A Prize for Rebuilding Lost Lives
Asieh Amini - 2008.03.04

There are many social and political activists and human rights organizations that focus on abolishing practices such as the death penalty, stoning, or improving conditions for women prisoners. These activities, however, focus on saving women who have already been convicted and are in prison.
There certainly are individuals and organizations engaged in the prevention of social ills and providing assistance to abused women, but it growingly appears that this assistance is not sufficient to make a change. Prisoners whose lives have been saved enter a hostile social environment after their release and are prone to going astray.
In several cases in which I was personally involved, women who were saved from death, eventually returned to their old lifestyle of prostitution which has placed them in renewed danger of arrest and punishment. This is because these women lack employment opportunities, are poor, and often rely on the assistance of charitable foundations.
Is there nothing that can be done for thee people? Can society not provide a fresh start for a healthy life to people who have been freed? Can we not set aside a special prize for women whose human rights have been abused, but who have risen to the occasion to become positive role models for others? Do organizations that respect human rights and work to institute such rights also have a responsibility to provide conditions to prevent these freed women from relapsing into their old lifestyles and ending up in prison, again?
The placement of such priorities in the platforms of charitable and volunteer organizations will help not only to prevent the relapse of many freed women into their lifestyles, but also to spread awareness about these issues and turn individual problems of poor and desperate women into public and social problems.
We may think that issues such as this belong to a certain class of people, or, how can we expect a woman who has just been freed from prison to access such information.
My response is that, actually, prisoners are well connected and often form information networks that surpass in effectiveness many social information networks. Furthermore, such information can be presented to women while they are in prison and serving time.
Freed prisoners are forgotten people that require individual and social attention. Let us not be a part of their gradual extinction by forgetting them!
