How A Brazilian Graffiti Artist Is Empowering Women Around The World


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New York City, 2015, PANMELA CASTRO
New York City, 2015, PANMELA CASTRO

Excerpt: HUFFPOST LATINO VOICES

by Taylor Pittman

“Art is how we can be influenced and be an influence.”

Panmela Castro is speaking out through her art to combat Brazil’s high rates of violence against women.

Based in Rio de Janeiro, the feminist graffiti artist and activist uses her skills to create murals addressing the country’s problem with domestic violence, gender inequality and the mistreatment of women.

“We face different situations that we are conditioned to obey and that most of the time are oppressive and/or prejudiced,” she told The Huffington Post via email. “This is why we have to change what it means to be a woman in the world.”

Being a woman in Brazil can come with its dangers. According to the United Nations Trust Fund to End Violence against Women, a woman is assaulted in Sao Paulo every 15 seconds. Earlier this year, President Dilma Rousseff signed a law that created stricter sentences for murders connected to domestic violence, citing the startling statistic that 15 women are killed every day in Brazil, many because of domestic violence.

SEBASTIAN PODESTA/FLICKR
SEBASTIAN PODESTA/FLICKR

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