āConnecting the Dotsā webinar examines living on an island used for decades by the U.S. military for bombing practice
Members of Puerto Ricoās Vieques Womenās Alliance make their case for continued Presbyterian partnerships
April 30, 2024
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Members of the Vieques Women's Alliance were featured during Wednesday's edition of "Connecting the Dots."
A recent installment of the āConnecting the Dotsā webinar series gave voice to three women who live on Vieques Island in the southeastern region of the Puerto Rico archipelago, an island that has faced many challenges including decades of hosting a U.S. Navy base for live-fire bombing practices.
Since Hurricane Maria in 2017, Vieques has had no hospital and offers its 9,000 or so residents only a community clinic with a dialysis treatment center. Further complicating matters, the company that provides ferry service from Vieques to Isla Grande ā Puerto Ricoās Big Island ā has recently filed for bankruptcy.
Michelle MuƱiz, Presbyterian Disaster Assistanceās disaster recovery coordinator, hosted the webinar, which featured three members of the Vieques Womenās Alliance:
Zaida I. Torres Rodriguez, a registered nurse and longtime member of the alliance.
Miriam Ana SobĆ” Peterson, who was born and raised in Vieques and is a founding member of the Vieques Womenās Alliance.
Ilandra O. Guadalupe Maldonado, an athlete, dancer and explorer of rivers whoās currently studying environmental health in pursuit of a public health degree.
The webinar was conducted in Spanish and included nearly simultaneous English translation.
āWe were tired, fed up and angry,ā SobĆ” Peterson said of the founding of the Vieques Womenās Alliance in 1999. āAll of us women needed to turn out and give voice to what we were feeling and experiencing. We did not want these kinds of tragedies to keep on happening.ā
The alliance āhas given me tools to create my own narrative and exercise my right to remain on this land, and itās expanded my knowledge about who came before me,ā Guadalupe Maldonado said.
āI believe itās extremely important to pass the baton to new generations,ā said Torres Rodriguez, whoās 69 and is a cancer patient. āMilitary practices affected us for 60 years and left a legacy of pollution and contamination. The population of Vieques continues to face this challenge today.ā
Without the ferry service, āit is extremely difficult to go to the main island and get services,ā she said. āWe honestly feel trapped in our community.ā
Torres Rodriguez said members of the alliance and others are in dialogue with the United States government after filing a lawsuit. āWe are trying to solicit an apology for everything that has happened with the U.S. naval base,ā she said. Vieques has faced a population drain, and people from outside Puerto Rico are beginning to buy up available properties on the island. āThere is a lot of short-term thinking,ā Torres Rodriguez said. āYounger generations know whatās happening, and they need to be joining us in this fight to solve these problems so we can take back our land.ā
Guadalupe Maldonado said sheās learned through her studies that the harmful effects of toxins that have accumulated in the bodies of Vieques residents āmay not be seen immediately. We may not have symptoms now, but we will in the future.ā She was born in 1998 and the Navy stopped its bombing exercises on Vieques five years later. As someone studying to become a health-care professional, āI see how this continues to affect us, so we need to create systems that help us,ā Guadalupe Maldonado said. āIf the government isnāt helping, it will be the responsibility of the Vieques Womenās Alliance to look out for our best interests.ā
āWe donāt want to leave Vieques,ā Guadalupe Maldonado said. āWe understand the environmental conditions we have been exposed to, but itās our right to stay in our territory, and we want answers.ā
MuƱiz asked what people can do to support the Vieques Womenās Alliance and the community.
āWe have been living this and we need to share our experiences. Each one of you can also do this,ā SobĆ” Peterson said. āWe want you to be our voice, our eyes. We want you to think of yourself as someone from Vieques. We honestly need a hospital. We need to continue to be resilient and continue fighting.ā
Watch previous editions of āConnecting the Dotsā here.
Mike Ferguson, Editor, Presbyterian News Service
Today's Focus: āConnecting the Dotsā webinar
Let us join in prayer for:
PC(USA) Agenciesā Staff
Joanna Graf, Finance Administrator, Board of Pensions
Denise Gray, Accountant, General Ledger Office, Administrative Services Group (A Corp)
Let us pray
Lord of the harvest, may each of us grow in the place you have called us, nourished and nourishing others as we seek to serve you. Amen.