Chimichangrila ={==~ 🐱 🌮⭐️

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Chimichangrila ={==~ 🐱 🌮⭐️

Chimichangrila ={==~ 🐱 🌮⭐️

@hattoussil

A feline heart wrapped in forged dreams. AuDHD Kindled Minde Guided by stars, ruled by chaos ✊🏳️‍🌈 + 🦋🧠⚡+ 🧩

Rabat Katılım Ağustos 2008
221 Takip Edilen106 Takipçiler
Chimichangrila ={==~ 🐱 🌮⭐️ retweetledi
Crazy Vibes
Crazy Vibes@CrazyVibes_1·
When Mariska Hargitay was cast as Detective Olivia Benson in 1999, she thought she had landed a steady acting job on a new Law & Order spinoff called Special Victims Unit. At the time, it felt like a career step forward. A solid role. A reliable paycheck. She had already spent years working steadily in television, including time on “ER,” but nothing that had truly made her a household name. She had no idea the role would completely reshape her life. Not long after SVU premiered, the letters started arriving. At first they were ordinary fan mail — autograph requests, compliments, messages from viewers who loved the show. Then the tone changed. “I was assaulted when I was 15. I am 40 now and I have never told anyone.” Mariska sat alone in her trailer holding the letter, stunned silent. Soon there were more. Then hundreds more. Then thousands. These weren’t fan letters. They were confessions. Women. Men. Survivors carrying decades of silence finally putting their pain into words. And the heartbreaking part was this: they weren’t writing to Mariska Hargitay. They were writing to Olivia Benson. A fictional detective had become the safest person they could imagine telling the truth to. Mariska understood exactly what that meant. Survivors were so desperate to be believed that they trusted someone who didn’t even exist. Most actors would have thanked the audience politely and moved on. She moved closer to the pain instead. She trained as a certified rape crisis advocate. She studied trauma and sat with experts who worked with survivors every day. She wanted to understand the reality behind the stories arriving in her hands. Then, in 2004, she made a decision that reached far beyond Hollywood. She founded the Joyful Heart Foundation. Its mission was enormous: help survivors heal and transform the way society responds to sexual assault, domestic violence, and child abuse. Five years later, another discovery changed the direction of her work completely. Across America, rape kits were sitting untouched in police warehouses. Evidence collected from survivors after assaults had been abandoned for years — sometimes decades. In some cities, the backlog reached into the tens of thousands. Each forgotten kit represented someone still waiting for justice. Mariska refused to let that continue quietly. She testified before Congress. Met with governors, prosecutors, and police departments. Walked through storage facilities where evidence gathered dust. In 2017, she co-produced the HBO documentary “I Am Evidence,” following survivors fighting to have their kits finally tested. The film won an Emmy in 2019. Her first Emmy had come from portraying Olivia Benson. Her second came from doing the work Benson would have fought for herself. Year after year, the movement grew. Mandatory testing laws. Tracking systems. Survivor notification rights. Funding for crime labs. Reform spread state by state until, in May 2026, Maine became the final state to adopt at least one major pillar of rape kit reform. For the first time, every American jurisdiction had laws addressing the backlog. Mariska called it “a promise that the system can and will be transformed into a source of light, not darkness.” Today, she is still playing Olivia Benson, now the longest-running live-action primetime character in television history. But when she talks about what matters most, she rarely starts with awards or fame. She starts with survivors. Because what began as letters to a fictional detective became something far bigger — proof that when people are finally believed, entire systems can begin to change.
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7ayawaana
7ayawaana@7ayawaana·
Wejedto your eldest son ldbi7a as the true tradition intends ?
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Chimichangrila ={==~ 🐱 🌮⭐️
@ArifiRoyaliste @TobyGN1G Tu les as reconnu tbarekalah 3lik. Tu vois t’as un talent : la clairvoyance d’une taupe. Tu ne sais rien de ces gens, de leur situation, de leurs origines. Mais comme t’aime pas avoir tort tu continue avec ton tberhich. Tu nous fais honte.
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Arifi Anti Marhba ⭐⭐
Arifi Anti Marhba ⭐⭐@ArifiRoyaliste·
Mes frères et soeurs la diaspora marocaine Dites vous que ce sont ces gens là qui nous méprisent et nous appellent les zmag
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Chimichangrila ={==~ 🐱 🌮⭐️
@amineachik2002 @Bart45000 @ArifiRoyaliste Le problème c’est cette façon de penser. Les gens qui réussissent leurs projets travaillent dur pour le faire + d’autres facteurs. Rien a voir avec leur sexualité. Il n’ya pas de « penchant » artistique l’art est une nécessité chez les gens qui s’expriment à travers lui.
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last night
last night@amineachik2002·
@Bart45000 @ArifiRoyaliste Le problème, c'est que la plupart des gens qui réussissent sont homosexuels, ouverts d'esprit et ont un penchant artistique... etc.
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Chimichangrila ={==~ 🐱 🌮⭐️ retweetledi
DA VINKI
DA VINKI@VorosTwins·
Our cat is so thirsty!
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