Siempre vzw launches its manifesto aimed at making Latin American and Caribbean women visible

Joren Janssens

The nonprofit organization Siempre launched its manifesto this Tuesday, November 13th, in the headquarters of the European Network Against Racism (ENAR), in Brussels, with the participation of prominent figures of the Belgian academic and socio-political landscape.


Siempre is devoted to creating connections among Latin American and Caribbean women settled in Europe. It pleads for building networks among activists and institutions, and also offers workshops of health, education, multiculturalism, and helps to give visibility towards the community that it represents.


The meeting was also an occasion to celebrate its recent membership to ENAR, a solidarity network that connects and supports several organizations all over Europe and has its offices in Rue Ducal, 67, Brussels. With the presence of its allies, Siempre analyzed the seven key subjects of the manifesto, which is already available in five languages, on the official website of the foundation siempre-ong.org

The participants came from countries like Colombia, Mexico, Peru, Venezuela, Ecuador, Cuba, Brazil, Spain, Belgium, and North Sudan, which generated a rich and constructive debate about Siempre ́s challenges and structural goals.

Specialists from all knowledge areas were present: intellectuals, psychologists, scientists, anthropologists, lawyers, filmmakers, translators, designers, students, local politicians, human rights activists, and members of ENAR.The common denominator among all of them was their interest in the female empowerment and the fight against all kind of violence towards women.

Siempre ratified in its manifesto: “We work as a unified network, using our voices to make ourselves visible as migrants and as bearers of bio-aesthetic and cultural diversity. We weave a collective fabric of alliances with sisters from diverse backgrounds to provide a platform for their knowledge and empower their participation”

During the meeting, they discussed the political and social issues of Latina women settled in Europe, which they assure, are a not well-represented minority. They also mentioned the challenges of highly qualified professionals, dealing with linguistic and academic barriers.

According to Siempre, they have tasked themselves “with making Latina’s women visible, considering their different origins, cultural contexts, and labor, as well as both their formal and informal education and with recognizing their ethnic and cultural diversity”.
They also compromised to work on the transmission of the Latin American collective imaginary to the new generations, especially the Europe-born children of Latin and Caribbean migrants.

Born in May 2017, the NGO operates with its own financial resources, works with associations of several European countries, and gains strength from the ancestral struggle of aboriginal women in Central and South America.

Its name is the acronym of the main working areas: Science, Integrity, Empowerment, Mobility, Renewable & Educational Projects.
Founded by two Mexicans, Dr. Ana Valenzuela, scientist, researcher and author; and Tamara Cruz, artist, artisan, and politician of Groen; Siempre rises as a platform to denounce the problems of migrant women.

The foundation directs its emphasize towards contemporary phenomena affecting Latina women, such as gender violence, accessibility to the job market, migration and family reunification.

This contribution was written by Yanet Medina Navarro (1990), Cuban writer and freelance journalist living in Belgium. She graduated from Communication Faculty, University of Havana and is a former reporter at Radio Reloj, Prensa Latina news agency & Radio Netherlands Worldwide. 

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