Last year, women, girls and allies all across Mexico took to the streets to engage in massive demonstrations to raise awareness about the violence against women and girls in the country. At our most recent BPFNA board meeting, Vice President Veró Garibay-Bravo shared an update on what's currently happening with the women's movement in 2021.
BPFNA-Bautistas por la Paz stands with the Asian American & Pacific Islander (AAPI) community in lamenting the deaths of the eight people killed in Atlanta and joins with others in demanding an end to AAPI hate, violence and discrimination. We condemn the increasing xenophobic and hateful attitudes and actions directed toward AAPI communities, families and businesses – especially throughout recent years where we’ve seen targeted rhetoric around the “rising threat” of China and fear mongering around COVID-19. We also acknowledge that this racism is not something new. As a nation founded on white supremacy and patriarchy – ideologies that are deeply embedded in our systems and everyday way of life – we also cannot ignore the history of racism in the United States against Asian Americans and Pacific Islanders and, as six of the victims were women of Asian descent, the history of misogyny against Asian women in particular.
Read MoreGail here on behalf of your Board of Directors of the Baptist Peace Fellowship of North America, Bautistas por la Paz, bringing you Advent greetings, a brief year end reflection and an announcement. I don’t know about you but this whole year has felt like the season of Advent. A waiting in the dark for light to be birthed once again. So from this year-long preparation, what do we want to remember from it?
Read More(Drawing created by Cristian Hernandez). "Sister, listen! This is your fight", women who saw us pass raised their fists, chanted the slogans, followed the rhythm of the drums, cried. Weeks before, the horrendous murder of the young woman Ingrid Escamilla at the hands of her partner and the disappearance and murder of Fátima Aldrighett (five years old), along with the mishandling of the stories by the media and the authorities in both cases were triggers for the outrage of the nation. “Enough is enough”. In a country where murders are no longer news, where 3,000 women die every year just for being women, these two cases aroused outrage at impunity, disgust at dehumanization, satiety over violence and injustice of the corrupt system in which we have lived for so many years.
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