|
|
|
6 th ANNUAL NEW YORK CITY
BRIDES’ MARCH AGAINST DOMESTIC VIOLENCE
September 26, 2006
Scores of “Brides” and Supporters Will March
Through Manhattan and the Bronx to Remember Gladys Ricart and Other Victims
of Domestic Violence

For the sixth year in a row, scores of women dressed in wedding gowns,
along with men dressed in black, will march through the streets of Washington
Heights, the South Bronx, and East Harlem to raise awareness about the
devastating effects of domestic violence on Latino and other families
and communities. They will be joined by members of the Ricart family and
families of other women who have been murdered, and by elected officials,
clergy, advocates and community.
Marchers will start gathering at 9 a.m. in front of the offices of the
Dominican Women’s Development Center at 251 Fort Washington Avenue
where they will hear from some of the march organizers. The six-mile march
will begin promptly at 10:30 a.m. and will end after 3 p.m. in East Harlem
at the Taller Boricua, Julia de Burgos Cultural Center, 1680 Lexington
Avenue & 106th Street, with a speak-out and closing ceremony.
The Brides’ March, also known as the Gladys Ricart and Victims
of Domestic Violence Memorial Walk, is an annual event that was started
in 2001 to remember Ms. Ricart, who was murdered by a former abusive boyfriend
on the day she was to wed someone else. The March also serves to remember
all the other women who have been killed or injured in domestic violence
incidents
Dozens of Deaths and Hundreds of Thousands of Domestic Violence Incidents
Reported Each Year in New York City
According to the NYC Mayor’s Office to Combat Domestic Violence,
38 family related homicides were recorded between January 1st and September
1st 2005. Last year, there were 67 in total. This includes intimate partner
homicide, as well as homicide committed by other family members and includes
children who were killed as a result of family violence. In addition,
according to the Mayor’s Office, last year, the police responded
to an average of 600 domestic violence calls a day, for a total of some
220,000. Teen abuse continues to be a problem as well. The City Domestic
Violence Hotline received 5,850 calls from teens as of July 31, 2005.
Last year, the total number of calls from teens experiencing violence
in their relationships was 18,282.
“These figures indicate that family violence continues to be a
matter of great concern,” said Grace Perez, Executive Director of
the Violence Intervention Program, Inc. “We need everyone in our
communities to say no to violence; that is the best way of putting an
end to the killings and to the abuse. We call on all concerned people
in the New York area to join our march!”
“Domestic violence is a crime that affects not only the victims
but our community. Through the efforts of the city and community groups,
domestic violence crime has decreased by 39% in the last four years. Our
message is clear – you are not alone and help is available,”
said Yolanda Jimenez, Commissioner of the Mayor’s Office to Combat
Domestic Violence.
Sponsoring Organizations
The 2006 NYC Brides March Organizing Committee is comprised of the following
members:
Mireya Cruz, Dominican Women's Development Center; Maria Lizardo, Northern
Manhattan Improvement Corporation; Adelita Medina, National Alliance for
the Elimination of Domestic Violence; Grace Perez, Violence Intervention
Program Inc.; and Evelyn Garcia, Violence Intervention Program, Inc.
Media Contacts: Please call Sandra A. Garcia at (646) 552-2109 or Neyda
Martinez at (917) 656-7846
If you are interested in being part of the coalition and participate
in the March, please contact Sandra A. Garcia at (646) 552-2109 for more
information.
What is the NYC Annual Brides’ March?
The NYC Annual Brides’ March Against Domestic Violence, also known
as the Gladys Ricart and Victims of Domestic Violence Memorial Walk, is
an annual event which was started in New York City in 2001 to remember
Ms. Ricart, a Dominican woman, who was murdered in New Jersey on September
26, 1999, by a former abusive boyfriend on the day she was to wed someone
else. Subsequent marches have also memorialized the countless other women
who have been killed or injured in domestic violence incidents.
This first Brides March took place on September 26, 2001, the second
anniversary of Gladys’ murder. The idea for the March was originated
by Josie Ashton, a young Dominican woman from Florida, who was very moved
by the murder and outraged at the media and community’s insensitive
response. Josie resigned from her job and sacrificed more than two months
of her life away from her family to walk in a wedding gown, down the East
Coast, from New Jersey to Miami, in an attempt to draw attention to the
horrors of domestic violence.
Several organizations in New York City, including the Dominican Women’s
Development Center, the Violence Intervention Program (VIP), the Northern
Manhattan Improvement Corporation, the Dominican Women’s Caucus
and the National Latino Alliance for the Elimination of Domestic Violence
(Alianza) helped Josie organize the first Brides March, which served as
a send off for her. They organized supporters in the New York metropolitan
area to join Josie on the first leg of a three-month, 1,600-mile journey,
which took her through several states and ended in her home state of Florida.
I was very upset about people's ignorance about domestic violence
and their willingness to blame the victim... We need to scream at
the top of our lungs that we are here, that we have laws, legislation
and programs to help women. They just don't know that help is there
for them.
—Josie Ashton, September 21, 2006 |
From a small group of some two dozen marchers, the first year, the Brides
March now attracts hundreds of individuals including government officials,
business and community leaders, grass roots activists, renowned artists,
clergy, law enforcement officers, and youth.
Each year, The Brides March receives the attention of local and national
media, helping to spread the word widely about an issue that still continues
to be kept quiet.
Background and Chronology of the Murder and the Trial
On Sunday, September 26, 1999, in Ridgefield, New Jersey, Gladys Ricart,
a young Dominican woman, was preparing for what should have been the happiest
day of her life, her wedding day. But, as she stood in her wedding gown
posing for photos surrounded by family and friends, Agustin Garcia, her
abusive ex-boyfriend, burst into the house and fatally shot her.
The killing and subsequent irresponsible media coverage served to divide
not only the largely Dominican neighborhood of Washington Heights, in
New York City, where both Ricart and Garcia had lived for several years,
but Dominicans everywhere who heard about the murder.
Because of Garcia’s prominence as a businessman and well-connected
community leader, media reports, tended to blame the victim by suggesting
that she may have invited her own death by daring to marry another man,
causing Garcia to become filled with jealousy. “The sensational
case illustrated how little people know about domestic violence, how women
are still blamed for allegedly inviting violence and how the notion of
crime of passion as a defense—which should have been discarded long
ago—is being used. (www.womensenews.org,
Crime of Passion Defense Should Not be Permitted, November 14,2001)
The judge in the case had allowed Garcia’s attorneys to use a “crime
of passion defense,” but On October 29, a jury rejected this defense
when it convicted Agustin Garcia of the murder of Ricart.
In the wake of the trial, members of the Latino community, domestic violence
advocates, and other outraged individuals formed a grass-roots coalition—The
Committee for Justice for Gladys Ricart. The Committee sought justice
for Gladys’ murder, offered support to her family, and helped to
raise awareness about the issue of domestic violence and its consequences.
About a month after the Brides March, on October 29, 2001, the jury in
the murder trial of Agustin Garcia rendered a guilty verdict. He was sentenced
to life in prison. After the trial and sentencing, The Committee for Justice
for Gladys Ricart evolved into the
New York Latinas Against Domestic Violence, (“NYLADV”), an
organization dedicated to creating greater awareness and consciousness
about domestic violence and its tragic consequences and to ensure that
the memory of Gladys Ricart and of all of the women who have died or been
injured at the hands of their abusers, lives on. One way of doing this
is to organize annual brides’ marches which take the issue to Latino
neighborhoods and attract media coverage.
To date, five marches have been held in New York City bringing together
hundreds of women, men, and youth, among them members of the Ricart family
and other families affected by domestic violence, elected officials, civic
leaders, clergy, students, and scores of domestic violence advocates.
Marches have also taken place in Lawrence, Massachusetts and Miami, Florida
in 2004 and 2005.
About Gladys Ricart. Gladys Ricart, a Dominican immigrant who
worked her way off public assistance, was the first in her family
to graduate from college and became an accounts manager at a tourism
company in Manhattan. She was a dedicated single mother to a 21-year-old
son. While they were dating, Garcia and Ricart were regulars at
social and political gatherings in Washington Heights. No one knew
of the abusive relationship that took place behind closed doors.
|
|
|
|
 |
 |