www.newsandletters.org












NEWS & LETTERS, December 2002

Stop the murders

Chicago--I joined an overflow crowd at the Latino Cultural Center, on Nov. 12, to see a new documentary, "Senorita Extraviada" ("Missing Young Woman") by Lourdes Tortillo. "Senorita Extraviada" documents a two-year search for the truth in the underbelly of the new global economy. The result is this shocking and brutal portrait of the human costs of globalization and violence against women in Ciudad Juarez, Mexico.

The opening scene of a woman talking about her escape from a would-be killer, sets the tone for this chilling look into the kidnapping, rape and murder of over 230 (now estimated to be over 300) women since 1993. Most worked for maquiladoras, businesses owned by Japanese, German and largely U.S. corporations.

This film unravels the demonization of these women by the frustrated authorities in their portrayal that the women's lifestyles caused their fate. Re-creation of the victims' faces by forensic workers and testimonies by the surviving family members give us the dignity these women deserve as members of their community who were loved by their family and friends.

A discussion followed the screening, led by Rosario Acosta, co-founder of Nuestras Hijas de Regreso a Casa (Let Our Daughters Come Home), an organization founded in Juarez and Chihuahua in 1998 by family members of the murdered women. They work to end the silence, by pressuring the authorities and demanding better working conditions and security at the maquiladoras. Upcoming events include a letter-writing campaign (www.chihuahua.gob.mx) as a way we can influence Congress and U.S. businesses with plants in Juarez.

In Mexico itself, a gathering of 1,000 women under the banner "Women in Black" marched through Mexico City on Nov. 25 calling for the murderers of hundreds of women in Ciudad Juarez to be brought to justice.

First Lady Martha Sahagun de Fox spoke, calling the killings the country's "most outrageous example of the violence against women." Rosario Robles, head of the opposition Democratic Revolution Party, blamed President Vicente Fox's government for not doing more.

The political pressure created by this video, the march, and another video, "City of Dreams: the Disappearing Women of Juarez," can only help end the dehumanization and murder of women and hopefully aid the movement that is uncovering Juarez's trade in human suffering.

--Sue S.

Return to top


Home l News & Letters Newspaper l Back issues l News and Letters Committees l Dialogues l Raya Dunayevskaya l Contact us l Search

Subscribe to News & Letters

Published by News and Letters Committees
Designed and maintained by  Internet Horizons