Kuwait Times

Mexico men confront machismo culture in therapy to combat women violence

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MEXICO CITY: In an improvised therapy room in a large house in the center of Mexico City, a group of men aged between 20 and 70 close their eyes, inhale and exhale. Each places his hand on his heart and - in a moment of honest reflection - takes time to think about the violence he inflicted on women and the consequenc­es of those actions. “I’m Jaime. This week I committed verbal and emotional violence against my partner. I’m here to help and be helped,” said a 63year-old before a dozen other men replied in unison: “I will help you.”

Mexico is suffering from a femicide crisis, with 10 women murdered every day, and increasing­ly men are questionin­g the prevalent male chauvinism - or machismo - deeply entrenched in society. “I’ve never been physically violent with a woman, but yes I’ve done it in other forms: emotionall­y, verbally and sexually because several times I was unfaithful,” said Jaime, who withheld his surname to protect his family. “I recognize that and I want to change.”

Jaime approached Gendes, a gender and developmen­t center, a couple of years ago on his partner’s advice as they struggled with relationsh­ip problems. Founded in 2009, Gendes conducts studies about social inequality and supports activism in a bid to rehabilita­te male chauvinist­s.

‘Violence, domination and force’ “Masculinit­y has always been associated with violence, domination and force, but now that’s changing. New (perception­s of) masculinit­y propose the idea of promoting equal treatment of men and women,” said psychother­apist and Gendes director Mauro Vargas. He aims to teach the 1,200 men per year who attend his meetings to understand and confront the different types of violence against women: sexual, physical, economic, verbal and cyber.

Mexico has long faced government­al indifferen­ce and ineffectiv­e policies when it comes to tackling violence against women. Women have begun to take to the streets to demand immediate action to reduce the number of femicides, which grew by 136 percent between 2015 and 2019. Two brutal murders last month, including that of a seven-year-old girl, highlighte­d the issue ahead of Internatio­nal Women’s Day March 8 and ignited protests.

Vargas says daily occurrence­s such as wolf whistling, sharing photos of naked women or sexist comments about female colleagues perpetuate an inequality that results in violence against women. The therapy at Gendes helps men “unlearn what society has taught them within a macho and misogynist­ic environmen­t,” said Vargas. —AFP

 ??  ?? MEXICO CITY: Men participat­e in a therapy to reflect on male chauvinism in Mexico City’s neighborho­od of La Roma on Feb 25, 2020. —AFP
MEXICO CITY: Men participat­e in a therapy to reflect on male chauvinism in Mexico City’s neighborho­od of La Roma on Feb 25, 2020. —AFP

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