Flip-flopping options
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Luis Pena
Usually 12-year-old girls are riding their bikes, playing with dolls
or watching Saturday morning cartoons.
This wasn’t the case for 38-year-old Costa Mesa resident Layla
Abdul.
She was kidnapped at 11 along with her 10-year-old brother. She
talks of being taken to a foreign country and forced into an arranged
marriage at age 12 to a man who was 25 years her senior.
Abdul and her husband eventually moved to Orange County and had
five children.
“I wanted to leave him but he always told me, ‘No,’ that he would
kill me or hurt me or take the kids away from me,” Abdul said.
At age 27, following a fight with her husband, she contacted
police, who gave her a pamphlet about Human Options, an organization
that helps battered women and their families.
That’s how her involvement with the organization began.
The group supported Abdul and the three of her children she could
take, and helped her get through a divorce.
“I found the strength and courage to leave my situation,” Abdul
said.
Abdul was offered a job with Human Options in 1996 and has been
with them ever since in a variety of roles.
She is a follow-up advocate, which involves paying visits to women
in a transitional housing program. She also answers hotline calls
from women seeking help. As the safety net coordinator, she finds
lodging when shelters are full and she helps bring women hot meals.
She also is multilingual and can translate Spanish and Arabic for
non-English speaking victims seeking help.
“My passion is to give back to the women and children,” Abdul
said.
She has helped close to 1,000 victims of domestic abuse, said
Vivian Clecak, executive director and founder of Human Options.
Abdul’s work hasn’t gone unnoticed. Clecak thought so highly of
her that she nominated Abdul for an Ambassador of Peace award in the
public service and social work category. The Violence Prevention and
Coalition of Orange County gives the award to leaders in the
community who are making a difference in preventing violence, said
Daria Waetjen, director of learning for the coalition.
“She can help other women or victim survivors understand how
difficult it is to start a new life,” Waetjen said.
Abdul will receive the award on June 4 at the Turnip Rose in Costa
Mesa.
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