Showing posts with label Gender issue. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Gender issue. Show all posts

Monday, 24 May 2010

from Los Angeles Times

For African American rape victims, a culture of silence
But as the phenomenon is finally addressed, women's voices emerge.
July 20, 2004 Gayle Pollard-Terry, Times Staff Writer

There's an old saying in the African American community: Black women raise their daughters and love their sons. A legacy of the atrocities of slavery, it signifies a communal protectiveness of black men, from the coddling of toddling boys to a reluctance to report rape and incest.

It's not like a get-out-of-jail-free card. It's born of a wariness of authority, especially white authority, learned from those stories about how your light-skinned sister got those gray eyes and your dark-skinned cousin got that keen nose, from those photographs of white lynch mobs and the beaten body of Emmett Till, a black teenager killed because of a wolf whistle.

http://articles.latimes.com/2004/jul/20/entertainment/et-pollard20





Tuesday, 18 May 2010

Continuous rapes by Precious's father

photo from http://pics.nerdnirvana.org/d/18018-2/rape-finland.jpg
Rapes by Precious’s own father
Precious has been continuously raped by her biological father since she was around 3 years old. Different from most victims of rapes, Precious does not scream or cry for help; instead, she chooses to remain silent. Here, we can see a very clear oppressive control Precious’s father has over her. Because black women are more inferior to men in the society, a lot of them choose not to speak up for themselves.