Robyn
Linde
2004 Upper
Midwest Human Rights Fellow
Fellowship Site: Minnesota
Advocates for Human Rights, Minneapolis, Minnesota
By Pat
McGroarty
07-21-2004
Since her days as an undergraduate student at Indiana University, Robyn Linde
has known that her career would involve the social justice issues that
are personally and professionally integral to her adult life.
“I was raised in a very conservative setting. I was indoctrinated by those
principles, and was really let down when I realized my parents didn’t see
the injustice of the policies they supported. When I went to college I
realized that one thing after another I had been taught was wrong. It wasn’t
just being a lesbian that brought it on, because that had been a part of
me before. It was learning that the way you see the world isn’t the way
it should be and that there is something we can do to fix that,�? explained
Linde while explaining what drives her to work for human rights.
This drive has brought her from liberal arts studies at Indiana University
and several years living and working in Europe to her current position
as a doctoral candidate in the University of Minnesota’s Political Science
department and an Upper Midwest Human Rights Fellow at Minnesota Advocates
for Human Rights in Minneapolis. Linde’s work on an internet project in
the Women’s Program at Minnesota Advocates is an example of her constant
attempt to incorporate human rights advocacy, especially the rights of
women, into her academic career.
Linde grew up in Ohio and Texas, the child of a fiscally conservative father
and a Southern Baptist mother. As a student at Indiana University she began
exploring her religious background as double major in Philosophy and Religious
Studies: “I thought Religious Studies was what I wanted to do, but at the
time I wasn’t spiritual. I had this fascination with religion from my fundamentalist
upbringing, but I hated the Church. I was angry at the notion of being
inferior as a woman and at the love the sinner, hate the sin mentality
toward gay people.�?
Studying her own and other religious traditions strengthened Linde’s desire to
work against injustice and prejudice. She wanted to do something beyond academia
and moved to Europe for several years before continuing her studies.
Linde lived in Finland, Lithuania, and Prague. She taught English as a second
language and found other odd jobs to support her travels. It was an opportunity
to explore Eastern Europe, broadening her perspective before returning to a master’s
program in the United States.
One issue that specifically intrigued Linde was the plight of Europe’s Roma,
or Gypsy, population. “I was interested in that population because it seemed
like no one else was. I had lots of European friends who just hated the Gypsies.
I couldn’t really get to the core of that, couldn’t understand that. I didn’t
feel like Europe was a place where you could really discuss that. It frustrated
me that I couldn’t learn anything about them except stereotypes. That’s why I
wanted to come back and learn about them,�? Linde explained.
Linde returned to the United States and received a scholarship to the University
of Delaware, Newark, where she earned a master’s degree in international relations,
“I wanted to study minority rights and chose political science and international
relations to do that.�?
After receiving her master’s degree she moved to the Twin Cities and began studies
as a Ph.D. Candidate in Political Science at the University of Minnesota. After
her first year of doctoral studies, Linde received a 2002 Macarthur Fellowship
to return to Europe and work with the Roma population that had intrigued her
during her travels: “I worked in Bosnia doing field work with the Roma population
and looking at human rights violations against Roma peoples. They’re not one
of the three major ethnic groups there, and are excluded from many aid programs.�?
Linde continued her studies after returning from the Fellowship and began volunteering
in the Women’s Program at Minnesota Advocates. After a year of volunteer work,
she received a 2004 Upper Midwest Human Rights Fellowship to focus more specifically
on her work in the Women’s Program.
As a fellow at Minnesota Advocates, Linde is currently helping with the development
of a website on violence against women in Eastern Europe and the Commonwealth
of Independent states. “We’re putting everything we can find that relates to
women’s rights within these individual countries on the page. The idea is if
you give people the tools they need, they can set up policies that work in their
own government,�? Linde explained. She two representatives from Minnesota Advocates
are currently in the Republic of Georgia training people to use web site’s resources.
Another project that Linde is working on as a Fellow at Minnesota Advocates is
the Battered Immigrant Women Report. The report examines how government agencies
respond to the special needs of battered women immigrants, and how those needs
are often not met. Linde discussed the importance of this project, “Battered
immigrant women have special needs, such a language barrier. When you don’t speak
English, it’s hard to convince the police that you were the one who was injured
or that you were responding in defense. It can be hard to understand the court
system when they don’t always provide proper interpreters.�?
Linde will continue working as a Fellow at Minnesota Advocates until the fall
semester, when she will begin writing her Ph.D. dissertation. All of my interests
fall under the same category of human rights,�? said Linde as she contemplated
a dissertation topic. “There isn’t enough research to do a project on Roma women
without doing some field work. Something in that area might interest me.�?
Linde hopes to obtain a faculty position after finishing her doctorate, possibly
at a college in the Twin Cities area. Wherever her post-doctorate career leads
her, she knows that she will always be connected to the human rights issues that
have come to define her own life and experience: “I want to be really strongly
connected to the activist community. You have to have an end-goal, and believe
in that goal. As a lesbian, I’m currently working against the federal marriage
amendment. I don’t have a doubt that we’re going to win, but the struggle can
be so disheartening sometimes. But, you have to be optimistic and believe that
you can make a difference. Human rights boil down to dignity, and that’s what
we have to work for.�?