“We March Against Patriarchy that Kills” was the motto of a protest held in Prishtina on Wednesday, marking the International Women’s Day.
Hundreds of protesters marched in Kosovo’s capital demanding an end of violence caused to women and gender equality.
The Marshojme, S’festojme (We March, We Don’t Celebrate) collective organizing this march, stated in the announcement that “we march because we do not want to celebrate while girls and women are being killed”.
Only during 2020, six women have been murdered in Kosovo. 1,222 cases out of 1,596 of domestic violence between January and September, had women victims.
Those marching stopped in front of Kosovo Police headquarters where they called “Edhe sa thirrje te humbura” (How many more missed calls) and “Drejtesi per grate e vrara” (Justice for murdered women).
“I want to work without being harassed”, “The time has come to overthrow the patriarchy”, “Patriarchy kills”, “Today we march, every day we fight” were some of the placards held by protesters.
The Acting President of Kosovo, Vjosa Osmani and the incoming Prime Minister, Albin Kurti joined the march.
https://exit.al/en/2021/03/08/kosovos-capital-marches-against-patriarchy-that-kills/
Red Shoes Left to Symbolise Murdered Albanian Women and Girls
Some of the pairs were accompanied by a red rose. They were placed there to symbolize the number of women murdered by men as a result of domestic or sexual violence in Albania.
At least seven women were murdered in 2020, but the number of cases of violence increased. Furthermore, there were several incidents of rape and sexual violence inflicted on minors during the year. Over 120 women have been murdered in the last 10 years in Albania.
More than 50% of all Albanian women will be victims of domestic violence at some point in their lives and at least once. Furthermore, the police fail to adequately protect and prosecute offenders.
According to data from the State Police seen by Exit, only 13% of complaints of domestic violence were criminally prosecuted between January and December 2020.
Out of 4701 reported cases of domestic violence during the year, the police prosecuted 615. They also issued 2816 protection orders, equating to 59.9% of the reports.
Data suggests that Albanian women spend almost a quarter of their day doing unpaid work such as cooking, cleaning, and caring. Men on the other hand do just 3.47%.
This equates to Albanian women working 40 hours a month, almost a full working week, for free.
The Albanian government continues to do little to meaningfully combat sex trafficking, despite Albania being designated as a source country and it predominantly impacted women and girls. According to the Council of Europe, the judiciary’s response to holding traffickers to account is getting worse.
https://exit.al/en/2021/03/08/red-shoes-left-to-symbolise-murdered-albanian-women-and-girls/
UNOFFICIAL TRANSCRIPT OF VIOLA DAVIS' SPEECH AT WOMEN'S MARCH 2018
"In the words of my fellow American, Malcolm X, I'm gonna make it plain.
In 1877, America, the greatest country on this planet, put laws in place called the Jim Crow laws. And the Jim Crow laws restricted the rights to quadroons, octoroons, Blacks, Hispanics, Indians, and Malays. Restricted medical. Restricted relationships. Restricted education. Restricted life.
It told us that we were "less than" and it came on the heels of the 13th Amendment. It came on the heels of fifty five individual great Americans writing the greatest document called the Constitution of the United States, saying "We the people".
Now the reason why those destructive laws came into place, I think can be greatly described by Martin Luther King. And what he said about time is. He said "I'm not ready to wait a hundred years, or two hundred years for things to change. That I think actually that time is neutral. That it can either be used constructively or destructively. That human progress rarely rolls in on inevitability. It is through human dedication, and effort, that we move forward. And that when we don't work, what happens is that time actually becomes an ally to the primitive forces of social stagnation. And the guardians of the status quo are in their oxygen tanks keeping the old order alive.
And so that time needs to be helped by every single moment doing right.
And the reason why these Jim Crow laws were in place that stifled my rights and your rights is because we fell asleep.
We fall asleep when we're moving ahead and we don't look to the left and the right and see that we're no including people in this move ahead. Because really, at the end of the day, we only move forward when it doesn't cost us anything. But I'm here today saying that no one and nothing can be great unless it cost you something.
One out of every five women will be sexually assaulted and raped before she reaches the age of eighteen. One out of six boys. If you are a woman of colour and you are raped before you reach the age of eighteen, then you are 66% more likely to be sexually assaulted again.
Seventy percent of girls who are sex trafficked are girls of colour. They are coming out of the foster care system. They are coming out of poverty. It is a billion dollar industry. When they go into the sex trafficking business- and they call it a business, trust me - more than likely they are gang raped.
I am speaking today not just for the 'Me Toos', 'cause I was a 'Me Too,' but when I raise my hand, I am aware of all the women who are still in silence. The women who are faceless. The women who don't have the money and don't have the constitution and who don't have the confidence and who don't have the images in our media that gives them a sense of self-worth enough to break their silence that's rooted in the shame of assault, that's rooted in the stigma of assault.
Written on the Statue of Liberty is "Come you tireless, poor, yearning to breath free- to breath free."
Every single day, your job as an American citizen is not just to fight for your rights. It's to fight for the right of every individual that is taking a breath, whose heart is pumping and breathing on this earth..
And like the originators of this "Me Too", the Fannie Lou Hamers, the Recy Taylor who in 1944 was gang raped by six White men, and she spoke up. Rosa Parks fought for her rights. She was silenced. To the Tarana Burkes. To the originators, the first women to speak out -it cost them something. Nothing and no one can be great without a cost.
Bandwagon
Testimonial
Transference
Snob Appeal
Facts and Figures
Plain Folks
Glittering Generalities
Appeal to Fear
Expertise
Logical Appeal
Name Calling
Humour
https://youtu.be/C1kTEit6-qw?si=tXIFHeGxc7TklnC9 https://youtu.be/lJynpEzXCY8?si=MwCngts-Uox9ks0j