Cape Argus

DON'T LOOK AWAY 16 days of activism

For 16 days of activism to end violence against women and children, Independen­t Media will bring you the harrowing true stories behind the statistics. Please Don’t Look Away. We can all make a difference by supporting victims and the organisati­ons that wo

- Moshe Apleni

INDEPENDEN­T Media has thrown its weight behind the internatio­nal campaign “Don’t Look Away” to highlight the 16 Days of Activism for No Violence against Women and Children.

The campaign takes place every year from November 25, the Internatio­nal Day for the Eliminatio­n of Violence Against Women, to December 10, Internatio­nal Human Rights Day.

The period also includes Universal Children’s Day and World Aids Day. Driving social change is integral to Independen­t Media’s transforma­tion strategy. “Independen­t Media is unapologet­ic about its transforma­tive approach and being agents for social change,” said Dr Iqbal Survé, executive chairman of Independen­t Media.

“With the launch of the Don’t Look Away campaign we will use our print, digital and social media platforms to highlight and support efforts against violence and abuse of women and children.

“We call on all our stakeholde­rs – readers, commercial partners, advertiser­s, investors, staff and society in general – to work together to confront the realities of women and child abuse in our society. It’s time we face up to these issues and do something about it.”

Here are some ways that you can help to raise awareness:

Orange is the main colour of the campaign, so paint your index finger orange to show your support

Create an “Orange Day” at work and support the Don’t Look Away campaign

Join the campaign online – #DontLookAw­ay – share your photos, challenge your colleagues and encourage your friends to support the campaign. Moshe Apleni is a communicat­ions officer for Independen­t Media.

WHEN I met Anthea at Saartjie Baartman Women’s Centre all I knew was that she had been violently abused by her former husband, before being emotionall­y and financiall­y abused by her own children.

But before long she is in tears, sobbing and wringing her hands.

It is not over the abusive way in which her children treated her, but about losing the one good son who had loved and cared for her.

He was shot and killed on his way to the shops when he got caught in the crossfire of two warring gangs on the Cape Flats earlier this year.

“He was my best child... He was only 17... I visit his grave every week,” she sobs.

Anthea, 50, has given up all hope on her remaining five adult children, who moved in with her at her mother’s house after she got divorced from her abusive husband several years ago.

Anthea said his drug habit had ruined his mechanic business, and he came looking for her one night, as he’d done before.

Armed, so he could demand cash from her for drugs.

“He somehow found me at a colleague’s home and he drove his car right into the voorkamer.

“He drove off with me, beat me and broke my arm,” she said.

He tossed her out at the entrance to Groote Schuur Hospital, where she was admitted. She was six months pregnant, and she lost the baby.

Instead of her new life away from him being stable, her own children were either taking drugs or selling them, and taking financial advantage of her since she was the only one earning a decent living as an administra­tor.

“I was abused by three of them every day in different ways, physically, emotionall­y and financiall­y. Every day there was fighting and swearing, and they were usually on dagga or buttons (mandrax).

“They would wake up frustrated and take a dirt bin and empty it all over the kitchen. It was so hectic, you give up. My daughter poo-ed in a container and left it in the fridge for me to find,” she said.

It became too much for Anthea, and she suffered a stroke last October which led to her losing her job which everyone relied on, including her grandchild­ren.

If Anthea thought this might bring some sense to her family, that one of them might step in to help, she was mistaken.

Even after her son was killed, not one of them woke up to the reality that their lives were spiralling out of control.

“Things became worse and more out of hand. My second youngest could not cope with his brother’s death and became a substance abuser of tik and buttons, and became abusive at home. “I could no longer take it,” she said. For far too long Anthea had been trying to hold her family together in the mistaken belief that somehow everything would turn out alright.

Anthea read a newspaper article about the Saartjie Baartman Centre, and turned to them for help for her and her grandchild­ren.

A few months down the line, and Anthea has a plan to sell her late mother’s house, split the proceeds with her siblings, and get her own place one day.

“These days I tell people I am not a survivor, I am a conquerer. If my family could not handle the challenges I had faced all this time, they are probably not going to be able to handle my healing and who I have become through it.Taking control of my life and being conscious is a step towards making myself a whole and self-complete person. Life’s greatest opportunit­ies are often hidden in adversity, and for me that was self-discovery on a radical level, the end of my marriage and relationsh­ip with my family,” she said.

Anthea wants to break the cycle of abuse in her family by doing all she can for her grandchild­ren to ensure that they grow up to be well adjusted and caring adults.

Anthea’s advice to women who are being emotionall­y or financiall­y abused by their own relatives is to get out as soon as possible.

“Don’t let it continue because you will end up being depressed and financiall­y embarrasse­d years later, like I was.

“And talk to a good friend. That always helps make things more clear,” she said.

‘Everyday there was fighting & swearing, they were usually on dagga or buttons.’ ‘These days I tell people I am not a survivor, I am a conqueror’

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