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Former nun helps Mexico 'femicide'
victims recover
Linabel Sarlat runs a support center to help bring economic and
spiritual renewal to the women of Anapra, Mexico.
By Sara Miller Llana
June 5, 2008 - (CSMonitor) Life in Anapra has never
been easy. Many of the hundreds of local women murdered in the past
15 years hail from this border town, one of the most violent and
marginalized communities in Mexico. And while international attention
on the "femicides" abates, the psychology of fear, the
cycle of poverty, and a stubborn macho culture are now stirred by
a wave of drug-trafficking violence in nearby Ciudad Juárez.
It's in this atmosphere that Linabel Sarlat, a slight woman with
boundless energy, works to bring economic and spiritual renewal
to the women of this gruff, gray desert community.
The former nun is the first to concede that her group – which
calls itself "The Ants" – is not revolutionary.
But the name itself, she says, reflects their deliberate approach
to the enormous task.
"Against hopelessness, there is always hope; there are always
spaces of hope," says Ms. Sarlat, driving around Anapra in
a white pickup truck. "And our goal is that the women pick
themselves up, and with a clear heart, we create a new social fabric
of equality."
Brutal history of the 'femicides'
Women from all over Mexico, mostly from deep valleys and rural towns
where men had long emigrated to the US, have found their way to
Anapra over the decades, drawn to US factory jobs assembling toys,
shoes, and electronics.
While life was never easy – they were poor, and often alone
– their lives changed forever in 1993 when bodies of raped
women started appearing in ditches and vacant lots across Ciudad
Juárez.
In the past 15 years, some 450 girls and women have been murdered
in and around Ciudad Juárez and the state capital, Chihuahua,
with nearly a quarter of them first sexually assaulted, according
to Amnesty International.
Mexico has been widely faulted for inadequate investigations, prompting
scathing, international criticism – and leaving a culture
of defenselessness among women here.
Amelia Gomez says that for years she felt spiritually dead –
from the moment she believed she was about to be killed until she
heard about the "The Ants."
Ms. Gomez – whose name has been changed to protect her identity
since not even her family knows of her ordeal – moved to Ciudad
Juárez 12 years ago, at the height of the femicides.
Her husband, like so many in the community, blamed the victims themselves:
their supposedly provocative clothes and flirting eyes.
So, seven years ago, after she was picked up for her night shift
at an electronic parts factory, when the bus driver drove her up
a deserted road of Anapra, pulled her out of the bus, and raped
her – a pattern that fit the profile of so many murders she
had heard about – she never told anyone, not even her husband.
"I want to tell him," says Gomez. "But instead of
understanding me, he'll blame me."
She never reported the crime. She quit her job. She could barely
care for her kids. And then someone told her about a new therapy
group, a notion she'd never even heard of. Tepid at first, she has
since become a leader within the group and enrolled in high school
classes with dreams of becoming a psychologist.
Simply sharing her story – and hearing so many others just
like her own – is what has given her strength to move forward.
"Here I can express myself as I am," she says. "I
truly feel like I am a miracle."
Gender roles turned upside down
It is not just public violence against women that The Ants must
contend with. Sarlat says almost every woman here has suffered some
type of physical or sexual abuse.
It is a crisis that dogs Mexico, but one that is perhaps heightened
in Anapra, where rural women suddenly found themselves with financial
independence, a situation that turned gender roles upside down.
That is exactly what happened in Gomez's family, which migrated
here from rural Mexico.
"When I started bringing money home, I brought problems to
our marriage," says Gomez, who married as a teen and never
had independence apart from her father or husband. "My husband
wanted to control me."
But instead of returning to traditional patterns, The Ants push
for more independence through microenterprises.
Microbusiness solutions
The group has helped women set up a small day-care center and restaurant,
as well as a small business delivering prepared meals to entire
families when women are working in factory jobs and don't have time
to cook.
When the men disagree, The Ants invite them to therapy. Few have
shown up. But some have, including domestic abusers seeking recovery,
says Sarlat.
Their work is not always successful. Three years ago, during their
first microenterprise project, they set up a van service to transport
women to the nearest supermarket, seven kilometers away. But the
drivers of the traditional routes intimidated the women, first verbally,
and once by surrounding the vehicle and scratching it. The women
gave up the project.
"Through all of this," Sarlat says, "our hardest
task is to teach them that they are not victims. They are used to
feeling like victims; we want to show them their potential, that
we women can work together and have our own money, that we are worth
something and are dignified."
Sarlat spent more than 20 years as a nun, mostly in front of classrooms
at Catholic schools for upper class kids. When she was sent to Ciudad
Juárez, teaching wealthy children there, it was the neighborhood
across town that kept calling her – in Anapra, where there
was no running water, no telephone service, a shantytown where migrants
from across Mexico poured in daily. She and her colleague Elvia
Villescas left the church, enrolled in psychology training, and
started The Ants.
"They are like an oasis in the middle of the desert,"
says Emilienne de León Aulina, the executive director of
a Mexico City-based organization called Semillas, or Seeds, which
gave The Ants a grant to launch their project. Semillas is also
fighting for legal justice for the women who have died or disappeared
in Ciudad Juárez. "They are true catalysts of change
because what they are doing is changing the behavior of people."
Sarlat downplays her work, but women like Angela Aurora Reyes don't.
Ms. Reyes, who moved to Ciudad Juárez 12 years ago, says
that violence among women is so commonplace that they don't even
realize it's a problem. "We have lived like this our whole
lives," she says. "We all have the same story."
She visited the new community center three years ago not for herself,
but to get help for her daughter, who is disabled. But it opened
up a new world – first of pain and then of healing.
Now she is taking adult education courses in gender, violence, and
women's rights at the local university, and imparting those lessons
in workshops she runs in women's homes throughout the neighborhood.
"We have learned," she says, "we do not need to live
like this."
From:http://www.csmonitor.com/2008/0606/p01s01-woam.html
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