Guatemalan women unite against 'double discrimination'

Working for change
A 55-year-old woman once resigned to a life dedicated to her husband
and children advises the mayor of Guatemala's former colonial capital
on local development issues.
A Maya Indian woman who had to stop
wearing her traditional costume to get through high school now
staunchly defends girls´ rights to wear it in the classroom.
In
Guatemala women suffer extreme discrimination in one of the
most conservative and “macho” countries in Latin America,
but these two volunteers, and thousands like them, are gradually
swinging the balance in their favour. 
Double discrimination
For 36 years, Guatemala was torn apart by a bloody civil war, which
claimed 200,000 lives, and relegated gender issues to a back burner.
During the war, state security forces conducted widespread massacres
of Maya Indians in suspected rebel strongholds and picked off thousands
of community and political leaders through selective assassinations
and “disappearances.”
In many cases women stepped in
to replace their dead husbands at the forefront of organisations
demanding justice. Yet these very women faced a double discrimination
- being both women and Indian. 
Taking action
In 1997 as part of the peace accords signed by leftist rebels and
the government, the National Women's Forum was set up.
Despite
lack of resources, it has given once voiceless women the chance
to propose fundamental changes to the country through a central
co-ordinating committee of women from government and civil society.
Following surveys carried out in 1998-9, in which 35,000 women
set down demands on issues ranging from economic policy to political
participation, it was found that hundreds of thousands of rural
women, mostly Mayas, had no personal documents or even proof
of their existence. 
The next steps…
The forum set about trying to remedy the situation and a nation wide
campaign to enable these “invisible women” to register
themselves and thus gain voting rights heavily influenced recent
government legislation on the issue.
An educational reform to make
the school system fairer for girls, especially Indian girls, is
among the next issues on the forum’s agenda.
Yet women are
aware that they still have a long way to go. Unless the other
half of Guatemalan society is made to understand the benefit of sharing
the load in society, recent advances could easily disintegrate.
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