Celebrating the International Women’s Day: A Way to Break Bias and Build Community
Written by: Marciana
International Women’s Day has been celebrated for over a century, its history linked to both the emancipation of women and their access to the workforce under equal conditions, AND women’s political participation through the right to vote. Recognized as the International Women’s Day in 1975 by the United Nations, it became enshrined in the UN calendar in 1977, as the United Nations Day for Women’s Rights and International Peace.
This year’s theme for the International Women’s Day is #breakthebias. What a relevant, timely topic! Not only was this day founded in relation to women’s rights AND international peace, but it is now celebrated by acknowledging that bias prevents progress and women’s rights continue to be jeopardized by layers of discrimination and oppression!
It is, therefore, appropriate to think of bias and challenges faced by women with lived experiences of conflict, persecution, and forced migration. Women living through wars, displacement, and violence are challenged by multiple manifestations of bias, ranging from vulnerability, as a justification of promoting policies that keep women dependent on men or patriarchal systems run and informed by men, to gender constructed as a barrier to accessing employment or engaging in political participation and peace building.
Yet, women remain powerful beyond measure! Escaping areas of conflict and years of violence and persecution, they adopt new communities and engage in activism for the protection of those that did not yet find their voices. Pursuing education and becoming teachers, nurses, doctors, chefs, organizational leaders, they redefine themselves to overcome the systematic barriers that prevent them from using their expertise and fully integrate in their communities.
Often forced to leave their family and community behind, in search of a safe haven, women build new communities, using their stories to reclaim identities that were taken away from them. In our Her Migrant Hub community, the first questions raised by the amazing women activists that founded this community were, “How can we reach more women? How can we expand our networks of care, and increase access to services and resources for others?”. Indeed, how can we use togetherness to address vulnerability?
Today, on the International Women’s Day, we celebrate the powerful women that defy all bias! And, while identifying themselves as refugees or asylum seekers or women on the move, we see their true souls: They are the engine of each community, building bridges, creating capacity, celebrating humanity!
So, how can we truly celebrate this day?
- By learning from women with lived experiences of conflict and/or displacement and following their lead in developing strategies that will reduce vulnerability maybe victimization? and recognize women’s capacity for peace building and governance.
- By SEEING them: as educators, as caregivers, as activists, as friends, as community leaders.
- By listening to THEIR stories and respecting the identities they choose.
- By promoting women’s rights and working with migrant women to challenge any remaining bias and remove barriers to accessing needed services and resources.
It is only when women’s rights are fully recognized, protected, and realized that we can truly and effectively work on the complex global issues affecting us all.
Happy International Women’s Day – from each of us, at Her Migrant Hub!
Read More From Our Community
LGBTQ+ People and Health Inequity
Tanzilya Oren
In New York City, over 50,000 people, i.e., 4% of the 8.38 million residents, identify as non-binary and transgender people. We do not know precisely the number of immigrants among this population. Alex Trifonov, a community health representative and patient navigator at NYU Langone Health, on May 11, 2022, presented on the issue of health equity at an event at RUSA LGBTQ+. What is known is that stress caused by minority status and stigma leads to chronic stress and cardiovascular problems. Chronic stress, in turn, can cause substance use and abuse, addiction, and mental health issues.
Mr.Trifonov specifically spoke about health inequity among LGBTQ+ people regarding cancer. He talked about very low levels, lower than immigrant populations, of preventative healthcare utilization among LGBTQ+ patients due to the abovementioned minority stress and consequent avoidance of medical care. At the same time, across the United States, over 80,000 LGBTQ+ people receive a cancer diagnosis every year. Lesbians and bisexual people have a double risk of acquiring cancer diagnoses. Transgender and nonbinary patients have double the chance of getting cancers caused by infectious diseases. Gay men are diagnosed with anal and prostate cancers and cancers caused by HIV younger than other patients.
The Pain Within
Elvira Brodskaya
Being an asylum seeker means being in constant mental pain. Is there a solution?
When I came to the US, I felt l like I'd been handed a new life. Everything seemed so new and fresh, full of opportunities I never had before. And also, everything seemed so safe.
Seeking Work in One's Professional Field of Expertise: Resources for Obtaining Equivalency of Credentials in the U.S. as an Asylum Seeker or Migrant
Julia
As an immigrant to the US, one’s ability to find meaningful, dignified, and safe employment varies greatly based on one’s recognized legal status. For asylum seekers who are waiting for their asylum claim to be processed, legal job opportunities are limited and risk of human rights violations is high. Although asylum policy in the US is challenging at best, in NYC there are many community organizations working to fill some of the gaps and help provide services for asylum seekers and other migrants that are eager to find meaningful, dignified, and safe employment.
Asylum seekers and other migrants face challenges in finding meaningful work for various reasons. Difficulty obtaining recognition for studies completed in their home country, limited access to educational credentials and related paperwork due to relocation, certification differences, and language barriers are among the most pervasive. Difficulty transferring professional credentials from one’s home country to the United States is a challenge preventing many asylum seekers from finding employment in which they can apply and use their expertise.
My Internship with Unaccompanied Minors: Learning About Resilience and Hope
Sandy
A group of teenage girls sat silently at three tables in the dining room. The girls wore identical gray sweatpants and sweaters but had different hairstyles. It was shortly before 9 am. They had eaten breakfast and were waiting to walk over to their classroom. The girls were small in height, had brown skin, and didn’t look very excited to head to school. Pretty much like other typical teenage girls. As I made my way through the dining room, I said, “Buenos Dias Chicas!” A few girls responded with “Buenos Dias”, some smiled back, and others remained silent.
It took a while for the girls to become familiar with seeing me three times a week. The “clients” of this department were unaccompanied children waiting to reunite with their families. Teenagers from different countries, some spoke more than one language. For the first few weeks, I’ve only listened to their stories and learned why these adolescents chose to leave their homes, how they arrived at the U.S/Mexico border, and how they were adjusting to the program. Some departed their countries for better educational opportunities; some left to search for work to support their families, and others were looking to escape violence or abuse. Many of these child migrants, however, traveled alone. And carried their traumas, alone.
Ambiguous Loss
Sedef
It is hard to be the newcomer, the new person, or the one who is so unfamiliar with a different and foreign environment. Anyone around the world experiences anxiety stepping into a new place within a group of new people. We usually rely on our acquaintances and friends to introduce and make this transition smoother. But what happens when we are forced out of our familiar surroundings and need to leave our hometowns, homes, and states to flee from some disaster to a place that we know no one?
Stepping into to unknown is already hard. When we add the multitudes of losses we experience to the existing fear and anxiety of the unfamiliar and unknown, it is even more challenging. A migrant who had to leave their home without the guarantee of going back had to leave more than just their home behind. Sometimes, people leave behind their parents, and sometimes, they have to leave their kids, spouses, lovers, and pets. Sometimes they even need to leave behind the familiar sounds of their mother tongue. Songs of the local birds, the taste of the usual morning cup, the sounds of the local streets, the sights of their neighborhood, the aroma of the meals shared with the dear faces of loved ones, the way the sun lays its rays before it sets in their bedroom, and all those comfortably familiar details are left behind. The layers and layers of losses are there in every migrant's story.
How do you feel?
Daniel
“When the truth is finally recognized, survivors can begin their recovery”
- Judith Herman M.D.
Overview of Gender-Based Violence Against Women (GBVAW)
Chloe Sarantopoulos
Across the globe, 1 in 3 women–an estimated 736 million–are subjected to physical or sexual violence perpetrated by an intimate partner, or sexual violence from a non-partner-–a number that has remained largely unchanged over the past decade (WHO, 2021).
Unfortunately, this alarming statistic is likely to be significantly lower than the true figure, given the high levels of stigma and under-reporting of abuse. Gender-Based Violence Against Women (GBVAW) disproportionality affects low and lower-middle-income countries and regions, with twenty-two percent of women living in ‘least developed countries’ subjected to Intimate Partner Violence (IPV) in the past 12 months (WHO, 2021). The intersecting and compounding nature of violence against forced migrant women prevails across temporal and geographical contexts. GBVAW is rampant around the world and an impending cause for migration, forcing countless women and children to flee abuse at home and attempt to seek safety in a new country.