Feminist Manifesto: The rapist is YOU / O violatori san TU - March 2020
Not much has changed since July 2019, although we had expected the authorities to react quickly in the aftermath of the Caracal case. 2020 began with the scandal of the National Liberal Party (PNL) mayor who raped two trafficked minors. One of the girls attempted suicide because of the trauma. Nothing happened to the mayor, and politicians did not publicly take a stance against the violence to which girls and women are subjected to in this country. How much longer are we going to hide and overlook this painful reality that women are forced to live in day by day?
Violence against women is still silently or explicitly accepted, both institutionally and within society at large. Statistics for Romania show that one out of four murders take place within the family, around half of the citizens believe that rape can be justified in certain circumstances, and 30% of women say that they were victims of physical or sexual violence at some point in their lives, after the age of 15. Around 81% of cases of violence occur at home - both in rural areas (53%) and within cities (47%). Also, in 81% of the cases, violence victims are women, and in 92% of the cases the aggressors are men. One out of four women in Romania was physically or sexually assaulted by their partner. However, only 4% of sexual violence acts end up in court. In addition, Romania is one of the main countries of origin of victims of human trafficking in Europe, often with the complicity of the authorities.
In solidarity with our sisters around the world, we have organized the flashmob "The rapist is YOU" in Romania, to show, once again, that sexism and violence against women are normalized in all patriarchal societies, from East to West, and are NOT a sign of Romanian exceptionalism, "uncivilization" or “backwardness”. The flashmob was also performed in both Romanian and Romani languages, to draw attention to the fact that Roma women in Romania face sexism and racism from authorities and society, and are doubly affected by this racist-misogynistic systemic violence.
We came together as a feminist collective and created the #CadeUnaCademToate (#IfOneFallsWeAllFall) movement, in solidarity with the wider intersectional feminist movement - #NiUnaMenos, and with other similar initiatives in Europe, Latin America, the US and beyond, fighting for women's rights, regardless of color, nationality or sexual orientation.
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