FOR A GOOD CAUSE -- Dina Mendez
Amy R. Spurgeon
Dina Mendez didn’t need to be a victim of violence to realize that taking
action to bring about awareness on the topic is crucial.
The 22-year-old Anaheim Hills resident and OCC student is responsible for
bringing the Clothesline Project 2000 to her campus for the first time.
The project is a visual display of decorated T-shirts that bear witness
to the violence against women and children. T-shirts have been on display
since March 29 in the Student Center.
The shirts range in color to signify different types of violence: yellow
or beige for victims who have been battered, white for those who have
died as a result of violence; red, pink or orange for rape or sexual
assault victims; blue or green for victims of incest or child sexual
abuse; and purple or lavender for those who have been violently attacked
because of their sexual orientation.
The nationwide program started 10 years ago when a group of women
inspired by the AIDS quilt decided to take the statistics of violence
against women and turn them into an “in-your-face” educational tool.
Mendez, a volunteer with the county’s Sexual Assault Victims Services,
decided to bring the project to OCC after seeing it at UC Irvine.
“My heart goes out to people of abuse,” Mendez said. “I just wanted to do
something for them and the community.”
All week, Mendez has spent countless hours in OCC’s student lounge,
helping victims decorate. Participants were provided with paints,
T-shirts and a quiet, private place to work.
By midweek, 50 T-shirts had been designed.
One shirt read: “He touched me. I pretended I was sleeping. I didn’t know
what was going on. Now I know my uncle was wrong.”
“No more tears sis, Love Bro,” read another.
“This is so important to me,” Mendez said. “Just letting people know that
there are people out there who care and are trying to bring an end to the
violence.”
Amanda Combs is one of Mendez’s supervisors at Sexual Assault Victim
Services. She praises Mendez’s work and is grateful for her.
“Dina works on a 28-hour day,” Combs said. “She would never toot her own
horn, but she has been such an asset. She took the Clothesline Project
and ran with it.”
Mendez said she one day hopes to work as a professional in the field of
violence prevention. In the meantime, she looks forward toward graduating
and then transferring to a four-year university.
A candlelight vigil honoring survivors of violence, from 7 to 10 p.m.
today, will culminate the project. The procession starts in the Student
Lounge and will end in the quad area. It is free and open to the public.
The evening will include survivor testimonies, music and a reception.
“It is a ceremony symbolizing people who have survived violence,” Mendez
said. “It is honoring those people who have survived and are still
surviving. It is a way to say ‘I did it and I’ll continue to do it.’ ”
* FOR A GOOD CAUSE features people who do good in the community. To
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