Code Pink Journals CodePINK Journals

Work 4 Peace,Hold All Life Sacred,Eliminate Violence! I am on my mobile version of the door-to-door, going town-to-town holding readings/gatherings/discussions of my book "But What Can I Do?" This is my often neglected blog mostly about my travels since 9/11 as I engage in dialogue and actions. It is steaming with my opinions, insights, analyses toward that end of holding all life sacred, dismantling the empire and eliminating violence while creating the society we want ALL to thrive in

Saturday, December 10, 2022

Journey For Justice Dec10th, Day 10 Amerikkkan Scar:

For those of you who know of others who are perhaps more moved by love for animals than concern for human tragedy, this short film documenting the egregious permanent attack on life by the border 'wall' please watch & share.

This is yet another reason I'm on this Journey For Justice caravan. We are about to cross over from Texas to New Mexico, Arizona, & California where this indescribable violence has & continues to be supported & perpetuated by greedy, anti-human white men.

https://www.newyorker.com/video/watch/the-new-yorker-documentary-american-scar-the-environmental-tragedy-of-the-border-wall?fbclid=IwAR0y3SVkj2oPZsxNLMIlps9Wy3vdDUx5EYqRgmEOOXlYJ5bXpu5aeEp0YIw

Journey For Justice Dec 10th, Day 10: Memorial for 23 TWENTY-THREE brown people murdered by white male racist at walmart

Our last stop in El Paso is a candle-light vigil at the memorial built to remember the mostly brown womyn and men murdered by a white male supremacist who was so filled with hate against Latinas and immigrants he had to drive 10 hours to kill. We were also here to remember those he injured and the communities he devastated.

So much pain along our border. It is very hard to look at the pictures and names of these people, from 15 years old to 86, attempting to merely shop at fuckin walmart or raising money outside walmart for their grandchild's soccer team or the couple who had been married for 60 years. All murdered three years ago.

Journey For Justice Dec 10th, Day 10: Cafe Mayapan

If you are ever in or near El Paso, make sure you check out Cafe Mayapan and Mujer Obrera.

We had the good fortune of being treated to a scrumtious meal there as we listened to the courageous, tireless workers from El Paso and Juarez and the programs they are and have been supporting for years now.

We know that Juarez has been a terrible, violent place for Indigenous and Mexican womyn and girls who are still being disappeared and murdered, bought and sold for men and boys to exploit and then kill.

So the work these womyn have been doing and are doing are vital for the safety of womyn and girls.

Cafe Mayapan and Mujer Obrera have been feeding, organizing a community center, and providing other services as well as housing and jobs for womyn workers since 2001. Did I say the food is delicious? It is. Check out www.mujerobrera.org/cafemayapan

Journey For Justice December 10th, Day 10 - El Paso UTEP Centenial Museum: Pasos Ajenos: Social and Inequalities in the Borderlands: Carmelita Torres!!!

I think I'm pretty well informed - intentionally - yet how did I miss the Bath 'Riots' and the incredible Carmelita? I don't think I would have forgotten her story, especially after I learned about the Braceros and how they were stripped naked and sprayed with gasoline and ddt before they could enter the u.s.

Well Carmelita Torres was a 17 year old teenager who crossed the Santa Fe International Bridge into El Paso every day in order to work cleaning a rich person's home.

She and all the womyn workers were ordered off the trolley after it crossed, to strip naked in order to be doused in keroscene, gasoline, pesticides and forced vaccinations. She refused and convinced the 30 other womyn passengers to exit the trolley to demonstrate their opposition to such inhuman cruelty.

The justification for such a horrific practice was the blaming migrants for the flu, lice, illnesses - sound familiar? Later it was 'discovered' that the military base and the soldiers returning from wwi were the culprits spreading the flu infection not the Mexican workers - and you can believe the soldiers were not subjected to gasoline spray.

Over 200 womyn joined in the protest by 8:30a.m. and by noon there were over 2000 and more womyn lying across the railroad tracks, stopping all rail traffic, demanding the end of fumigating humans. Both Mexican and u.s. police attempted to make them leave but they were pelted with rocks, bottles, and jeers.

Several protestors were jailed including Carmelita, a few even executed.

The protest lasted 3 days but this horrific practice on the Mexico/u.s. border lasted 40 more years - and it was studied by the nazis when they came here to get schooled on how to torture and eliminate humans.

For more information about this informative and historic & present-day truth telling, check out www.pasosajenos.org/exhibit