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Current Projects
last modified November 26, 2007 by sed2109
Here is the Sign Up for the Clothesline Project. Please try to take at least two hours! (Steph will work more but is planning on filling in gaps since she's so free)
Clothesline Project sign-up -- Tuesday, Nov. 27
Time
Name
10-11am
************steph had appt rescheduled and needs folks to set up in her stead
11-12pm
(steph will arive at 20 after 11)
1-2pm
Jen (1:30-2:30)
2-3pm
Jen (1:30-2:30) Aliza (from 2:30)
3-4pm
Aliza
4-5pm
Nick, Aliza (until 4:30)
5-6pm
Nick, (Jen 5:45 - end)
6-6:45pm
Stephanie, (Jen 5:45 - end)
Statement of Purpose
Rape is a hate-crime. Sexual assault is an act of violence – not an expression of sexual desire. It is a brutal assertion of control that can happen in any relationship, to either women or men.
Sexual violence is an epidemic. Yet the institutions of our society insist on treating this violence as a series of unrelated, isolated incidents. This mentality dictates that we keep off the streets, that when we are harassed we should take it as a compliment, that when we are raped we should get over it. Most security advice offered to survivors is based on a blame-the-victim mentality. Too often the survivor is interrogated instead of the perpetrator. They tell us it happened because we were on the street, or at home; because we were in the office, or in the classroom; because we were out at night, or during the day; because we were off campus, or our clothes were too tight; because we are queer, or we have the wrong kind of sex; because we are the wrong color, or the wrong class; because we are transgendered; because we are the wrong religion; because we drank too much, or were out studying too late; because boys will be boys; because we were not in our bedrooms, but in the wrong neighborhood. They tell us it didn’t really happen because we were dating the person; because women cannot rape, because men cannot be assaulted.
There is no end to the list of excuses. Tonight we remind ourselves that there are no excuses. Excuses serve only to perpetuate the violence. They silence us by convincing us that we are alone, and by ignoring the fact that the violence we face is often interconnected – sexual violence is often motivated by the same hatred that fuels racism, classism, ableism, homophobia, and religious bias. Excuses silence men who have been sexually assaulted along with survivors assaulted by women. They deny our power of survival. These excuses focus solely on our fears. These fears confine us and make us limit our own activities instead of demanding an end to sexual violence.
The excuses end here. Tonight is a night of survival in the most active sense of the word. Tonight is a night of empowerment. We march together as women, demonstrating the strength in our numbers. Sexual assault is disproportionately committed against women; it is often gender-based. Tonight we reclaim the streets as our own safe space. We march because every women has the right to walk at night without fear. We shout to combat the silence that is forced upon us.
Tonight is also a night of unity. We march with men in the community to demonstrate our solidarity against the violence that affects all of us, as both male and female survivors, and as co-survivors who share the pain of our partners, our friends, and our families. We march because we recognize that only together can we break the cycle of violence. With rage we march and with strength we speak.
Take back the day. Take back the night. Take back our bodies. Take up the fight.