Article and
photographs by Shona Macleod, Communications Assistant, Tostan International.
View more photos from the event in our Flickr photostream!
View more photos from the event in our Flickr photostream!
In the dusty terrain of Guédiawaye, on the outskirts of
Dakar, Senegal, hundreds of women and men gathered to mark International Women’s
Day on March 8. The atmosphere of the event, organized by UN Women, was one of
celebration with musicians, singers, and dancers. I had the honor of
participating in the event with other Tostan team members.
A banner signed by local women calls for an end to domestic violence. |
The theme
of the day was ‘A promise is a promise: Time for action to end violence against
women’. Some of the women attending the event carried posters calling for an
end to gender-based violence and many others were draped in UN Women banners. While
waiting for the speeches to begin, I asked some of them why they had wanted to
take part.
Marème
Sow had come with a delegation from an organization called COFLEC (le Collectif
des femmes contre l’émigration clandestine or ‘Women’s Collective Against
Illegal Migration’). Marème represents immigrants in Spain. For many of these
women, she told me, gender-based violence is an everyday reality. Later, the
president of COFLEC spoke to the audience about how the effects of this
violence are not just physical but psychological as well. She shared how women unfortunately
receive little support to help them move on with their lives after experiencing
gender-based violence.
Khady Ba, President of
the Guédiawaye Association of Disabled Women.
|
Khady Ba, the
president of the Guédiawaye Association of Disabled Women, came to show her
conviction that women living with disabilities have both the same rights and
the same challenges as able-bodied women. She said they must work to overcome the
challenges they have in common with all women as well as the challenges caused
by their disabilities.
Although many of
the women attending the event had come in groups as members of organizations,
some had come individually. One local woman named Maymana came to show her
solidarity for ending gender-based violence because she sees its negative
effect every day in her neighborhood.
A large number of excited school girls were also in
attendance. One group enthusiastically announced that they think every day
should be women’s day, before continuing to chant the day’s theme in French: il est temps de mettre fin à la violence à l’égard des femmes.
A group of schoolgirls excited to be included in the celebrations. |
The
speeches from government officials as well as prominent members of civil
society reinforced the day’s theme. The speakers focused on the fact that
gender-based violence continues to be an issue in Senegal despite recent
advances in the law. It can happen at home, at work, or in the street. It is
not, of course, a problem unique to Senegal, but one that is seen in every
country of the world and affects women of every color, of every age, and in
every social class.
Despite the differences between the women and girls I spoke
to at the event, they all shared one common sentiment: they had come to the
event because they recognized that the problems faced by women are universal.
They had come, they told me, simply because they are women.
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