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A UMNS Report
By Linda Bloom*
3:00 P.M. ET March 12, 2013 | NEW YORK
Representatives of United Methodist Women carry a banner March 8 during
an International Women’s Day march near the United Nations.
A UMNS photo by Linda Bloom.
View in Photo Gallery
To say that the women attending the Commission on the Status of
Women at the United Nations understand the crises occurring around the
world would be an understatement.
Since the commission meeting began March 4, topics addressed during
official sessions and related workshops and panel discussions have
mirrored global trends and events.
For example:
As an inter-governmental body that helps form policies and global standards, the Commission on the Status of Women has annual sessions to prepare reports and recommendations on topics related to women’s rights.
But much of the woman-to-woman contact during those sessions occurs
through the participation of representatives of nongovernmental
organizations, such as United Methodist Women, the United Methodists boards of Global Ministries and Church and Society and other denominations involved with Ecumenical Women at the United Nations.
This year, the UMW delegation
included several women from the United States and eight international
representatives. Both UMW and the Board of Church and Society
co-sponsored a series of related events at the Church Center for the
United Nations during the week of March 4.
Tatiana Dwyer, the UMW staff executive who organized the delegation,
said the point is to allow women personally to tell their stories. The
CSW-57 participants, she noted, are not victims, but intelligent,
determined women who need help to get organized and “to push for their
rights and their place at the table.”
Sharing experiences
The Rev. Betty Kazadi Musau, United Methodist clergy from the Democratic
Republic of Congo, speaks during a March 5 panel discussion on
violence, economics and war at the Church Center for the United Nations.
A UMNS photo by Leigh Rogers.
View in Photo Gallery
The Rev. Betty Kazadi Musau, a UMW delegate from the Democratic Republic of Congo, spoke during a March 5 panel on violence, economics and war about how women’s bodies in her country “have become a battleground for the rebel groups.”
But as painful as it was to share some of the grim details about the
ordeal of women in eastern Congo, Musau later said her experience at
CSW-57 had been “a call to action” to raise awareness about issues of
women’s rights at the grassroots level.
“When you educate church members, automatically it will have an impact on the community,” she added.
Renee Campbell, a UMW delegate and top executive of Wesley House
Community Services in Louisville, shared her experiences, both
personally and professionally, in a March 5 panel on “Faith’s Response to Domestic Violence.”
Campbell also is a founder of the Louisville Clothesline Project,
which uses shirt-decorating sessions as therapy and a way to give women
a voice about the abuse they have experienced. After receiving
information from another UMW delegate, Suzuyo Takazato of Japan, who
works with survivors of sexual violence and sex workers connected with
U.S. servicemen in Okinawa, Campbell has decided on a new project.
“I’m going to coordinate an effort to get together and decorate a
shirt in honor of each of the women (in Okinawa),” she explained. “I
want to give them a voice.” Later, she added, she would send Takazato
photographs of the decorated shirts hanging on a clothesline.
In Japan, Christian women have worked on issues of prostitution and
trafficking for years through organizations like Kyofukai. Junko
Miyamoto, a longtime staff member, now focuses her attention on child
pornography and trafficking, making presentations at both the First and
Second World Congress against the Commercial Sexual Exploitation of
Children.
Unfortunately, she reported during a March 8 panel on “Overcoming
the Pain of Abuse and Violence against Women and Girls,” child
pornography is not yet banned, and even the celebrated art of Japanese
anime and manga “are being misused” to sexualize children.
“Our struggle is continuing, but we still have hope to overcome all
these problems with your cooperation and love,” Miyamoto told the
audience.
As the Rev. Amee Paparella, staff with the Board of Church and
Society, pointed out during the same discussion, persons of faith are
involved at every level of intervention and advocacy for those trying to
overcome the pain of abuse and violence.
“To say that we worship a God who cares for the vulnerable and
suffering and not advocate for the vulnerable and suffering makes no
sense,” she said.
Hope amid threats
A March 6 panel discussion on “Women’s Leadership to End the Korean
War,” co-sponsored by United Methodist Women, included, from left, June
Kim, Gyung Lan Jung, Hosu Kim and Christine Ahn. A UMNS photo by Linda
Bloom.
View in Photo Gallery
Amid the week’s unavoidable news of the world’s political and military tensions, women tried to sound a note of hope.
Speakers on “Women’s Leadership to End the Korean War,” a March 6
panel co-sponsored by UMW, the Korea Policy Institute and the Global
Fund for Women, said women from North and South Korea had conducted
meetings and other exchanges together since 1988.
But contact has dropped markedly since 2007 and has had no
government support in the past few years, said Gyung Lan Jung, a UMW
delegate and co-representative of Women Making Peace, an organization
encouraging reunification.
The conflict threatens everyone on the Korean Peninsula, especially women and children, she pointed out.
“Peacemaking on the Korean peninsula is not just about nuclear
issues. We need to create mutual understanding and trust between the
two Koreas.”
Technically, the 1953 armistice did not end the war between north
and south, said Christine Ahn of the Korea Policy Institute. “The
reality is six decades of an unended war,” she pointed out. “Millions
of families are still divided.”
Five days later, North Korea, still incensed by the U.N. Security Council action, declared the armistice invalid.
Some speakers throughout the week pointed out that militarization —
in Korea and elsewhere — increases the risk of violence against women.
That concern also was part of a “call to action” for a march on International Women’s Day
organized by UMW and four other organizations. In a military culture,
“individuals in positions of authority believe they can commit crimes
with impunity,” the call to action said, leading to sexual violence and
ongoing harassment and intimidation.
Rusudan Kalichava, a UMW delegate from the Republic of Georgia who has seen her share of war-related violence against women, found it energizing to be part of the march.
“I love the spirit of these women,” she said. “I feel we are together and can say ‘no’ to violence.”
*Bloom is a United Methodist News Service multimedia reporter based in New York. Follow her at http://twitter.com/umcscribe.
News media contact: Linda Bloom, New York, (646) 369-3759 or newsdesk@umcom.org.