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- From: rich@pencil.cs.missouri.edu (Rich Winkel)
- Subject: Women overcoming violence
- Message-ID: <1993Jan28.091509.27780@mont.cs.missouri.edu>
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- Date: Thu, 28 Jan 1993 09:15:09 GMT
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-
- The ACTivist Volume 9 #1, January 1993.
-
- The ACTivist is published monthly by the ACT for Disarmament
- Coalition, 736 Bathurst St., Toronto, Ontario, Canada M5S 2R4, phone
- 416-531-6154, fax 416-531-5850, e-mail web:act. Hard copy
- subscriptions are available with a donation of $10 or more to ACT for
- Disarmament. Reprint freely, but please credit us (and send us a copy!)
-
- /** gen.newsletter: 129.12 **/
- ** Written 11:48 pm Jan 9, 1993 by web:act in cdp:gen.newsletter **
- WOMEN OVERCOMING VIOLENCE
-
- The fourth War Resisters' International Women's Conference,
- 'Women Overcoming Violence' took place in Thailand from November
- 25 to December 1. Over 150 women from some 63 countries attended,
- including Maggie Helwig of ACT for Disarmament.
-
- Much of the material on this and the preceding page was generated by
- the conference, which included four days of workshops and plenary
- sessions on violence against women, militarism, and development, as
- well as several days devoted to developing a series of resolutions, and
- a tour of some women's initiatives in Thailand.
-
- The conference produced some 200 pages of papers and talks on a
- wide variety of topics; copies are available either from War Resisters
- International or from ACT for Disarmament. For more information or
- a list of papers, contact Maggie at ACT Toronto (736 Bathurst St.,
- Toronto, Ontario, M5S 2R4, phone 416-531-6154). Maggie is also available
- to speak to interested groups, schools, etc.
-
- For more converage of the Women Overcoming Violence conference,
- we suggest you read forthcoming issues of Peace News (the WRI
- newspaper) and WRI Women (the newsletter of the WRI Women's
- Working Group). Write to WRI, 55 Dawes St., London SE17 1EL,
- ENGLAND for copies of either publication.
-
- Following are words from some conference participants.
-
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- Thalasingham Jeyanthy, 27 years old, was from 1989 to 1992 the
- director of the Suriya Women's Development Centre near Jaffna, part
- of the Tamil area of Sri Lanka. The Centre is an shelter and training
- institute for poor rural women, wives who have been thrown out by
- their husbands, and women whose relatives have been killed in the war.
- The Center also runs a nursery for the nearst village, in which they look
- after 85 children.
-
- "Whatever we need, we do it all ourselves, no men. We need a house
- painted, we do it ourselves. We need a roof fixed, we do it ourselves.
- We need to build a bunker, when the government drops bombs from
- helicopters, we do it ourselves, no men ... We don't have big people
- educating little people. At the Centre we are all equal. Women learn
- whatever they want to learn, and if there's something they don't like,
- no problem."
- ***************
- Sumlit Bunprakorp, 49 years old, is a farmer and village health care
- volunteer in northeastern Thailand. She was active in a successful
- campaign against the government's resettlement project for her area,
- where they intended to cut down the forests and make way for a
- eucalyptus plantation.
-
- "When we have a march, the men are always afraid of trouble from
- some local official, so they make the women march in front in case
- they encounter any trouble. And once they decided to write a letter
- to the local government in blood, and then they made us, the women,
- give all the blood ...
-
- "The men think that they are stronger, but from their actions, it seems
- to me they don't have strength or perseverance."
- ******************
- The survival and well-being of every person concerns us. Women are
- the first environment, the innovators, drawing on their talents and
- ingenuity to find ways and means to do more than survive.
-
- So why are women left out of development planning? Are we
- invisible? There are so many cases where government and funding
- agencies have failed in their projects because women were not
- consulted.
-
- It is women who suffer from Structural Adjustment Policies, yet
- the negotiations with the World Bank andthe IMF in no way reflect
- this suffering or its alleviation.
-
- In organizations like SEWA in India, Gabriela in the Philippines ...
- women came to the forefront and drastic changes occurred. Women
- and development go hand in hand.
-
- It takes stength to live and survive a battering. Government and
- NGO programmes designed for women can reinforce and utilize that
- strength, helping women to redirect this strength from trying just to
- survive and to cope with a life of violence to redesigning their lives
- and the lives of their families and society.
-
- -- Elaine Hewitt, Women and Development Unit, UWI, Barbados
- ****************
- The current world situation cannot continue. It is moving to destruction.
- But there are alternatives, coming up from the poor, the marginalized
- -- like the noise of the sea before a storm, the noise of the earth before
- an earthquake. This is very urgent, and we must feel this urgency ...
-
- We must come up with another concept of human needs, emphasize
- self-development, happiness, pleasure in creation and work ... a concept
- of democracy which includes all living things .. an economic model
- emphasizing basic needs, self-sufficiency, which does not exploit, use
- too many machines, exhaust resources ...
-
- Justice is the historical verification of love, we cannot love without
- justice. We must be at the forefront of the struggle criticizing
- militarism which uses the resources of the poor world.
-
- We must begin to dream. When we dream, we take actions to make
- our dreams a reality. A people without dreams is dead.
-
- We women, we have the ability to dream dreams that bring life.
-
- -- Nelsa Curbelo, SERPAJ-Latin America
- ** End of text from cdp:gen.newsletter **
-
-