Bresha, her mother, and her sisters endured years of abuse and threats by Bresha’s father. After continuing to witness this abuse, Bresha sought help from family members and police, but the violence continued. As a young girl with few options, she was rightly scared for her family members’ lives as well as her own. What Bresha faced was not new: countless Black women, girls and gender-nonconforming people face similar matrices of interpersonal violence and state violence. Many, like Bresha, are criminalized for choosing survival.
The incarceration of Bresha Meadows serves no one. Bresha is not a threat to herself, family or community. Instead, it perpetuates the violence against Black women and girls that is inflicted at both the state and interpersonal levels every day. The state failed to protect Bresha. Now, it has chosen to criminalize her. In doing so, it also has chosen to exacerbate the suffering her family already has endured, as they now are separated from their daughter, sister, and niece and must prepare to defend Bresha’s life.
Our hope is that Bresha and her family are swiftly reunited without the threat of future separation by the state that they may begin to heal as only they can do with one another. We must bring Bresha Meadows home now.
In Solidarity,
Love & Protect Project NIA Chicago Taskforce on Violence Against Women & Girls Lifted Voices Moms United Against Violence and Incarceration Moms United Against Violence and Incarceration The Illinois Clemency Project for Battered Women For the People Artists Collective Survived & Punished Free Marissa Now National Mobilization Campaign Liberation Library California Coalition for Women Prisoners Black Lives Matter: Chicago Assata’s Daughters |
STAND WITH BRESHA MEADOWS!
There are three ways you can support Bresha:
|
She is 14. She has survived a huge trauma. She needs therapy and care, not jail for defending hers and her family’s lives. No more kids in jail.
She did what was necessary for herself and for her family.