Monday, May 28, 2012

May 28, 2012

Poem “How wrong was I”




What is there to say?
When you make me pay
All of your disdain
Gave you my all
Hoping for your love
And all I got was hurt.
Thought you were the one
That I will keep by my side
That will make my life
An eternal paradise
How wrong was I
To let you play with my life
As if you were the only one
How wrong was I
To think you will love me back
The way I did from the start.
“No more” I cry
From the bottom of my broken heart
It is time to give you my good byes
And free myself from the mess you left behind!
Jessie H.



Partisanship and the Violence Against Women Act


The following editorial appeared in the Los Angeles Times on Tuesday, May 15:


The political climate in Congress is so noxious these days that even a law that originally passed with overwhelming bipartisan support because it provided much-needed help to abused women is now a partisan issue. That's shameful. Republicans in the House should drop their attempts to undermine the Violence Against Women Act and instead move swiftly to reauthorize and strengthen the existing program, as the Senate has already done.
First enacted in 1994, the law has been renewed twice without a fight. Last week, however, some of the same GOP lawmakers who once endorsed this sensible law retreated, voting in committee to strip out provisions designed to protect immigrants. Under VAWA as it has long existed, if an immigrant married to a U.S. citizen or a green-card holder - and therefore eligible to stay in the country permanently - can show evidence of abuse, he or she may file independently without having to rely on the abusive spouse. VAWA's gender-neutral protections apply to legal and illegal immigrants and allow the victim to file confidentially.
Confidentiality is crucial. As the Republican-led House Judiciary Committee noted in its 2005 report to reauthorize VAWA and expand protections, without such guarantees, an abuser could try to derail a spouse's green-card application or push to have him or her deported. A battered woman whose application depends on her abusive husband certainly might think twice about filing if she knew her abuser would be notified that she was seeking help without him.
Eliminating the confidentiality provision is one of several changes House Republicans would like to make to weaken the law. They argue that the changes are necessary to combat fraud, in which immigrants falsely claim to have been abused in order to obtain visas. But where are the data and studies that indicate that fraud is a problem? Immigrant victims who petition for visas under VAWA are already required to supply ample evidence of abuse, such as police reports or medical records. And applications undergo intense scrutiny. In fiscal 2011, immigration officials denied nearly a third of those petitions.
The House reauthorization bill also seeks to undercut a provision that allows undocumented immigrants who assist in prosecutions of serious crimes to apply for U visas, and ultimately obtain green cards. The proposed changes would allow victims to obtain temporary visas only. Surely, even those lawmakers who embrace anti-immigrant legislation can appreciate that U visas help protect American citizens too, by encouraging witnesses to step forward without fear of deportation. That's why the program enjoys the backing of many law enforcement groups.
The House will vote on Wednesday. It should reauthorize VAWA without limits, as it has in the past, and demonstrate that helping battered women, including those who are immigrants, isn't a partisan issue.
©2012 the Los Angeles Times


Read more here: http://www.mcclatchydc.com/2012/05/16/148990/partisanship-and-the-violence.html#storylink=cpy

Sunday, May 27, 2012


Bordertown and Ciudad Juarez's murders












Bordertown (2006) is an eye-opener when it comes to violence towards women and their rights in Mexico City. It tells the story of "las mujeres de Juarez" (the women from Juarez) whom have been facing "femicide" since 1993 without any actions being taken. Ciudad Juarez is well known for its government "inaction in preventing violence against females and bringing perpetrators to justice" and therefor women bodies keep piling up throughout the years. In 2011, Chihuahua's Attorney General, Carlos Manuel Salas, announced during a briefing in August 2011 that 222 women had been killed in Chihuahua since January of that year. Of these 222 murders, 130 of them occurred in Ciudad Juarez. In total, more than 300 women were murdered in Mexico in 2011 (Ortega Lozano, Marisela, 2011."130 women killed in Juárez this year; Chihuahua AG says fight for women's rights painful and slow"El Paso Times. Retrieved May 25 2012). The predominance of Mexico as a "machista" society has created an environment filled with misogynous  attitudes that jeopardize the sake of thousands of women and consent violence against them.According to Amnesty International, "In [2009], the Inter-American Court of Human Rights ruled on the “cotton field” (Campo Algodonero) case that Mexico was guilty of discrimination and of failing to protect three young women murdered in 2001 in Ciudad Juárez or to ensure an effective investigation into their abduction and murder (Spiegel Online. "'Bordertown' Booed at Berlinale," February 16, 2007)". The Court ordered Mexico to conduct a new investigation of the murders, create a national memorial for the victims, pay reparations to the families of the victims, and to improve measures which prevent and adequately investigate the murder of females.Back in 2002, a social movement called "Ni una mas" (Not One More) was created to bring support to the victims of violence and their families. However, the government still remains reluctant to admit that this is an issue and refuses to take actions upon it."Justicia!" (Justice!) is heard in every corner of Ciudad Juarez. The murder of women continues and the fear of being assaulted is a constant, a curse attained at the mere moment of birth!
Jessie H.

Welcome to my blog! Finally i made up my mind :) After all the brainstorming sessions i went through, i decided to create a blog that not only educates the audience but also creates awareness and action. "Sister Keeper" will display articles about violence against women at both the national and international level, what actions are being taken to amend the issue and ultimately what can be done to further eradicate violence once and for all!


The best judge of whether or not a country is going to develop is how it treats its women. If it's educating its girls, if women have equal rights, that country is going to move forward. But if women are oppressed and abused and illiterate, then they're going to fall behind.

BARACK OBAMA, Ladies' Home Journal, Sep. 2008