MEXICO CITY – Relatives of women and girls murdered or missing in Mexico marched through the capital Sunday carrying over 100 purple crosses inscribed with the names of victims, demanding justice for their loved ones and improved efforts to investigate their cases.
Bearing T-shirts and signs with photos of the victims, they walked behind banners and chanted the victims’ names as they headed for the sprawling main square, the Zocalo, to set up an offering near a massive altar erected to mark Dia de Muertos, or Day of the Dead.
“Not one more killed!” they cried. “Our daughters, where are they?”
The demonstration set out from the Independence Monument and headed for Mexico City’s sprawling main square to set up an offering near a massive altar erected to mark Dia de Muertos, or Day of the Dead.
Dia de Muertos is observed Nov. 1-2, and the demonstration was billed as a “Dia de Muertas” march, or “Day of the Dead Women,” to call attention to the killings of women and girls — nine per day in the country on average, according to the United Nations. It was the second Dec. 3 march by the organization, Voices of Absence, which is out to get the date associated with their cause.
“We march on ‘Day of the Dead Women’ to take them beyond just the altars,” journalist and activist Frida Guerrera said. “They did not die of old age or from illness. They were snatched away, they were ripped from their families, and we want them to be seen. May they not remain in the invisibility of Day of the Dead celebrations.”
Norma, a 43-year-old Mexico City resident, came in memory of her daughter Valeria, a 24-year-old engineering student who was murdered in June allegedly by her boyfriend. Norma, who declined to give her full name because the suspect is a fugitive, described Valeria as hard-working, healthy and beloved by family and friends.
“We want justice,” she said. “Justice for her, justice for all of them, so that all women, all our daughters, we ourselves can walk in the street.”
She was accompanied Saturday by about 30 relatives and friends of Valeria, and perhaps 200 other purple-clad demonstrators.
“One feels the solidarity, that sisterhood among us,” Norma said. “We are sisters of the same sorrow.”
Voices of Absence was born out of an online chat and has grown to encompass over 100 families, said Guerrera, whose organization pushes prosecutors to investigate cases and helps relatives navigate the judicial process.
Guerrera said the demonstrators were demanding a “real interest” on the part of authorities to address gender violence. She credited Mexico with having in May signed onto the EU- and U.N.-sponsored Spotlight Initiative, which aims to eliminate violence against women and girls, though she argued that progress toward meeting its goals has been slow in the country.
Before the march began, priest and human rights activist Alejandro Solalinde sprinkled holy water over the purple crosses.
At the Zocalo demonstrators wrote victims’ names on two much larger crosses, and the plan was to bolt them to the ground at Monument to Mothers at a nearby intersection, the latest in a series of informal “anti-monuments” that have sprung up to commemorate violence, repression and impunity in Mexico.
Solalinde said society — governments, schools, the news media, churches — have a responsibility to educate people about macho attitudes that remain prevalent.
“We have to change the cultural patterns. … We have to change our vision of gender,” the priest said. /gsg