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October 22, 2007
Women and the Struggle for Social Change in Colombia
by Terry Gibbs
Many Colombian women on the political left see their daily participation
in community and peasant organizations, social movements, and armed
revolutionary groups as intimately bound up with the society they
seek to build in Colombia. A lot of these women feel the need to
confront inequality and implement a more redistributive political
and economic agenda, suggesting that political economy is as important
to gender politics as identity. In fact, a significant number of
these women did not come to their politics from a gender or feminist
perspective, but rather they began their engagement from a sense
of injustice at the broader socio-economic conditions in which a
majority of Colombians live. As a result, women struggle to organize
in the context of a dirty war in which they are threatened, harassed
and killed for being “subversives.”
It is important to place an analysis of gender politics within
the broader geo-politics of Colombian society. According to Colombian
Senator Gloria Inés Ramírez of the center-left Democratic
Pole party, there are two realities for women in Colombia. There
is the official culture of non-discrimination reinforced by the
mainstream media. The media, she notes, focus on the fact that there
are women in positions of leadership in Colombia. In other words,
that there is political space for women and that women have access
to positions of power.
However, Ramírez points out that the reality for most women
is markedly different because they do not participate in these spaces.
“Equality is not just a numbers game and simply filling positions
with women does not guarantee policies that serve the interests
of women in general,” she states. “We are a patriarchal
and capitalist culture. We have to attack the problem on both of
these fronts. Education and participation play a crucial role in
this struggle.”
Ramírez notes that working on “women’s issues”
is still seen by many to be secondary to the “real”
political work of the country. This has led women to initiate critical
discussions within the party about which should come first, class
or gender. “We came to the conclusion, after an intense discussion,
that the focus should be class with a gender perspective. We shouldn’t
prioritize one over the other because both coincide in the conditions
of women and men, in the machista sphere and the patriarchal
order of society.”
In the capital Bogotá, Democratic Pole Mayor Luis Eduardo
“Lucho” Garzón initiated a large-scale campaign
called “Bogotá Without Indifference” to confront
poverty in the city. The elected mayor of Bogotá appoints
the local mayors of the 20 districts of the city known as localities.
Garzón appointed women as local mayors in all 20 districts,
thereby giving women a prominent voice in the campaign and other
political issues.
In
the locality of Bosa in southern Bogotá, local mayor Jannethe
Jimenez has attempted to confront the high levels of poverty and
marginalization. This poverty ridden barrio, which has long been
ignored by both the Bogotá and national governments, is expanding
rapidly as displaced families arrive daily, exacerbating the problems
of crime and pollution. Approximately 80 percent of the community
survives by engaging in the informal economy. Jimenez’s administration
is working to legalize these entrepreneurial activities and to find
ways to give families legal title to the lands they have come to
occupy.
The plight of women in Bosa is particularly difficult as they face
the double burden of poverty and sexism. “This is a very macho
locality,” Jimenez notes. “There is intra-familial violence,
sexual violence, low levels of education, many women-headed households,
many single mothers and, because of the lack of education, many
men do not allow their wives to access family planning so they have
seven to ten children. Here, as we say on the security committee,
the ‘law of beer’ reigns supreme.”
The achievements of Jimenez’s administration are impressive.
It has built schools that provide meals for the students, constructed
housing, built “justice centres” where families can
access legal and psychological services, and it works with the displaced
to try and provide employment opportunities and to clean-up the
polluted river that runs through their neighborhoods. Reflecting
on women’s leadership in Bogotá, Jimenez claims, “Last
year we had the most effective budget management that this city
has seen and it was a process led by 20 women. We are demonstrating—and
the figures bear this out not only at the local but at the district
level—that as women we are capable.”
The problem of displacement in Colombia has a prominent gender
component. There are three million internally displaced persons
in the country and, as Senator Ramírez notes, 57 percent
of them are women. In addition to the particular problems of women
as heads of displaced households, many of whom have lost husbands
and sons to the war, there is also the problem of sexual violence.
Displaced women and girls are particularly at risk because of the
insecurity and desperation in which they are forced to survive.
The problems of poverty and displacement are epitomized by the
struggle of women in the Mochuelo neighborhood of Cuidad Bolívar,
which consists of some 300 families and is one of the poorest areas
of Bogotá. In a meeting with women in the community, it was
explained to the author that many local women became politicized
through necessity. From poverty and social dislocation, they formed
community associations and began to organize in order to meet basic
needs and to put pressure on the state to recognize their situation.
Some of the women in the group represent the displaced population.
One of them, Clemencia Melo de Forero, explained the urban reality
for displaced rural women:
| I loved living in the countryside. There is no pollution.
You don’t need money to survive. You can grow your platano,
cilantro and onions and if you need something else then you
can barter with your neighbour. Here it is so different. If
you don’t have money you die of starvation and you can’t
go to the neighbour for help because we’re all in the
same situation. For this reason, you have to join in the work
of the community. The work is hard but it’s harder if
you don’t participate. We do this work to give our children
a better future. |
In collaboration with social workers from the National University,
the women of Mochuelo participate in a program called the “Basic
Breadbasket” (ASUCANASTA) wherein each family receives a minimum
quantity of food to ensure nutrition for their children. This program
was initiated as part of the Democratic Pole’s “Bogotá
Without Indifference” campaign.
However,
Mochuelo women participating in social activities such as the Basic
Breadbasket program have endured harassment by the state’s
security forces. In July 2007, Melo de Forero was detained by the
National Police and interrogated about her economic activities,
her family and community connections, and her activities with the
program. In regard to the latter, the police wanted the full names
of all those affiliated with the Basic Breadbasket program and information
about the involvement of representatives from the National University.
Police explained that Melo de Forero’s detention was related
to her connections with the guerrillas, an accusation for which
they had no evidence. Meanwhile, Melo de Forero was told that she
would not be released until she signed a form stating that she was
not the victim of any aggression and that she was held voluntarily.
According to Clara María Gómez, the director of the
social inclusion project in Mochuelo, this type of harassment of
community members is common not only in Cuidad Bolívar, but
throughout the country. While the national government maintains
the pretence of democracy, many citizens in Colombia are denied
their basic civil rights, not to mention their social and economic
rights.
Perhaps in no other segment of Colombian society are repression
and poverty as blatant as in the agrarian sector. Women such as
those from the FENSUAGRO peasant union are part of a rich historical
tradition of women struggling for the right to organize and to have
democratic access to the land. FENSUAGRO is made up of associations
of small and landless farmers, agro-industry workers, rural women,
tenant farmers, day labourers, indigenous and Afro-Colombian organizations,
and other groups representing the rural sector. The union, with
a membership of some 80,000, works through 60 affiliated rural organizations
in 22 of Colombia’s 32 departments. Because of the strong
positions that the union takes against the US-sponsored war on drugs
and the Colombian government’s security and neoliberal economic
policies, FENSUAGRO members have faced persecution from both paramilitaries
and the state.
At a meeting on a farm, 20 female representatives of the union
spoke about their activism. They emphasized the importance of participating
in social organizations as a channel to becoming politically conscious
and to building skills in social organizing. Many spoke of the historical
“slavery” of the household, noting that while many women
are still dominated by their husbands, the forms of control are
now more insidious.
Some of the women identified the attitudes of men as one of the
barriers that make it particularly difficult for them to organize.
As one woman noted, “Despite the improvements in the rights
of women both socially and in the home, there are still many men
who think that a woman’s place is in the home and who do not
want their wives to become active politically. Like the meeting
today, many women that we invited didn’t come because their
husbands wouldn’t let them.” Another woman added, “Many
men don’t take seriously the work we do as women. If they
form an organization, it takes on importance. If we get together,
they say it’s because we want to gossip.”
While
FENSUAGRO women are ultimately promoting a radical redistribution
of wealth in the country, their short-term objectives include working
to build small, cooperative businesses. The women have engaged in
capacity building workshops on topics ranging from health and business
to commercialization. However, they receive little state support
for their attempts to build their businesses and many women do not
have title to their land so they cannot participate in state programs.
One woman complained, “They tell us that we should be engaged
in projects, women should have their own businesses, but we get
no support from the state to do this. If women as heads of households
don’t have title to the land, to a farm, they have no way
to participate in these strategies. It should be made easier for
women to access these programs.”
Simply belonging to FENSUAGRO has been a problem for many of the
families. One woman recounted the experience of the community of
Viota when paramilitaries arrived in March 2003 to spread terror
because of the community’s historical links with FENSUAGRO
and the Communist Party:
| They came to assassinate entire families. They preferred this
to displacement. From that moment there were death threats,
detentions of many farmers, and many women were left alone because
their husbands were detained. Children were suffering from hunger.
… Many have only reluctantly began to organize again,
for fear of the politicking of the traditional parties. I would
say they are the creators of this war. …little by little
people in Viota are organizing again but not without fear. |
The head of the International Commission of FENSUAGRO explained
that the union’s members have been the targets of ongoing
attacks by paramilitaries and the state. More than 400 affiliates
have been assassinated, many have been forced into exile, hundreds
live in conditions of forced displacement, and more than 45 are
imprisoned in various regions of the country. Harassment, threats
and surveillance of FENSUAGRO’s headquarters, its leaders
and members from the base communities are constant, day-to-day realities.
While rural union activists may be a particularly endangered species
in Colombia, unionists from all sectors are under threat. Of the
2,000 unionists killed globally over the last decade, over 75 percent
were Colombian. Since the formation of the Central Trade Union Federation
(CUT) some 20 years ago it is estimated that up to 4,000 union members
have been killed in the country. The personal narrative of union
leaders such as Julia Gonzalez reveals an all too common story.
In 1989, Gonzalez began to work in human rights and was involved
in the creation of the CUT on the Atlantic Coast. Out of the 20
leaders, she was the only woman elected. And because she was the
only woman she was given the role of Secretary of Women. Later her
work brought her to Bogotá.
According to Gonzalez, she endured persecution, raids of her offices
and assassination attempts because of the high profile of her union
work. She explained:
| People don’t really want to work in human rights in
the union movement because of what that means in this country.
To be a unionist is dangerous, but to work in human rights is
even more dangerous. I took on both of those roles. It’s
not easy to work under constant threat, harassment, to be displaced
and to be required to walk around with bodyguards …you
lose yourself. Your personal life becomes public; it’s
very difficult. That’s the context we work in because
we have no choice. |
In addition to these outside threats, being the only woman in the
union’s national leadership during the 1990s proved to be
a difficult task. The former Secretary of Women had been a man and
he limited his work to organizing cooking classes, first aid and
issues related to the reproductive role of women. Gonzalez was part
of a regional effort in the mid-1990s to push for better representation
and leadership for women within the union movement. Three hundred
women organized and placed pressure on the executive. Although they
initially met with great resistance, they eventually managed to
get three more women elected to the executive, increasing their
number to four out of 21.
Despite the advances, Gonzalez explained that many women have left
their positions in their unions because of the problems they have
faced:
| In some of our unions when there was talk of democracy, we
would talk of gender democracy and that would shock people.
Some women went with this idea to the leadership. There they
faced resistance. Whenever they tried to bring this theme into
the discussion, men would quit the union. Obstacles would constantly
be put in front of these women; obstacles that would tire them
out and eventually many would quit. |
Some women in Colombia have, for various reasons, decided that
the only way to overcome state repression and the structural problems
of poverty and inequality is through armed struggle. Women make
up more than thirty percent of the fighters in the Revolutionary
Armed Forces of Colombia (FARC), Colombia’s largest guerrilla
group. Furthermore, they now constitute approximately forty percent
of mid-level commanders in the rebel army. While these women are
succeeding in shifting the gender dynamic within the structures
of the traditionally male-dominated FARC, they are also fighting
to dramatically change the country’s political, economic and
social structures.
While
the FARC has been criticized for its violations of human rights,
particularly kidnapping, targeted assassinations, and the use of
home-made mortars and landmines, some analysts have suggested that
it is a mistake to simply dismiss the group as a criminal or terrorist
organization as both the Colombian and US governments have done.
Gladys Marin, who has been a FARC guerrilla for more than 30 years,
explains that she became involved in the guerrilla group because
“I liked the sound of the objectives it was fighting for:
defending the interests of the people, the struggle against imperialism,
against discrimination, for a radical change in the structure of
the government.”
According to Marin, there were only two women involved in the FARC
when it was founded in the 1960s. Initially, they performed the
traditional work of women such as washing clothes and cooking, but
things have changed over the years. “I’m not saying
there’s no machismo now, because we came from a macho state
and society,” she explains. “Machismo is everywhere,
in Colombia, in Europe, in the United States, but here our norms,
our documents tell us that we are equal, that we must be treated
equally.”
Most of the women interviewed noted the culture shock of joining
the FARC, not only because of the difficult conditions in which
guerrillas live, moving constantly in jungle terrain and living
in fear of attack, but because of the extreme contrast between the
role of women back in their communities as compared to that in the
rebel camps. Many female FARC members come from traditional peasant
communities where the hierarchy of the family and the subordination
of women in the household are deeply entrenched. So for most of
them, the FARC provided a liberation of sorts from traditional obligations
and a recognition of their broader capacities as women.
FARC women and men share equally in cooking, cleaning, guard duty
and combat. Many guerrillas, both male and female, point out that
discrimination of any sort is met with sanctions. As one guerrilla
notes, “Here, we women say that a woman is not just for sexual
exploitation, having kids, washing, cleaning and sweeping. We have
to strengthen our own goals, to be someone in this life.”
Another female guerrilla states, “Here we have rights and
responsibilities to live up to. A woman can find herself leading
50 to 60 men, just as a man can. She can give classes in politics
and military strategy, and she can lead a team into combat. It’s
great to see women commanders exercising their authority.”
The principal issues related to gender that FARC women identified
do not differ significantly from those highlighted by Colombian
women engaged in non-violent political activities, although their
language reflects a Marxist orientation. Many political women who
have not taken up arms identify poverty, inequality, displacement
and political corruption as important issues. FARC women, however,
speak of imperialism and capitalist exploitation. And while many
other women, particularly peasants and residents of Bogotá’s
poor barrios, tend to frame their politics in the very immediate
struggles for rights, food, water and land, FARC women are clearly
working towards a socialist society, an overthrow of the current
capitalist order.
Terry Gibbs
is an assistant professor in the Department of Political Science
at Cape Breton University in Nova Scotia, Canada. She is also an
associate editor of Colombia Journal (www.colombiajournal.org).Terry
and Suzanne MacNeil conducted the research for this article in the
summer of 2007.
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