The Oakland Press

How Dominican women fight child marriage and teen pregnancy while facing total abortion bans

- By María Teresa Hernández

AZUA, DOMINICAN REPUBLIC >> It was a busy Saturday morning at Marcia González’s church. A bishop was visiting, and normally she would have been there helping with logistics, but on this day she was teaching sex education at a local school.

“I coordinate activities at the church and my husband is a deacon,” González said. “The bishop comes once a year and children are being confirmed, but I am here because this is important for my community.”

For 40 years, González and her husband have pushed for broader sex education in the Dominican Republic, one of four Latin American nations that criminaliz­es abortion without exceptions. Women face up to 2 years in prison for having an abortion; penalties for doctors or midwives range from 5 to 20 years.

With a Bible on its flag, the Caribbean country has a powerful lobby of Catholics and evangelica­ls who are united against decriminal­izing abortion.

President Luis Abinader committed to the decriminal­ization of abortion as a candidate in 2020, but his government hasn’t acted on that pledge. For now, it depends on whether he is reelected in May.

To help girls prevent unplanned pregnancie­s in this context, González and other activists have developed “teenage clubs,” where adolescent­s learn about sexual and reproducti­ve rights, self-esteem, gender violence, finances and other topics. The goal is to empower future generation­s of Dominican women.

Outside the clubs, sex education is often insufficie­nt, according to activists. Close to 30% of adolescent­s don’t have access to contracept­ion. High poverty levels increase the risks of facing an unwanted pregnancy.

For the teenagers she mentors, González’s concerns also go beyond the impossibil­ity of terminatin­g a pregnancy.

According to activists, poverty forces some Dominican mothers to marry their 14 or 15-year-old daughters to men up to 50 years older. Nearly 7 out of 10 women suffer from gender violence such as incest, and families often remain silent regarding sexual abuse.

For every 1,000 adolescent­s between 15 and 19, 42 became mothers in 2023, according to the United Nations Population Fund. And until 2019, when UNICEF published its latest report on child marriage, more than a third of Dominican women married or entered a free union before turning 18.

Dominican laws have prohibited child marriage since 2021, but community leaders say that such unions are still common because the practice has been normalized and few people are aware of the statute.

“In my 14-year-old granddaugh­ter’s class, two of her younger friends are already married,” González said. “Many mothers give the responsibi­lity of their younger children to their older daughters so, instead of taking care of little boys, they run away with a husband.”

Activists hope education can help prevent girls from facing this situation.

“There are myths that people tell you when you have your period,” said Gabriela Díaz, 16, during a recent encounter organized by the Women’s Equality Center. “They say that we are dirty or we have dirty blood, but that is false. We are helping our body to clean itself and improve its functions.”

Díaz calls González “godmother,” a term applied by Plan Internatio­nal to community leaders who implement the programs of this UK-based organizati­on, which promotes children’s rights.

According to its own data, San Cristóbal and Azua, where González lives, are the Dominican cities with the highest rates of teenage pregnancy and child marriage.

To address this, its clubs accept girls between 13 and 17. Each group meets 2 hours per week, welcomes up to 25 participan­ts and is led by volunteers like González.

In San Cristobal, also in southern Dominican Republic, the National Confederat­ion of Rural Women (CONAMUCA) sponsors teenage clubs of its own.

“CONAMUCA was born to fight for land ownership, but the landscape has changed, and we have integrated new issues, such as food sovereignt­y, agrarian reform, and sexual and reproducti­ve rights,” said Lidia Ferrer, one of its leaders.

Its clubs gather 1,600 girls in 60 communitie­s, Ferrer said. The topics they study vary from region to region, but among the recurring ones are adolescent pregnancy, early unions and feminicide.

“The starting point is our own reality,” said Kathy Cabrera, who joined CONAMUCA clubs at age 9 and two decades later takes new generation­s under her wing. “It’s how we live and suffer.”

Migration is increasing­ly noticeable in rural areas, Cabrera said. Women are forced to walk for miles to attend school or find water, and health services fail in guaranteei­ng their sexual and reproducti­ve rights.

“We have a government that tells you ‘Don’t have an abortion’ but does not provide the necessary contracept­ion to avoid it.”

She has witnessed how 13-year-old girls bear the children of 65-year-old men while neither families nor authoritie­s seem to be concerned. On other occasions, she said, parents “give away” their daughters because they cannot support them or because they discover that they are no longer virgins.

“It’s not regarded as sexual abuse because, if my grandmothe­r got pregnant and married at an early age, and my great-grandmothe­r too and my mother too, then it means I should too,” Cabrera said.

In southern Dominican communitie­s, most girls can relate to this, or know someone who does.

“My sister got pregnant at 16 and that was very disturbing,” said 14-year-old Laura Pérez. “She got together with a person much older than her, and they have a baby. I don’t think that was right.”

The clubs’ dynamics change as needed to create safe and loving environmen­ts for girls to share what they feel. Some sessions kick off with relaxation exercises and others with games.

Some girls speak proudly of what they have learned. One of them mentioned she confronted her father when he said she shouldn’t cut any lemons from a tree while menstruati­ng. Another said that her friends always go to the bathroom in groups, to avoid safety risks. They all regard their godmothers as mentors who have their backs.

“They call me to confide everything,” González said. “I am happy because, in my group, no girl has become pregnant.”

Many girls from teenage clubs have dreams they want to follow. Francesca Montero, 16, would like to become a pediatrici­an. Perla Infante, 15, a psychologi­st. Lomelí Arias, 18, a nurse.

“I want to be a soldier!” shouted Laura Pérez, the 14-year-old who wants to be careful not to following her sister’s footsteps.

“I was undecided, but when I entered CONAMUCA I knew I wanted to become a soldier. In here we see all these women who give you strength, who are like you, but as a guide,” Pérez said. “It’s like a child seeing an older person and thinking: ‘When I grow up, I want to be like that.’”

 ?? MARIA HERNANDEZ — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Teenage club members wear shirts that reads in Spanish “I take care of my body and my health” at a session on sex education at a school on the weekend in Azua, Dominican Republic, on Dec. 9, 2023. To help girls prevent unplanned pregnancie­s in a country where abortion is illegal, activists have developed “teenage clubs,” where adolescent­s learn about sexual and reproducti­ve rights, self-esteem, gender violence, finances and other topics.
MARIA HERNANDEZ — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Teenage club members wear shirts that reads in Spanish “I take care of my body and my health” at a session on sex education at a school on the weekend in Azua, Dominican Republic, on Dec. 9, 2023. To help girls prevent unplanned pregnancie­s in a country where abortion is illegal, activists have developed “teenage clubs,” where adolescent­s learn about sexual and reproducti­ve rights, self-esteem, gender violence, finances and other topics.
 ?? RICARDO HERNANDEZ — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Rosa Hernández shows a photo of her late daughter Rosaura Almonte in Santo Domingo, Dominican Republic, on Dec. 10, 2023. Hernández asked for an exception for her daughter to get an abortion in order to use chemothera­py as her leukemia treatment, but was denied because that would put the fetus at risk of death in the Dominican Republic where abortion is criminaliz­ed without exceptions. Both her daughter and daughter’s 13-week-old fetus died in 2012.
RICARDO HERNANDEZ — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Rosa Hernández shows a photo of her late daughter Rosaura Almonte in Santo Domingo, Dominican Republic, on Dec. 10, 2023. Hernández asked for an exception for her daughter to get an abortion in order to use chemothera­py as her leukemia treatment, but was denied because that would put the fetus at risk of death in the Dominican Republic where abortion is criminaliz­ed without exceptions. Both her daughter and daughter’s 13-week-old fetus died in 2012.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States