
The empowerment of women and girls is a most urgent need in today’s world where discrimination, violence and exploitation against them, especially in the developing world, is tearing the heart out of society and family life causing human suffering, exclusion, sickness and death.
Education is the key to empowering women and girls and building equality in society by defeating the superior and domineering attitude of many men. Some wrongly believe they are entitled to treat women as inferior and unworthy of leadership roles in society, business and family.
At every social strata: rich, middle class, poor, apart from formal education, there has to be additional human rights training in human dignity and equality for boys and girls from the earliest age. Women have to be empowered economically through skills training and small business opportunities; allowing them to take control over their lives.
The economic power of women is essential for changing the inequality and the injustice in societies where they are treated unfairly and regulated to lower status than males. Money talks and in community-based Grameen-loaning schemes, it is the women who are mostly given the loans. They are considered stronger, more reliable in paying back and wiser in using the loans, and more caring of the needs of the children.
Having money empowers the women and gives them status and respect in the community and in their families.
Without empowered, self-reliant and resilient women there is a greater danger of violence against women and children.
The education of boys and men in values that respect girls and women is vital. They must be taught that their own value and dignity as human beings and their role in family and society is rooted in the respect for the dignity of females. The powerful machismo male self-image that looks on females as objects of sexual gratification has to be replaced with one of respect, self-discipline and equal partnership, gender equality and complementary roles.
Without empowered, self-reliant and resilient women there is a greater danger of violence against women and children.
The 2017 National Demographic and Health Survey conducted by the Philippine Statistics Authority says that one in every four Filipino women and children aged between 15 and 49, has experienced physical, emotional or sexual violence from abusers, or husband, or partner.
If left untreated, female victims of child sexual abuse will remain traumatised, growing up in fear of rape and sexual abuse. They can get help and fight back, but some may be rendered fearful and submissive to the violence of the abusive male in later life. That is why intervention, protection, healing and empowerment therapy is so important.
Domestic violence is physical and sometimes psychological. Arguments and verbal abuse break out constantly, leading to a broken home and child abuse.
The United Nations Declaration on the Elimination of Violence against Women says “any act of gender-based violence that results in, or is likely to result in physical, sexual or psychological harm or suffering to women, including threats of such acts, coercion or arbitrary deprivation of liberty, whether occurring in public and private life. Gender-based violence is any violence inflicted on women because of their sex.”
Domestic violence against women is predominantly linked to failed intimate relationships. In many cases, these are shallow and short-lived, most are based on sexual encounters and most are loveless relationships. The woman is treated, not as a loving friend and equal partner and respected mother of the children, but as an object of sexual gratification and a servant housekeeper and cook. The dominated woman is dependent on the man as the provider for herself and the children. Many beaten women endure physical abuse because of fear and dependency.
The children in such families are greatly affected by the violent rages of the man against their mother. They, too, can grow up with the notion that violence is a normal part of relationships and become violent themselves. Children can suffer violent sexual assault at the hands of the mother’s partner. Sometimes the overpowered mother will allow the man to do it as a way to sexually satisfy him and calm his violent behaviour against her. About 80 per cent or 32 million children suffer from violence. Seven million of these children are between the ages of 10 to 18 and are sexually abused every year.Twenty per cent, or 1.4 million, are under six-years-old.
Domestic violence is physical and sometimes psychological. Arguments and verbal abuse break out constantly, leading to a broken home and child abuse.
As we celebrate the 500 years of Christianity in the Philippines. The Chaplaincy to Filipino Migrants organises an on-line talk every Tuesday at 9.00pm. You can join us at:
https://www.Facebook.com/CFM-Gifted-to-give-101039001847033
One of many examples is the family of five-year-old Vangie and eight-year old Maria (not their real names). Their parents had severe disagreements and violence occurred. Their mother left the children with their paternal grandmother and the father. She found another partner. After only a few months, the two small girls were set upon by the biological father and he constantly sexually abused them and raped them both. They were rescued by senior staff and social workers from the Preda Foundation and are recovering in the Preda Home. He will stand trial. The children will testify.
Human trafficking is another form of violence against women. Young women and minors are “captured” by false promises, lured into fake employment and end up in brothels as sex slaves to powerful men. Many endure physical and psychological violence and “rough sex.” They are victims of debt bondage; threatened by pimps and traffickers to pay their debts or they be jailed.
That is the case of some of the 18 young girls, four of them minors, who were lured and pressured to join a party where they were to be sexually sold to foreign sex tourists in a hotel in Baloy Beach, Olongapo City, the Philippines, in November. But the plan leaked and they were all rescued by the National Bureau of Investigation, city social workers and Preda Foundation social workers. The minors are recovering at the Preda Home. The adult women are being helped by government social workers.
There has to be a major change in the culture of male abuse and violence against women, and an end to the political tolerance that allows it. The rule of law must prevail, respect for the well-being of every woman and child has to be upheld, and we are challenged to stand with them for their rights and dignity.
View New Life at Preda: Resilience and Hope at: https://youtu.be/G0fFNmHSYic

Father Shay Cullen
www.preda.org