WOMEN IN SOUTH QUEENS JOIN HUNDREDS OF  
 COMMUNITIES NATIONWIDE TO RALLY VOTERS 
 BY CARLOTTA MOHAMED 
 The South Queens Women’s  
 March  is  bringing  awareness  
 on the importance of voting on  
 Election Day.   
 The organization, which  
 was established in January  
 2020, hosted a sign-holding  
 event on Saturday, Oct. 17, outside  
 of The Figure Studio, located  
 at 111-49 Lefferts Blvd. in  
 South Ozone Park, in coordination  
 with the fifth Women’s  
 March on Washington and 207  
 other protests held by sister  
 actions in cities and communities  
 across the nation.  
 The South Queens Women’s  
 March  highlights  gender  
 equality  issues,  specifically  
 how women have suffered  
 greatly under the Trump Administration  
 and this has been  
 even more so exacerbated by  
 the COVID-19 pandemic.  
 Aminta  Kilawan-Narine,  
 founder and executive director  
 of the South Queens Women’s  
 March, said women in the  
 U.S. are bearing the brunt of  
 multiple  crises  —  including  
 the COVID-19 pandemic, white  
 supremacy and nationalism,  
 an ever-deepening economic  
 disaster, a worsening climate  
 crisis  and  a  family/domestic  
 care crisis. From New York to  
 California, women are rising  
 up to demand a new government  
 of, by, and for the people,  
 according to Kilawan-Narine. 
 “We the people are going to  
 deliver a democracy in November,” 
   Kilawan-Narine  said  to  
 attendees,  encouraging  them  
 all to vote.  
 Kilawan-Narine  is  proud  
 that her organization is able to  
 bring accessible information to  
 people in the community from  
 all different backgrounds.  
 “Today,  we  really  wanted  
 to  do  something,  even  if  it’s  
 small,  in  south  Queens  because  
 this  is  where  we  live,”  
 Kilawan-Narine said. “We are  
 joining  together  as  women  
 from all walks of life to vote in  
 record numbers, demand that  
 every  single  vote  is  counted,  
 and return our democracy to  
 its rightful state.”  
 An attendee at the event,  
 Mohamed Amin, founder and  
 executive director of the Caribbean  
 Equality Project, said  
 he created the organization after  
 experiencing a hate crime  
 incident  with  his  brother  in  
 2013 on Richmond Avenue.  
 The Caribbean Equality  
 Project offers counseling,  
 The South Queens Women’s March in Ozone Park is encouraging voters to head to the polls on Election Day.  Photo by Dean Moses 
 Aminta Kilawan-Narine, founder and executive director of Queens  
 South Women’s March. 
 mental  health,  immigration  
 support and more for LGBTQ  
 in Richmond Hill.  
 “Why  do  we  have  to  leave  
 our Caribbean, immigrant  
 community  to  access  mental  
 health  services  and  to  seek  
 support?” said Amin, who realized  
 after  the  incident  that  
 there wasn’t a space for LGBTQ  
 voices  to  be  heard,  particularly  
 immigrants.  
 According to Kilawan-Narine, 
  they will fight to secure  
 the  progress  they  have  made  
 as a country.  
 “We have suffered through  
 years  of  crisis  compounded  
 TIMESLEDGER   |   QNS.26     COM   |   OCT. 23-OCT. 29, 2020 
 upon  crisis,  and we  have  had  
 enough,”  Kilawan-Narine  
 said. “We are rising up here  
 in our own community to take  
 our power back. We commit  
 ourselves to fight to secure  
 immigrant rights, LGBTQ+  
 rights,  reproductive  rights,  
 women’s rights, and the lives  
 of black and brown people  
 across  this  nation  which  has  
 run afoul at the hands of law  
 enforcement.” 
 Reach reporter Carlotta  
 Mohamed  by  e-mail  at  cmohamed@ 
 schnepsmedia.com  or  
 by phone at (718) 260–4526. 
 A young attendee holds a sign with the names of Indo-Caribbean  
 women who have died as a result of domestic violence. 
 
				
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