We Should Listen to The Women Who Came to Europe - Historie

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  • We Should Listen to The Women Who Came to Europe

    von admin, angelegt

    Foto:Who needs support? In this picture: a demonstration at International Women's Day (2014) Photo: Sigfrid Lundberg (CC BY-SA 2.0)

    In the debate on migration after the events of Cologne, women are too often only objects. For Alisa Trojansky it is time to recognize that sexism is no foreign invention, and to speak up against women being used as symbols or justifications for racism...


    A post by Alisa Link: https://publixphere.net/i/publixphere-de/user/Alisa Trojansky

    It’s International Women’s day and I have never seen so many promoters of women’s rights in any year before. Living in Cologne for the last two months, I have been approached by journalists asking whether I had been at the train station at New Year’s Eve about three times. Why? Because while, until now, we had been used to being treated with respect and pure honour by European men at the same time living in a paradise of perfectly equal opportunities and in safe surroundings, we had clearly been overwhelmed by a huge bunch of migrants from Muslim or not specified other backgrounds that had invented a sexual harassment not known in the Western World before. Cologne, in this context, has become the proof of the upcoming breakdown of women's public safety.

    The narrative above is wrong, of course, and yet it is powerful. Two months after the events of Cologne, we are still talking about teaching refugee men about how to treat white women.

    Make no mistake: violence against women has to be condemned without restrictions, no matter who committed it. But the clue is that in the current situation, under the current narrative, women are again only the objects, not the subjects in the discussion - the latter carrying a racist undertone. It also totally ignores the fact that women’s rights are not only for women from the West. On International Women’s day, I wonder whether we should not seize the opportunity to speak up not only for European women, but also for those who have been living in Europe for only a few days, months or years.

    It might be time to discuss what “European values” mean for refugee women and how we can contribute to empowering every woman to be strong and brave enough to raise her voice, to ensure her physical and psychological integrity. Focusing on refugees as men, connected with adjectives such as dangerous, criminal and sexist is not only unfair to them; Regarding the fact that men make up only 40% of asylum seekers in total (2015), leaving 60% who are women and children, refugee women should get at least as much attention.

    International Women’s day might be the perfect time to listen to the women who came to Europe as asylum seekers and refugees; to learn about their impressions when entering for the first time an over-sexualised society in which advertisement treats women as some naked extra object to raise profits. It would be valuable to learn about how they feel living in a refugee camp, living in a cramped space with men and other people whom they had never met before. And, last but not least, how it feels to be prejudged by a society that claims that you are invisible, without any rights, qualification or self-esteem next to your husband or brother - who must be one of those sexist, dangerous migrants for sure.

    Do not get me wrong. I know it’s not my right to speak for refugee women and to tell them that they should claim their rights and become feminists. But since International Women’s day is about solidarity, it is my aim to speak out against women being used as symbols or justifications for racism, instrumentalised for power. Women’s rights are not contradictory to refugee’s rights; promoting women’s rights is promoting refugees’ rights. There is no way around it.

    How do you see it? Comment right here and start a discussion

    Related discussions (in German)

  • We Should On International Women's Day, Listen to The Women Who Came to Europe

    von babbelgebrabbel, angelegt

    Foto:Who needs support? In this picture: a demonstration at International Women's Day (2014) Photo: Sigfrid Lundberg (CC BY-SA 2.0)

    In the debate on migration after the events of Cologne, women are too often only objects. For Alisa Trojansky it is time to recognize that sexism is no foreign invention, and to speak up against women being used as symbols or justifications for racism...


    A post by Alisa Trojansky

    It’s International Women’s day and I have never seen so many promoters of women’s rights in any year before. Living in Cologne for the last two months, I have been approached by journalists asking whether I had been at the train station at New Year’s Eve about three times. Why? Because while, until now, we had been used to being treated with respect and pure honour by European men at the same time living in a paradise of perfectly equal opportunities and in safe surroundings, we had clearly been overwhelmed by a huge bunch of migrants from Muslim or not specified other backgrounds that had invented a sexual harassment not known in the Western World before. Cologne, in this context, has become the proof of the upcoming breakdown of women's public safety.

    The narrative above is wrong, of course, and yet it is powerful. Two months after the events of Cologne, we are still talking about teaching refugee men about how to treat white women.

    Make no mistake: violence against women has to be condemned without restrictions, no matter who committed it. But the clue is that in the current situation, under the current narrative, women are again only the objects, not the subjects in the discussion - the latter carrying a racist undertone. It also totally ignores the fact that women’s rights are not only for women from the West. On International Women’s day, I wonder whether we should not seize the opportunity to speak up not only for European women, but also for those who have been living in Europe for only a few days, months or years.

    It might be time to discuss what “European values” mean for refugee women and how we can contribute to empowering every woman to be strong and brave enough to raise her voice, to ensure her physical and psychological integrity. Focusing on refugees as men, connected with adjectives such as dangerous, criminal and sexist is not only unfair to them; Regarding the fact that men make up only 40% of asylum seekers in total (2015), leaving 60% who are women and children, refugee women should get at least as much attention.

    International Women’s day might be the perfect time to listen to the women who came to Europe as asylum seekers and refugees; to learn about their impressions when entering for the first time an over-sexualised society in which advertisement treats women as some naked extra object to raise profits. It would be valuable to learn about how they feel living in a refugee camp, living in a cramped space with men and other people whom they had never met before. And, last but not least, how it feels to be prejudged by a society that claims that you are invisible, without any rights, qualification or self-esteem next to your husband or brother - who must be one of those sexist, dangerous migrants for sure.

    Do not get me wrong. I know it’s not my right to speak for refugee women and to tell them that they should claim their rights and become feminists. But since International Women’s day is about solidarity, it is my aim to speak out against women being used as symbols or justifications for racism, instrumentalised for power. Women’s rights are not contradictory to refugee’s rights; promoting women’s rights is promoting refugees’ rights. There is no way around it.

    How do you see it? Comment right here and start a discussion

    Related discussions (in German)

  • On International Women's Day, Listen to The Women Who Came to Europe listen to the women who came to Europe

    von Mayte Schomburg, angelegt

    Foto:Who needs support? In this picture: a demonstration at International Women's Day (2014) Photo: Sigfrid Lundberg (CC BY-SA 2.0)

    In the debate on migration after the events of Cologne, women are too often only objects. For Alisa Trojansky it is time to recognize that sexism is no foreign invention, and to speak up against women being used as symbols or justifications for racism...


    A post by Alisa Trojansky

    It’s International Women’s day and I have never seen so many promoters of women’s rights in any year before. Living in Cologne for the last two months, I have been approached by journalists asking whether I had been at the train station at New Year’s Eve about three times. Why? Because while, until now, we had been used to being treated with respect and pure honour by European men at the same time living in a paradise of perfectly equal opportunities and in safe surroundings, we had clearly been overwhelmed by a huge bunch of migrants from Muslim or not specified other backgrounds that had invented a sexual harassment not known in the Western World before. Cologne, in this context, has become the proof of the upcoming breakdown of women's public safety.

    The narrative above is wrong, of course, and yet it is powerful. Two months after the events of Cologne, we are still talking about teaching refugee men about how to treat white women.

    Make no mistake: violence against women has to be condemned without restrictions, no matter who committed it. But the clue is that in the current situation, under the current narrative, women are again only the objects, not the subjects in the discussion - the latter carrying a racist undertone. It also totally ignores the fact that women’s rights are not only for women from the West. On International Women’s day, I wonder whether we should not seize the opportunity to speak up not only for European women, but also for those who have been living in Europe for only a few days, months or years.

    It might be time to discuss what “European values” mean for refugee women and how we can contribute to empowering every woman to be strong and brave enough to raise her voice, to ensure her physical and psychological integrity. Focusing on refugees as men, connected with adjectives such as dangerous, criminal and sexist is not only unfair to them; Regarding the fact that men make up only 40% of asylum seekers in total (2015), leaving 60% who are women and children, refugee women should get at least as much attention.

    International Women’s day might be the perfect time to listen to the women who came to Europe as asylum seekers and refugees; to learn about their impressions when entering for the first time an over-sexualised society in which advertisement treats women as some naked extra object to raise profits. It would be valuable to learn about how they feel living in a refugee camp, living in a cramped space with men and other people whom they had never met before. And, last but not least, how it feels to be prejudged by a society that claims that you are invisible, without any rights, qualification or self-esteem next to your husband or brother - who must be one of those sexist, dangerous migrants for sure.

    Do not get me wrong. I know it’s not my right to speak for refugee women and to tell them that they should claim their rights and become feminists. But since International Women’s day is about solidarity, it is my aim to speak out against women being used as symbols or justifications for racism, instrumentalised for power. Women’s rights are not contradictory to refugee’s rights; promoting women’s rights is promoting refugees’ rights. There is no way around it.

    How do you see it? Comment right here and start a discussion

    Related discussions (in German)

  • On International Women's Day, listen to the women who came to Europe

    von Mayte Schomburg, angelegt

    Foto:Who needs support? In this picture: a demonstration at International Women's Day (2014) Photo: Sigfrid Lundberg (CC BY-SA 2.0)

    In the debate on migration after the events of Cologne, women are too often only objects. For Alisa Trojansky Link: https://publixphere.net/i/publixphere-de/user/Alisa/about it is time to recognize that sexism is no foreign invention, and to speak up against women being used as symbols or justifications for racism...


    A post by Alisa Trojansky

    It’s International Women’s day and I have never seen so many promoters of women’s rights in any year before. Living in Cologne for the last two months, I have been approached by journalists asking whether I had been at the train station at New Year’s Eve about three times. Why? Because while, until now, we had been used to being treated with respect and pure honour by European men at the same time living in a paradise of perfectly equal opportunities and in safe surroundings, we had clearly been overwhelmed by a huge bunch of migrants from Muslim or not specified other backgrounds that had invented a sexual harassment not known in the Western World before. Cologne, in this context, has become the proof of the upcoming breakdown of women's public safety.

    The narrative above is wrong, of course, and yet it is powerful. Two months after the events of Cologne, we are still talking about teaching refugee men about how to treat white women.

    Make no mistake: violence against women has to be condemned without restrictions, no matter who committed it. But the clue is that in the current situation, under the current narrative, women are again only the objects, not the subjects in the discussion - the latter carrying a racist undertone. It also totally ignores the fact that women’s rights are not only for women from the West. On International Women’s day, I wonder whether we should not seize the opportunity to speak up not only for European women, but also for those who have been living in Europe for only a few days, months or years.

    It might be time to discuss what “European values” mean for refugee women and how we can contribute to empowering every woman to be strong and brave enough to raise her voice, to ensure her physical and psychological integrity. Focusing on refugees as men, connected with adjectives such as dangerous, criminal and sexist is not only unfair to them; Regarding the fact that men make up only 40% of asylum seekers in total (2015), leaving 60% who are women and children, refugee women should get at least as much attention.

    International Women’s day might be the perfect time to listen to the women who came to Europe as asylum seekers and refugees; to learn about their impressions when entering for the first time an over-sexualised society in which advertisement treats women as some naked extra object to raise profits. It would be valuable to learn about how they feel living in a refugee camp, living in a cramped space with men and other people whom they had never met before. And, last but not least, how it feels to be prejudged by a society that claims that you are invisible, without any rights, qualification or self-esteem next to your husband or brother - who must be one of those sexist, dangerous migrants for sure.

    Do not get me wrong. I know it’s not my right to speak for refugee women and to tell them that they should claim their rights and become feminists. But since International Women’s day is about solidarity, it is my aim to speak out against women being used as symbols or justifications for racism, instrumentalised for power. Women’s rights are not contradictory to refugee’s rights; promoting women’s rights is promoting refugees’ rights. There is no way around it.

    How do you see it? Comment right here and start a discussion

    Related discussions (in German)

  • On International Women's Day, listen to the women who came to Europe

    von Mayte Schomburg, angelegt

    Foto:Who needs support? In this picture: a demonstration at International Women's Day (2014) Photo: Sigfrid Lundberg (CC BY-SA 2.0)

    In the debate on migration after the events of Cologne, women are too often only objects. For Alisa Trojansky it is time to recognize that sexism is no foreign invention, and to speak up against women being used as symbols or justifications for racism...


    A post by Alisa Trojansky

    It’s International Women’s day and I have never seen so many promoters of women’s rights in any year before. Living in Cologne for the last two months, I have been approached by journalists asking whether I had been at the train station at New Year’s Eve about three times. Why? Because while, until now, we had been used to being treated with respect and pure honour by European men at the same time living in a paradise of perfectly equal opportunities and in safe surroundings, we had clearly been overwhelmed by a huge bunch of migrants from Muslim or not specified other backgrounds that had invented a sexual harassment not known in the Western World before. Cologne, in this context, has become the proof of the upcoming breakdown of women's public safety.

    The narrative above is wrong, of course, and yet it is powerful. Two months after the events of Cologne, we are still talking about teaching refugee men about how to treat white women.

    Make no mistake: violence against women has to be condemned without restrictions, no matter who committed it. But the clue is that in the current situation, under the current narrative, women are again only the objects, not the subjects in the discussion - the latter carrying a racist undertone. It also totally ignores the fact that women’s rights are not only for women from the West. On International Women’s day, I wonder whether we should not seize the opportunity to speak up not only for European women, but also for those who have been living in Europe for only a few days, months or years.

    It might be time to discuss what “European values” mean for refugee women and how we can contribute to empowering every woman to be strong and brave enough to raise her voice, to ensure her physical and psychological integrity. Focusing on refugees as men, connected with adjectives such as dangerous, criminal and sexist is not only unfair to them; Regarding the fact that men make up only 40% of asylum seekers in total (2015), leaving 60% who are women and children, refugee women should get at least as much attention.

    International Women’s day might be the perfect time to listen to the women who came to Europe as asylum seekers and refugees; to learn about their impressions when entering for the first time an over-sexualised society in which advertisement treats women as some naked extra object to raise profits. It would be valuable to learn about how they feel living in a refugee camp, living in a cramped space with men and other people whom they had never met before. And, last but not least, how it feels to be prejudged by a society that claims that you are invisible, without any rights, qualification or self-esteem next to your husband or brother - who must be one of those sexist, dangerous migrants for sure.

    Do not get me wrong. I know it’s not my right to speak for refugee women and to tell them that they should claim their rights and become feminists. But since International Women’s day is about solidarity, it is my aim to speak out against women being used as symbols or justifications for racism, instrumentalised for power. Women’s rights are not contradictory to refugee’s rights; promoting women’s rights is promoting refugees’ rights. There is no way around it.

    How do you see it? Comment right here and start a discussion

    Related discussions (in German)

  • On International Women's Day, listen to the women who came to Europe

    von Mayte Schomburg, angelegt

    Foto:Who needs support? In this picture: a demonstration at International Women's Day (2014) Photo: Sigfrid Lundberg (CC BY-SA 2.0)

    In the debate on migration after the events of Cologne, women are too often only objects. For Alisa Trojanskyit is time to recognize that sexism is no foreign invention, and to speak up against women being used as symbols or justifications for racism...


    A post by Alisa Trojansky

    It’s International Women’s day and I have never seen so many promoters of women’s rights in any year before. Living in Cologne for the last two months, I have been approached by journalists asking whether I had been at the train station at New Year’s Eve about three times. Why? Because while, until now, we had been used to being treated with respect and pure honour by European men at the same time living in a paradise of perfectly equal opportunities and in safe surroundings, we had clearly been overwhelmed by a huge bunch of migrants from Muslim or not specified other backgrounds that had invented a sexual harassment not known in the Western World before. Cologne, in this context, has become the proof of the upcoming breakdown of women's public safety.

    The narrative above is wrong, of course, and yet it is powerful. Two months after the events of Cologne, we are still talking about teaching refugee men about how to treat white women.

    Make no mistake: violence against women has to be condemned without restrictions, no matter who committed it. But the clue is that in the current situation, under the current narrative, women are again only the objects, not the subjects in the discussion - the latter carrying a racist undertone. It also totally ignores the fact that women’s rights are not only for women from the West. On International Women’s day, I wonder whether we should not seize the opportunity to speak up not only for European women, but also for those who have been living in Europe for only a few days, months or years.

    It might be time to discuss what “European values” mean for refugee women and how we can contribute to empowering every woman to be strong and brave enough to raise her voice, to ensure her physical and psychological integrity. Focusing on refugees as men, connected with adjectives such as dangerous, criminal and sexist is not only unfair to them; Regarding the fact that men make up only 40% of asylum seekers in total (2015), leaving 60% who are women and children, refugee women should get at least as much attention.

    International Women’s day might be the perfect time to listen to the women who came to Europe as asylum seekers and refugees; to learn about their impressions when entering for the first time an over-sexualised society in which advertisement treats women as some naked extra object to raise profits. It would be valuable to learn about how they feel living in a refugee camp, living in a cramped space with men and other people whom they had never met before. And, last but not least, how it feels to be prejudged by a society that claims that you are invisible, without any rights, qualification or self-esteem next to your husband or brother - who must be one of those sexist, dangerous migrants for sure.

    Do not get me wrong. I know it’s not my right to speak for refugee women and to tell them that they should claim their rights and become feminists. But since International Women’s day is about solidarity, it is my aim to speak out against women being used as symbols or justifications for racism, instrumentalised for power. Women’s rights are not contradictory to refugee’s rights; promoting women’s rights is promoting refugees’ rights. There is no way around it.

    How do you see it? Comment right here and start a discussion

    Related discussions (in German)

  • On International Women's Day, listen to the women who came to Europe

    von Mayte Schomburg, angelegt

    Foto:Who needs support? In this picture: a demonstration at International Women's Day (2014) Photo: Sigfrid Lundberg (CC BY-SA 2.0)

    In the debate on migration after the events of Cologne, women are too often only objects. For Alisa Trojanskyit is her it's time to recognize that sexism is no foreign invention, and to speak up against women being used as symbols or justifications for racism...


    A post by Alisa Trojansky

    It’s International Women’s day and I have never seen so many promoters of women’s rights in any year before. Living in Cologne for the last two months, I have been approached by journalists asking whether I had been at the train station at New Year’s Eve about three times. Why? Because while, until now, we had been used to being treated with respect and pure honour by European men at the same time living in a paradise of perfectly equal opportunities and in safe surroundings, we had clearly been overwhelmed by a huge bunch of migrants from Muslim or not specified other backgrounds that had invented a sexual harassment not known in the Western World before. Cologne, in this context, has become the proof of the upcoming breakdown of women's public safety.

    The narrative above is wrong, of course, and yet it is powerful. Two months after the events of Cologne, we are still talking about teaching refugee men about how to treat white women.

    Make no mistake: violence against women has to be condemned without restrictions, no matter who committed it. But the clue is that in the current situation, under the current narrative, women are again only the objects, not the subjects in the discussion - the latter carrying a racist undertone. It also totally ignores the fact that women’s rights are not only for women from the West. On International Women’s day, I wonder whether we should not seize the opportunity to speak up not only for European women, but also for those who have been living in Europe for only a few days, months or years.

    It might be time to discuss what “European values” mean for refugee women and how we can contribute to empowering every woman to be strong and brave enough to raise her voice, to ensure her physical and psychological integrity. Focusing on refugees as men, connected with adjectives such as dangerous, criminal and sexist is not only unfair to them; Regarding the fact that men make up only 40% of asylum seekers in total (2015), leaving 60% who are women and children, refugee women should get at least as much attention.

    International Women’s day might be the perfect time to listen to the women who came to Europe as asylum seekers and refugees; to learn about their impressions when entering for the first time an over-sexualised society in which advertisement treats women as some naked extra object to raise profits. It would be valuable to learn about how they feel living in a refugee camp, living in a cramped space with men and other people whom they had never met before. And, last but not least, how it feels to be prejudged by a society that claims that you are invisible, without any rights, qualification or self-esteem next to your husband or brother - who must be one of those sexist, dangerous migrants for sure.

    Do not get me wrong. I know it’s not my right to speak for refugee women and to tell them that they should claim their rights and become feminists. But since International Women’s day is about solidarity, it is my aim to speak out against women being used as symbols or justifications for racism, instrumentalised for power. Women’s rights are not contradictory to refugee’s rights; promoting women’s rights is promoting refugees’ rights. There is no way around it.

    How do you see it? Comment right here and start a discussion

    Related discussions (in German) dicussions (in german)

  • On International Women's Day, Let's listen to the women who came to Europe

    von Mayte Schomburg, angelegt

    Foto:Who needs support? In this picture: a demonstration at International Women's Day (2014) Photo: Sigfrid Lundberg (CC BY-SA 2.0)

    In the debate on migration after the events of Cologne, women Women are too often only objects. objects in the debate on migration, Alisa notes. For her it's time to recognize that sexism is no foreign invention, and to speak up against women being used as symbols or justifications for racism...


    A post by Alisa Trojansky

    It’s International Women’s day and I have never seen so many promoters of women’s rights in any year before. Living in Cologne for the last two months, I have been approached by journalists asking whether I had been at the train station at New Year’s Eve about three times. Why? Because while, until now, we had been used to being treated with respect and pure honour by European men at the same time living in a paradise of perfectly equal opportunities and in safe surroundings, we had clearly been overwhelmed by a huge bunch of migrants from Muslim or not specified other backgrounds that had invented a sexual harassment not known in the Western World before. Cologne, in this context, has become the proof of the upcoming breakdown of women's public safety.

    The narrative above is wrong, of course, and yet it is powerful. Two months after the events of Cologne, we are still talking about teaching refugee men about how to treat white women.

    Make no mistake: violence against women has to be condemned without restrictions, no matter who committed it. But the clue is that in the current situation, under the current narrative, women are again only the objects, not the subjects in the discussion - the latter carrying a racist undertone. It also totally ignores the fact that women’s rights are not only for women from the West. On International Women’s day, I wonder whether we should not seize the opportunity to speak up not only for European women, but also for those who have been living in Europe for only a few days, months or years.

    It might be time to discuss what “European values” mean for refugee women and how we can contribute to empowering every woman to be strong and brave enough to raise her voice, to ensure her physical and psychological integrity. Focusing on refugees as men, connected with adjectives such as dangerous, criminal and sexist is not only unfair to them; Regarding the fact that men make up only 40% of asylum seekers in total (2015), leaving 60% who are women and children, refugee women should get at least as much attention.

    International Women’s day might be the perfect time to listen to the women who came to Europe as asylum seekers and refugees; to learn about their impressions when entering for the first time an over-sexualised society in which advertisement treats women as some naked extra object to raise profits. It would be valuable to learn about how they feel living in a refugee camp, living in a cramped space with men and other people whom they had never met before. And, last but not least, how it feels to be prejudged by a society that claims that you are invisible, without any rights, qualification or self-esteem next to your husband or brother - who must be one of those sexist, dangerous migrants for sure.

    Do not get me wrong. I know it’s not my right to speak for refugee women and to tell them that they should claim their rights and become feminists. But since International Women’s day is about solidarity, it is my aim to speak out against women being used as symbols or justifications for racism, instrumentalised for power. Women’s rights are not contradictory to refugee’s rights; promoting women’s rights is promoting refugees’ rights. There is no way around it.

    How do you see it? Comment right here and start a discussion

    Related dicussions (in german)

  • Let's listen to the women who came to Europe

    von Mayte Schomburg, angelegt

    Foto:Who needs support? In this picture: a demonstration at International Women's Day (2014) Photo: Sigfrid Lundberg (CC BY-SA 2.0)

    Women are too often only objects in the debate on migration, Alisa notes. For her it's time to speak up against women being used as symbols or justifications for racism...


    A post by Alisa Trojansky

    It’s International Women’s day and I have never seen so many promoters of women’s rights in any year before. Living in Cologne for the last two months, I have been approached by journalists asking whether I had been at the train station at New Year’s Eve about three times. Why? Because while, until now, we had been while we are used to being treated with respect and pure honour by European men at the same time whilst living in a paradise of perfectly equal opportunities and in safe surroundings, we had clearly obviously been overwhelmed by a huge bunch of migrants from Muslim or not specified other backgrounds that had invented a sexual harassment not known in the Western World before. World. Cologne, in this context, has become been the proof of the upcoming breakdown of women's public safety. the public space for women.

    The narrative above is wrong, of course, and yet it is powerful. Two months after the events of Cologne, we are still talking about teaching refugee men about how to treat white women.

    Make no mistake: Without restrictions: violence against women has to be condemned without restrictions, condemned, no matter who committed it. But the clue is that in the current situation, under the current narrative, women are again only the objects, not the subjects in the discussion - the latter carrying a racist undertone. It also totally ignores the fact that women’s rights are not only for women from the West. On International Women’s day, I wonder whether we should not also seize the opportunity to speak up not only for European women, but also for those who have been living in Europe for only a few days, months or years.

    It might be time to discuss what “European values” mean for refugee women and how we can contribute to empowering every woman to be strong and brave enough to raise her voice, to ensure her physical and psychological integrity. Focusing on refugees as men, connected with adjectives such as dangerous, criminal and sexist is not only unfair to them; Regarding the fact that men make up only 40% of asylum seekers in total (2015), leaving 60% who are (2015) compared to women and children, refugee women should get at least as much attention.

    International Women’s day might be the perfect time to listen to the women who came to Europe as asylum seekers and refugees; to learn about their impressions when entering for the first time an over-sexualised society in which advertisement treats women as some naked extra object to raise profits. It would be valuable to learn about how they feel living in a refugee camp, living camp in a cramped space with men and other people whom they had never met before. And, last but not least, how it feels to be prejudged by a society that claims that you are invisible, without any rights, qualification or self-esteem next to your husband or brother - who must be one of those sexist, dangerous migrants for sure.

    Do not get me wrong. I know it’s not my right to speak for refugee women and to tell them that they should claim their rights and become feminists. But since International Women’s day is about solidarity, it is my aim to speak out against women being used as symbols or justifications for racism, instrumentalised for power. Women’s rights are not contradictory to refugee’s rights; promoting women’s rights is promoting refugees’ rights. There is no way around it.

    How do you see it? Comment right here and start a discussion

    Related dicussions (in german)

  • Let's listen to the women who came to Europe

    von Redaktion, angelegt

    Foto:Who needs support? In this picture: a demonstration at International Women's Day (2014) Photo: Sigfrid Lundberg (CC BY-SA 2.0)

    Women are too often only objects in the debate on migration, Alisa notes. For her it's time to speak up against women being used as symbols or justifications for racism...


    A post by Alisa Trojansky Trojanksy

    It’s International Women’s day and I have never seen so many promoters of women’s rights in any year before. Living in Cologne for the last two months, I have been approached by journalists asking whether I had been at the train station at New Year’s Eve about three times. Why? Because while we are used to being treated with respect and pure honour by European men whilst living in a paradise of perfectly equal opportunities and in safe surroundings, we had obviously been overwhelmed by a huge bunch of migrants from Muslim or not specified other backgrounds that had invented a sexual harassment not known in the Western World. Cologne, in this context, has been the proof of the upcoming breakdown of the public space for women.

    The narrative above is wrong, and yet it is powerful. Two months after the events of Cologne, we are still talking about teaching refugee men how to treat white women.

    Without restrictions: violence against women has to be condemned, no matter who committed it. But the clue is that in the current situation, under the current narrative, women are again only the objects, not the subjects in the discussion - the latter carrying a racist undertone. It also totally ignores the fact that women’s rights are not only for women from the West. On International Women’s day, I wonder whether we should not also seize the opportunity to speak up not only for European women, but also for those who have been living in Europe for only a few days, months or years.

    It might be time to discuss what “European values” mean for refugee women and how we can contribute to empowering every woman to be strong and brave enough to raise her voice, to ensure her physical and psychological integrity. Focusing on refugees as men, connected with adjectives as dangerous, criminal and sexist is not only unfair to them; Regarding the fact that men make up only 40% of asylum seekers in total (2015) compared to women and children, refugee women should get at least as much attention.

    International Women’s day might be the perfect time to listen to the women who came to Europe as asylum seekers and refugees; to learn about their impressions when entering for the first time an over-sexualised society in which advertisement treats women as some naked extra object to raise profits. It would be valuable to learn about how they feel living in a refugee camp in a cramped space with men and other people whom they had never met before. And, last but not least, how it feels to be prejudged by a society that claims that you are invisible, without any rights, qualification or self-esteem next to your husband or brother - who must be one of those sexist, dangerous migrants for sure.

    Do not get me wrong. I know it’s not my right to speak for refugee women and to tell them that they should claim their rights and become feminists. But since International Women’s day is about solidarity, it is my aim to speak out against women being used as symbols or justifications for racism, instrumentalised for power. Women’s rights are not contradictory to refugee’s rights; promoting women’s rights is promoting refugees’ rights. There is no way around it.

    How do you see it? Comment right here and start a discussion

    Related dicussions (in german)

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