The young teacher from Los Mochis, Fabiola Vianey, was murdered. The authorities have her murderer in prison. The reports of the crime indicate hatred and fury against the victim. No human being should be deprived of her life. But, in addition, with the femicides, Sinaloa shows a barbarism that must stop. The governor, Rubén Rocha Moya, reported: “They worked together, they were both teachers and the version that has been spread is that the teacher owed the teacher, but it turns out that in the teacher’s phone records it is that he is charging the teacher an amount, they owed, but it was too much hate, in the case of the action that was committed and it was just a matter of money, because finally it could be resolved in another way, but this is what we know, it is being investigated, The folder is already there, the person, the teacher, the author, the person responsible is already in jail under trial” (Noticieros Televisa, 20/Jun/2022).
The expeditious response of the authorities allows us to immediately address the analysis of the social pathology that produces these femicides. As the governor of Sinaloa pointed out, “resolve in another way”, in fact, economic debts must be resolved through commercial and civil channels. No, for violent action and homicide. A young teacher and mother is murdered due to a money debt: “According to the first investigations, the motive for the murder was due to an alleged debt of 50 thousand pesos that she had with another teacher” (Noticieros Televisa, 20/Jun/2022).
OF HATE AND FEMINICIDE. In addition, the hate crime, the viciousness with which it was committed, according to the descriptions of the wounds, is a sign of a pathology that ominously marks all Sinaloans. Sana: “Fury, blind anger… Spiteful and cruel intention”; Ominous: “Abominable or despicable” (Spanish Dictionary of the RAE). Given this, there must be a social and government action that seeks: First, the origin of this social pathology, the bases and mechanisms that trigger it. Second, the actions that must be done from the local spheres. Mexico City is far away for the hundreds of thousands of Sinaloan women. And, third, the call for social action that customarily insists on respect for human rights, with special emphasis on respect for gender equality.
Every family in Sinaloa MUST begin this exercise in social action. You can’t be subject to the government doing everything, and the fact that there are government agencies specialized in caring for women is a very notable achievement. In addition, the head, Teresa Guerra Ochoa, from the academy and social action has advanced, in an important way, in the analysis, classification and description for the search of the social pathology of violence against women in Sinaloa. But, she must continue to analyze. Include the psychoanalytic element and find explanations that guide the public and social action of discrimination and violence against women in Sinaloa.
PARAGRAPHS: ONE MORE LAP TO MR. SUN. Going around the sun again, now that Riguito is here, makes the novelist Elmer Mendoza’s license come back and recall a song by Violeta Parra. The Chilean poet says, because she will always be in the present: “Going back to seventeen after living a century is like deciphering signs, without being competently wise. To be suddenly again, as fragile as a second. To feel deeply again…What feeling can do has not been able to be known, nor the clearest proceeding, nor the broadest thought…”. Then comes the verse that has accompanied decades of life: “The moment changes everything like a condescending magician.” And, for that moment, Riguito has been taught, from his earliest years and constantly: You can NEVER hit a girl and a woman. And he little asks, what if she hits me? Get away! It is the order. NEVER hit a girl or a woman, run away and tell the teacher, dad, mom or the adult who is with you. But you, NEVER hit a girl or a woman. Returning to the poet: “she gently keeps us away from grudges and violence. Only love with its science makes us so innocent… she found love with her mantle like a warm morning. To the sound of her beautiful reveille, she made the jasmine sprout, flying like a seraph to the sky, she put earrings on it and the cherub turned my years into seventeen” (Violeta Parra, Back to seventeen). Riguito makes each afternoon, with his “goodbye, Mr. Sun”, return to his forties to have the strength and with it surf waves, ride the bike to the sidewalks and roads without cars, swim in the pool, and, daily, read the pages of the book you choose.
#femicide