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One Woman
at a Time
Despite poverty and unrest, Haitians fight despair
By Jacqueline Charles
October 2004 - (Ms. Magazine) Ercia Guillaume is
lucky. A maid for a Haitian businessman in the city of Les Cayes,
she enjoys “luxuries” few Haitians encounter: daily
food, a steady income, 24-hour electricity (via her employer’s
generator), a safe place to sleep. She has also been spared the
brutal act women have faced throughout Haiti’s history of
turmoil: rape.
Such basics are a far cry from the experience of most women and
girls in this impoverished nation of nearly 8 million people, especially
in the wake of political strife earlier this year (ironically, Haiti’s
bicentennial).
The chaotic days preceding and following former President Jean-Bertrand
Aristide’s ouster on February 29 fostered bloody revolts and
urban rioting. Hundreds of women and girls became victims of sexual
violence — a common occurrence rence when political unrest
explodes in this Caribbean nation, according to Haitian human-rights
groups and feminist organizations.
“A lot of women were violated,” Pierre Esperance, director
of the National Coalition for Haitian Rights , acknowledged last
spring.
Today, Esperance says that sexual violence against women —
or, more specifically, politically motivated sexual violence
— is nonexistent: “The [new] government will not condone
violence against women.”
Nevertheless, lack of security is still a huge problem. Despite
the presence of international troops, armed thugs outnumber police
in many parts of this mountainous nation.
“We need for the insecurity to end,” says Guillaume.
While lack of security remains a major issue, so does Haiti’s
dire economic situation. Not much has changed economically since
March, when a U.S.-backed government was installed to replace Aristide
and put the country back on the path to democratic elections.
“Haiti has nothing,” says Guillaume, a shy young woman
who speaks in short whispers.
Nowhere is the everyday struggle of Haitians more apparent than
in the mache , local markets that can stretch for miles.
Here is where the madansara — the merchant woman
— does business selling anything she can: a cup of rice, bars
of soap, used rags. With many women competing to sell the same items,
a madansara can earn less than $1 U.S. a day — the
average amount on which most Haitians survive.
The economic struggle women face affects the entire society. With
parents unable to pay for schooling, many girls turn to prostitution;
scantily clad female children are now a common sight, working streets
in the formerly upscale neighborhood of Petionville.
The practice of de facto child slavery is increasing: poor families,
unable to feed or educate their children, often send them to “
reste avec ” (stay with) better-off families, working
as a domestic servant called a “restavék.”
The statistics are deeply disturbing. The average life expectancy
for a Haitian woman is 50 years. She earns considerably less than
her poorest male counterpart, though over 60 percent of households
here are female-headed.
Haitian women rank lowest in the U.N. Development Programme’s
Western Hemisphere gender index: lowest in maternal mortality, contraceptive
use, teen-marriage incidence, primary-school enrollment.
Myriam Merlet, director of the Centre National et International
de Documentation et d’Information des Femmes en Haiti (ENFOFANM),
says that disregard for women’s rights has long been a problem
in Haitian society.
She and other women are trying to change attitudes as well as ease
the crisis. [See Ms ., Winter 2003/2004, highlighting the
work of Haitian health pioneer Loune Viaud.] Danielle Saint Lot,
Haiti’s Minister of Commerce, Industry and Tourism, believes
the answer for improving women’s lives lies with education
and job creation.
“If you educate them, they will educate their children differently,”
she says. “When you offer someone the possibility to work
and make money, people will be able to feel hope.’’
Shortly after taking office, Saint Lot helped organize a fair where
scores of women from both formal and informal sectors displayed
their talents and sold their wares.
The event demonstrated Haiti’s potential, so Saint Lot wants
to make it an international affair, inviting prospective investors
and vendors from neighboring islands. In that way, she hopes to
replace despair with hope — one woman at a time.
From: http://www.msmagazine.com/fall2004/haitianwomen.asp
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