, bears no resemblance
to Federico Fellini's 1980 film by the same name, or to the similarly
dubbed Buenos Aires neighbourhood of Puerto Madero, where almost
all the streets and public spaces are named for famous women. These
Colombian women, in contrast, are very real and still alive, and
are making their own mark on the country. Displaced by war, survivors
of massacres and crimes, some were victims of the paramilitaries,
others of guerrillas or the state security forces.
Colombia has the world's second largest internally
displaced population (after Sudan) -- at least 2.5 million, according
to government figures. Women account for 49 percent of the displaced.
The new community in Turbaco was built on the hard work of such
women. Initially, eight founded the Liga de Mujeres Desplazadas
(League of Displaced Women) in 1998, to get forced displacement
recognised as a war crime, to seek humanitarian aid to improve their
terrible health conditions and poor nutrition, and to reclaim their
own rights and those of their families. "Seeing the terrible
poverty in the streets was unbearable," remembers Patricia
Guerrero, a lawyer displaced by threats in 1997, mother of three
daughters and the driving force behind the Liga de Mujeres and this
unique village.
Around 100 women joined her to begin construction
in 2003, building their new lives brick by brick. They themselves
manufactured the 120,000 cement blocks used in the 97 houses (78
square meters each), which now house the 500 people that give life
to the five-block settlement. The project, which included the cost
of the land and the construction of the dwellings, was negotiated
with the owner for more than a year and a half. Guerrero obtained
500,000 dollars from the U.S. Congress to kick-start the process.
Additional money came from the office of the United Nations High
Commissioner for Refugees, the World Food Programme, the Spanish
government, the Ford Foundation and other public and private organisations.
As soon as more funds come in, construction of new houses will continue,
says Héctor Useche, administrative assistant director and
Liga project coordinator.
Training is a key component of the initiative.
Many of these women were peasant farmers or domestics before coming
here. "It was hard to learn how to make bricks, but I proved
that women could do it," says Niris Romero, a mother of five,
and one of the 30 women trained in the skill. "I also worked
on the beams of my house, and helped mould each column and make
the mix to cement the blocks. I am happy -- I have a roof and a
trade." Some of her peers were trained as bricklayers or in
agriculture -- everyone received some kind of training. Two hundred
Liga members who did not receive state housing subsidies underwent
training and took part in productive projects and other activities
during the construction phase. All have carried their training further,
particularly in the field of human development.
"It was extremely hard to get this project
off the ground," says Guerrero, who, having secured the initial
funding, negotiated the purchase of the land. "Later, we came
under attack: I was accused of doing it for personal gain, and people
predicted I would fail. During the construction process, we were
threatened, people were ‘disappeared' and killed, and bodies
were dumped on the surrounding land to scare us. They wanted to
drive us out, whatever it took," she remembers. The husband
of Simona Velásquez, 46, a mother of six who was displaced
by the war three times, was killed with a machete while he was guarding
materials used in the construction of the settlement. "They
didn't steal the materials, but the murder caused panic. Many of
the women wanted to give up," says Guerrero. But they did not,
"because it would have been like killing our last hope. That's
why we stayed," says Nerlides Almansa, 48, mother of six and
current co-ordinator of productive projects for the Liga and "City
of Women".
The women have since been nominated for the National
Peace Prize, awarded to individuals or organisations that contribute
to resolving Colombia's four-decade armed conflict. The project's
success story has been held up as a model for other regions in the
country. The women's families have also received training and awareness-raising
classes. Guerrero describes a youth league and explains that work
on the concept of masculinity is done with husbands. "We do
not want abusive husbands, or children who will be drawn into the
war or prostitution. Our community is grounded in ethical values,
and we educate everyone on their citizen's rights." The women
have also laid in water pipes and built a day-care centre, Mujercoop
-- a co-op that encompasses part of the community's brick manufacturing
activity -- and a community restaurant.
In addition, they set up a credit fund to finance
new micro-enterprises and subsidise education. In July, loans were
approved for 11 new businesses and shoe-making training, says manager
Roselí Cardona. Before arriving in Turbaco, the women had
lost everything, and their pride and dignity was in shreds. Many
of them had been raped and had seen family members killed. "I
don't like to dwell on the past. Today, we have peace, a roof over
our heads and a future," says Adelaida Amador, mother of five
and one of the first to move to the area. She owns one of the community's
grocery stores. Like most of the women in the new village, she has
found the courage and strength to rise from the ashes of her old
life. "We are proud of what we have done," says Marlenys
Hurtado, a mother of three and a Liga member. "We carry with
us all the trials and wounds of this war, but we have learned to
look to the future, with dignity." But this "is just the
beginning. We need to make our town and productive projects self-sustainable,
and to create an economy based on solidarity. We also need to resolve
the conflicts that will inevitably arise, and consolidate the community
based on a foundation of rights, equality, and opposition to war
and violence," says Guerrero.
It is harrowing to see children, husbands or brothers
or sisters murdered, or to discover the body of another relative,
and then have to flee to save your own life. It is an almost unimaginable
task to overcome fear, hunger, and social marginalisation and still
pick oneself up and continue on. But somehow, these women have managed
to do it. Isabelina Tapias, 71; Doris Berrío, her husband
and two children; and Ana Luz Ortega, and her husband and seven
children, for example, were displaced by paramilitaries. Tapia's
daughter was killed, Berrío and her family miraculously escaped
death, and Ortega and her family fled when the killings had become
routine in her community and her 12-year-old daughter was threatened
with rape. "We fled the guerrilla killings. We left everything
and got out," says Almansa. Almansa now focuses her attention
on planting corn, beans and vegetables and the quest for resources
to improve the community's crops. She gets her strength "from
the quality of the people who lead the project, those who support
them, and from within myself. This was the only dream I had."
From afar, the modest houses and tropical vegetation
form a quiet, green, deep wine, and yellow landscape, but the community
itself has made some noise. It is a powerful sound, and, "above
all, a strategy of peaceful resistance to impunity, violence against
women and children, and murder," says Guerrero. "It is
also a way to stand up to those who ‘disappear' people, steal
land, or who, for decades, have sown the seeds of pain and hunger
in these regions."
From: http://www.ipsnews.net/news.asp?idnews=34194
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