Archive for Blog

Conversation With Documentarian Aishah Shahidah Simmons — Sarah-Jane Stratford

Photo credit: Julie Yarbrough

 

Aishah Shahidah Simmons’s documentary about rape, NO!, was a project she conceived as being primarily aimed toward Black women, and these are the women who talk openly about their experience in the film. To Ms. Simmons’ surprise, the film has been used as a tool to open up discussion about rape in such unexpected places as Guam, Croatia, and Hungary. “The universality of sexual assault transcends color,” she points out. While Ms. Simmons, who is a survivor of both incest and rape, is pleased to have created a work that has so much resonance, it is also frustrating that a film first screened in 2006 continues to be so necessary. Nonetheless, the fact that the film sparks such deep responses and fruitful conversation is cause for great encouragement. Speaking out is one of the most powerful weapons to fight sexual assault.

 

NO! features a number of women giving testimony and thus breaking their silence on their personal experience of rape. As Ms. Simmons notes, this is critical because “rapists bank on silence and shame.” Challenging though it is to be out and visible, more and more women realize it is necessary, both for their own healing and as a way of breaking down the wall of shame.

 

Despite improvements in police and media response, there is still a societal attitude that treats rape as the only crime where a victim’s behavior is a factor in whether it is, in fact, deemed a crime. As Ms. Simmons says, “I could leave my laptop on a table in Starbucks while I’m at the counter and someone could steal it – that would definitely be stupid of me, but it won’t stop authorities from trying to track it down. When it comes to sexual assault, however, the victim is still thoroughly vetted for possible complicity before a serious investigation gets underway.”

 

Ms. Simmons explains that, despite the regular horror stories such as the gang rape in India and cases such as Steubenville, rape is no more prevalent than it’s ever been. The difference is that more women are refusing to be silent. This does raise the risk of backlash, which we see more immediately, thanks to social media.

 

“It is detrimental to survivors whose lives are plastered on social media,” says Ms. Simmons. “I get attacked too, and it’s hard, but at least I have tools, which include therapy and vipassana meditation, to handle it. A 15-year-old girl who’s already been victimized probably won’t have those or other useful tools to cope with the attacks.” Social media can castigate and malign a victim, which is why one major point Ms. Simmons makes when talking about NO! to young people is that they have to think about how words can have impact.

 

Part of the problem is a lack of understanding about language. Some people don’t have a real understanding of what rape is.

 

“I’ve heard girls say, ‘I’d let him rape me,’” says Ms. Simmons. Likewise, some boys and men have complained that NO! “doesn’t leave room for seduction.” Too many men are not clear on the difference between seduction and coercion, a problem that NO! attempts to rectify. “It’s generally understood that for every minute a rape lasts, that will require at least one year of healing, if they are in  therapy. When audiences hear that, and witness these survivors’ testimonies, they start to understand just what the words mean.”

 

Asked what she thinks is at the root of what’s called the current “rape culture,” Ms. Simmons says rape remains a weapon of patriarchy, an attempt to “put women in their place. There is a feeling that the traditional male power structure is slipping away and the immediate response to any perceived uprising is always to squash it. There is also still an idea that it’s acceptable to denigrate women, reducing them to receptacles rather than people, an idea unfortunately perpetuated in the culture and media. The difference between now and a few decades ago is that women are increasingly not silent about the violence perpetuated against them – be it sexual assault or a battering by a partner.”

 

One issue NO! explores that gets very little traction in the wider discussion of rape is that rape is also a weapon of homophobia.  “There is an attitude expressed by some men that says, ‘I’m gonna rape her straight,’” says Ms. Simmons. One survivor in the film, Queen, talks about the threat of her assault and how it came from an attitude of “rape isn’t rape if it’s to teach black lesbians a lesson.” This is especially the case if a woman is masculine identified. “When it comes to lesbians,” says Ms. Simmons, “the insistence that she is put in her place is particularly strong. She has to be shown that she is not a man. She is not a peer. She is a woman and thus a receptacle for whatever a man wants from her.”

 

This attitude extends toward hatred of gay men as well. The denigration of the feminine locates a gay man as being like a woman and thus worthy of condescension and even violence.

 

“So much of it is a desire to go back to the way things were,” says Ms. Simmons. “A time when gay people weren’t visible, women kept quiet, and all people of color knew their rightful place in society. Now the anger and fear of change as more groups push for equality gets played out on women’s bodies.”

 

Despite increasing gains in civil rights and equality across the spectrum, there is still some discomfort with language and how one is perceived. When calling out a racist act, a person of color might preface remarks with an apology, an insistence that they’re “not playing the ‘race card.’” Likewise, Ms. Simmons has observed repeatedly in her women’s studies classes at Temple University and in Q&A sessions after screenings of NO! that young women are quick to qualify their thoughts with the classic, “I’m not a feminist, but…” before continuing on to make a feminist statement.  When Ms. Simmons points out that they are speaking strong feminist language, they persist in believing that it’s a “bad word,” and not one with which they wish to be associated.

 

“The media plays a strong role in this,” says Ms. Simmons. “It determines what we think. It’s not just Fox News and Rush Limbaugh, and it’s not just the language of hip-hop, though that’s all easy to blame. It’s rampant in mainstream media too. We need to recognize that and push back.”

 

While policy can play an important role – the passage of the Violence Against Women Act was a strong step, although the fact that it was controversial is disheartening – Ms. Simmons notes that the real progress is found in organizations dedicated to changing behavior and helping to create a healthier dialogue. Groups such as Men Stopping Violence, Men Can Stop Rape, Black Women’s Blueprint, and Project Stop Now among many others, are making strides in pushing back against the culture of violence. Ms. Simmons is particularly pleased to see such groups and offices dedicated to women’s well-being on the campuses of the historically black colleges and universities, which have been slow to acknowledge the need.

 

She’s also encouraged by some of the responses young men have to NO! When she screened the film for the Philadelphia Student Union, many young men talked about how they have been complicit in violence, simply by not speaking out when something inappropriate was said or done, because they feared being attacked in kind. The film helps everyone see how important it is to break the cycle of silence.

 

“I wanted to make women feel empowered after viewing the film,” says Ms. Simmons of her impetus in making NO! “I wanted them to understand that life doesn’t have to stop if you’ve been assaulted. They can get involved in the movement to stop violence, and men must as well. I want women to feel strong enough to seek help – therapy can be stigmatized among people of color, but it’s important and I believe should be non-negotiable. Above all, I want everyone to understand that the shame is not on the victim, but on the perpetrator.”

 

 

—You can read more about Aishah Shahidah Simmons and NO!, as well as order copies, at http://notherapedocumentary.org/. Paradigm Shift NYC will also alert readers to local screenings.

Confessions of a Super Hero: Episode 1 of The Chronicles of Fortuna

Sauza Tequila Panders to Women…Badly — Elizabeth

While browsing the internet I came across this advertisement for Sauza Tequila. A conventionally attractive lifeguard mugs for the camera, shows off his physique and makes frozen cocktails because he knows how to take awesome care of the ladies. I was willing to brush it off as silly fluff until he said that taking care a woman includes

“keeping her shoe tree organized, her ex boyfriend from texting her, or her mom from blowing up her Facebook wall”

Later he raises his glass and says:

“I believe celebrity gossip is as important as the news, and if Jill buys the same purse, I’ll tell you you wear it better, because I’m a lifeguard and I care.”

The cheesy music and “gawk at the beefcake” vibe is tongue in cheek. And I admit I laughed a little bit when he broke the fourth wall with a smoldering “I love you.” But it’s hard to take most of the text of the ad as a joke. The things the Lifeguard says are supposed to be equally as appealing as his looks, and therefore the tequila. If we are meant to disagree with what he says, why would we want to accept his drink?

To sum up – women need men to organize our wardrobes, protect us from other men, run interference with our mothers, and validate how vapid, jealous and materialistic we are. We should be so flattered that a man would accept and embrace our neuroses and shallowness that we buy Sauza tequila.

I looked at the rest of the ads on Sauza’s YouTube Channel, and they are simpler, focusing mainly on how attractive the lifeguard is. Perhaps they are going for a parallel to beer and car commercials where stereotypically beautiful women are used to sell products to men. The thing is, in those advertisements the women don’t say things like,

“I know how to treat a man; keeping your toolbox organized, preventing your ex girlfriend from calling you and knowing that video games are as important as the news.”

Ads that feature sexy women targeted at men objectify women. This ad, featuring a sexy man, targeted at women…insults women.

No thanks, Sauza Tequila.

Elizabeth also blogs at Political Flavors. You can follow her on Twitter @MissCherryPi.

Story of the an Average Survivor — Andrea Hance

This is my first post to paradigm shift blog and I didn’t think I would be revealing personal stories just yet, but I was inspired recently by a Ted Talk by Shane Koyczan who shared his personal story of being bullied and also being a bully. So to introduce myself, here is a piece of a personal story.

I was bullied.

I sat and stared at those words for a moment because I have been running from them for a long time now. I don’t even like to admit it and I usually down play it whenever the subject does come up in social situation. However, the truth is that most of my school life I felt isolated and lonely. It’s not that I never had any friends, but there were many parts of my youth when I didn’t.

This manifested itself in being picked last for everything, not just sports which I can actually understand because I’m clumsy. I dreaded the words “pick a partner.” Attending school dances was like walking into a self-inflicted torture chamber filled with boys gaging at thought of dancing with me. My parents never made me go to any of these functions, but somewhere inside I would think maybe this time would be different.  It wouldn’t be.

While in Teach for America, I witnessed similar situations of subtle isolation. I tried to combat it as much as I could in my own classroom, but I know it was pervasive in our school.  Recent years has seen some highly publicized cases of bullying. Organizations and initiatives have jumped to try to help teachers, parents and students. I agree with their motives and effort. However, there has to be a change in culture to see them succeed in making the daily lives of kids being bullied.  Reality shows that feature harsh judgments of people’s talents and looks are standard on our TV screens.

In truth, I still struggle now with my past and there are times when I revert back to the wall flower and fear judgment. What if all my friends find out that I’m really a dork with nothing special to offer? These kinds of thoughts still haunt me. No one has given me cause to feel an upsurge of vulnerability and I have been offered more love and support than I ever thought I would be from a circle of friends.

So my question is, although it is true that It Gets Better as one of my favorite bully prevention programs declares, how do we instill the armor for kids being bullied so they can escape the memories when they are an adult? This would build a citizenship of confident adults and are ready to contribute to the world. I fear that many adult survivors of bullying are still hiding as wall flowers when they could be on the dance floor.

As a community we can help combat the negative effects of bullying. If you are friends with a survivor, be patient when they have moments of weakness. Also, remember that you may need to tell survivors they are good more times than is really necessary for an average person. It takes more for us to believe that what we do or think matters, but every time you do give us a compliment it means the world to us even if we don’t always show it.

Go! Push Pops is recruiting NYC Women to participate in a free Warrior Goddess Workshop May 4, 11, 18 & 25

ATTENTION: Young Feminists of Brooklyn!!

Go! Push Pops is recruiting NYC Women to participate in a free Warrior Goddess Workshop May 4, 11, 18 & 25

Go! Push Pops at the Brooklyn Museum!!!!

Wednesday, April 24, 2013 at 6:30 p.m.

The Brooklyn Artists Ball

Go! Push Pops will re-perform “BLOCK WATCHING Remix”  (based on Luis Gispert’s 2002 video Block Watching) with founding member Anna Souvorov as well as “BAD BITCHES” a new work in collaboration with Michelle Marie Charles.

Tickets for the dance party 9-12pm are only $75 (Includes Open bar and Nail Art)

Buy tickets to the Ball and/or After-Party at ball.brooklynmuseum.org.

The Push Pops are a queer, transnational, radical feminist collective under the direction of Elisa Garcia de la Huerta and Katie Cercone.

Go! Push Pops   
http://thepushpopcollective.tumblr.com/

Hello! — Cath

Hi!

 

I’m Cath, a new blogger to Paradigm Shift and a feminist about to graduate her hipster college!  My main interests that I will write about include theater, pop culture, beauty standards/ being body positive as well as personal essays.

 

I notice that a lot of the other cool bloggers have talked about their feminist “click” moments, so I would like to dive into that as well.

 

I had many “fake out” clique moments like when I got confused why all of my high school literature essays where about the female perspective or when I went through a phase where I only wanted to read plays by women.  But those were only little bumps long the feminist road, I had yet to encounter the humongo life altering road bump that would change my perspective utterly.

 

At my college we have something called a “Field Work Term.”  It is an annual event when we get 7 weeks to explore the world and do things that are supposed to complement our studies.  Most Bennington students do odd hipster things like working at an Asian circus, woofing(living on someone’s farm in exchange for work) or being a manager for a local cult(you can’t make this stuff up!).  My usual FWT’s have included typical cliché theater student things like working at a theater, stage managing at a theater, looking at a theater etc.  But for some reason, my junior year, I ended up going on a different path.

 

I found “The National Eating Disorder Association” through some feminist browsing.  I did not really know what an eating disorder was, unless you count sketchy inaccurate gossip from high school about why some girl looked so skinny.  So I was sort of confused what I was applying for and therefore NEDA was not even on the top of my list for that FWT, but they seemed so nice and emailed me back super fast!  I like when people do that!

 

So for 7 weeks I worked at NEDA and got my mind blown slowly.  I remember when I first started training and overheard someone on the phone saying, “There’s more to life than your looks, you can free yourself from that harmful thinking.”  I was like, “What!?!?!”  I had never heard anyone talk about physical appearance in that way.  I grew up knowing I was chubby and up to that point one of my major life goals was to not be that.  I had played with numerous sketchy diets and “Lifestyle” eating plans but most of them got me back where I started.  I had never heard anyone give permission for someone to not focus on their looks and to accept them self as they are now.

 

As I learned more and more about eating disorders and beauty standards, I felt more and more empowered.  I could hope for more things in my life than just being thinner!  Now I know that could sound shallow, but lot of people, especially girls, are raised to focus on enhancing their body through dieting etc.  That was all I knew and I didn’t think there was a way out.

 

For the first time I learned that I could love my body as it was!  I could love that I had curves and I wasn’t flat chested and that I didn’t look like anyone else!  For the first time I stopped noticing other people’s bodies and whether they were socially acceptable.  I sifted through NEDA’s amazing library of books and read tons of feminist theory, books about eating disorder prevention and being body positive.  I was so excited I literally wanted to eat all of these books with glee!

 

For the first time in my life I was free.  And when I talked to other people on the phone, I was helping to free them.  I helped people to see there was another perspective.  I helped people to learn that they are beautiful, no matter what their friend or boyfriend says.  I would talk to people as young as 12, who had been dieting all day and wanted to call to see what an eating disorder was.  I felt so good knowing that I could empower others to be themselves.

 

For me being a feminist means confidence no matter what social rules tell you to believe or think about yourself.  Feminism for me felt like this super hero cape that I didn’t know I had. I am so excited to write for Paradigm Shift!!  Woot!

Femen — Victoria Gibson

It is always difficult for women to get their voices heard. The radical European group, Femen, is seeking publicity for their cause by baring their breasts, even stripping completely, and painting slogans on their skin. This attention seeking action, they call “sextremism” is working to attract attentions and spread the news that there is a problem, but is their message getting through?
The photos I have seen, such as the one accompanying the quote below, have the writing blurred out, so the message cannot be read.

‘Russia has urged German authorities to punish the protesters. “This is ordinary hooliganism and unfortunately it happens all over the world, in any city. One needs to punish (them),” Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said. [http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/worldnews/vladimir-putin/9978447/Bemused-Vladimir-Putin-and-Angela-Merkel-confronted-by-topless-Femen-protester-in-Hanover.html]’


The protesters were not quoted directly, but excerpts from their facebook page were used to suggest possibilities of what issue they were protesting. Most of the comments printed are from government leaders, who are the target of the protests. They do not take a serious view, but rather try to make a joke of the demonstration. The overall effect of the story was to minimize the cause of the protest and make it seem amusing, while the women protesting were arrested and restrained.
A look at the Femen facebook page to find information, showed a lot of protest activity receiving media attention, but Amines Tyler, a Tunisian Femen protester, is listed as missing. The photo of her on the page shows she has been beaten, but I could not tell exactly what happened. Another photo showed a topless woman with “Kill Kirill . ..” written on her back. I am not sure what this means, but I do not support the promotion of killing or violence to change social attitudes.

Other protests by Femen have included nudity and recall the protests of the Doukhobor social movement in 1914 [Wikipedia http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nudity_and_protest] The Doukhobor group has roots in the Ukraine, but Doukobor community members settled in Canada after being exiled from their native country. This form of protest then surfaced in Canadian courts, when the collective religious law clashed with Canadian policies. The passive resistance of naked farmers is very different from the active protest of the Femen group, but I wonder if there is some historical connection?

In contrast to the solid Doukobor farmers, the young Femen protesters have bodies that attract sexist comments and media reports. Do the protesters hope to highlight sexism by attracting comments that reveal sexist attitudes towards young women? Or are they merely using the sensationalist trajectory of contemporary press reporting to attract attention? 
The actions of these women are dangerous and they are risking their personal safety to make their point. As a feminist, I am supportive of the idea of free expression, equal economic opportunity, reproductive choice and freedom from religious suppression, but I worry about these young women putting themselves in danger for such general goals.
The Femen “topless jihad” has taken on some daunting opponents in organized religion, national governments and social attitudes towards women’s bodies. These are brave young women and it may be the right time to move these issues into a media forum and spark discussion. I know that nothing will change if we all sit by passively and watch oppression by church and state, but I question the effectiveness of Femen’s tactics. They are, like Pussy Riot, seeking a media spotlight that they can shine on the current injustices that affect their lives.
If this trend continues, many more young women will be imprisoned, beaten and even killed trying to create change in the world. Is this a price we are willing to pay to have a few amusing stories in the press? It may be possible to create change without endangering these young women, but the tactics would have to be less extreme and the attention would not be so immediate. Real change is needed and the Femen protestors, Pussy Riot and others throughout the world are risking their lives to make it happen. We must respect their decision to do so, but still look for alternative means.

Femen: Feminism’s Enfant Terrible — Danielle Paradis

Both the Western and worldwide media does not pay attention to women until they take off their clothes. This isn’t news to anyone. Sites decrying the lack of young people’s morality also have gossip pages detailing lasciviously the nip slips and crotch shots of our favorite rehab bound women. With the preoccupation of women’s bodies is many a celebrity blogger’s paycheck made. It is in this light, this raunch culture, that I look at the activism of FEMEN with considerable cynicism.

FEMEN exploded onto the activist movement in 2008, its members quickly became internationally recognizable for going topless, and now naked, to protest sex tourists, sexism and other social ills in the Ukraine. The movement has since spread internationally. They have recently been in the news for the activist actions of a young women from Tunsia, Amina Tyler as well as April 4, 2013 International Topless Jihad Day. While I pray for the safety of Amina and the end of oppression the world over I also see that FEMEN is using her as the poster-child of a movement that runs on shock-value, and often speaks over the voices of the women they seek to ‘liberate’. Most recently FEMEN attacked sex workers taking to the stage in Paris to shove a nude woman who had been giving a lapdance on stage onto the ground repeatedly. While yelling, “Go rape yourself”, because apparently using nudity is only appropriate when FEMEN decides it is. They stated:  Mainstream sex industry is allowing millions of user to download each day billions of disgusting images staging women in the most humiliating way as possible to satisfy the beasty lust of patriarchy. It’s a bizarre ideological mash-up when the irony of harming a woman to fulfill their goals seems to escape them.

femen

 

FEMEN is all over the place ideologically speaking recently, they have even sought registration as a non-governmental organization. They even have the good fortune of  a wealthy male benefactor Jed Sunden, the owner of KP media.

It troubles me that naked women with banners are being presented in the media as the new wave of feminism. It troubles me that Inna Shevchenko seems to think she invented nude activism. It troubles me that journalists declare FEMENS actions a gloriously crude protest with an article that makes clear the authors titillation. Male gaze, anyone?

Taking off your clothes to protest is not a new thing. Nor is it soley the tactic of the white, tight bodied frustrated advocate. In Nigeria, Kenya, and Libya nude protest has taken place over a century. What a testament to Eurocentric thinking it is to assume that FEMEN or any other Western organization, looking at you PETA, has invented this style of activism.

FEMEN is opportunistic with their use of the young and attractive female body in order to draw attention. Perhaps more insidious is that Ms. Shevchenko’s ‘beauty as a weapon’ philosophy enhances that shallow binary between “feminists” as the ugly old movement and “Femen” as the young virile fierce beauties. Intersectional feminist theory reminds us to ask ourselves what women are represented and in FEMEN the answer seems to be the young and the luscious. Oh but there are less than perfect members of FEMEN who are active, people tell me. And undoubtedly there are, but these are not the women in the majority of the clips shown by the media or, tellingly, by FEMEN themselves.

Further, the west is decidedly Islamophobic at worst and ignorant at best about Muslims. The media at large misrepresents Islam, often portraying the Middle East as the Islamic capital while Indonesia actually boasts a larger Islamic population. FEMEN doesn’t seem to be doing any better. When Muslim women rally against FEMEN they are called brainwashed and ‘stupid slaves’ by the FEMEN supporters on Facebook. Miriam Cooke, professor of modern Arabic literature and culture of Duke University reminds of of the inherent colonialism in the concern for the oppression of women under the thumb of Islam she says, “so extreme is the concern with Muslim women today that veiled, and even unveiled, women are no longer thought of as individuals: collectively they have become the Muslimwoman.”

What Femen, and feminism, needs to remember is that all women have choices. All of us, as women, have power and our choices to respond how we want to. It’s not as though women who aren’t feminists are brainless they are people with their own experiences and power. They get to decide what they are doing with their lives.

Most of the pushback for Amina is coming from the west while Inna Shevchenko lives in France, where nude protests may be shocking—the penalty for doing so is not lashes. The repeated criticism by women actually practicing Islam and living in the countries that FEMEN seeks to ‘liberate’ is that white women are not bringing feminism to Muslim countries it has existed there before. There’s a lack of cultural sensitivity to charge into a country and assume that you know better, that you are able to save them.

In a civilized society, everyone should have the right to peaceful protest. No FEMEN member should be harmed for the frustration shown through nudity…is liberation making Muslim women available for scrutiny under the male gaze? The argument for nudity is that shock is what causes people to pay attention. But is it shock? Nudity is EVERYWHERE in the western society. There is a deeply Eurocentric mindset to much political discussion among white radicals in discussions of feminism and the struggle for women’s rights. Now the spotlight is being shone on Ms. Shevchenko and her considerable bodily charms—and I’ve never felt further away from progress.

Photo Credit anw-fr  via Creative Commons

Original post: http://www.fem2pt0.com/2013/04/10/femen-feminisms-enfant-terrible/

New York Deserves Better

…than rape jokes on social media,

…than a “professional athlete” who has pled guilty to domes c abuse,

…than misogynis c and derogatory comments about women,

…than perverse hypermasculinity,

…than HUMAN CAGEFIGHTING.

March 15, 2013

Honorable Sheldon Silver
Speaker of the Assembly
932 Legislative Office Building
Albany, N.Y. 12248

Re: Uphold Ban Against Professional Cage Fighting in New York

Dear Speaker Silver:

As advocates for survivors of domestic and sexual assault, we are writing to urge you to uphold the State of New
York’s ban against professional cage fighting and to resist efforts by the Las Vegas-based Ultimate Fighting
Championship (UFC) to bring these violent spectacles to New York.

No state that aspires to be the “progressive capital of the nation,” as Governor Cuomo asserted in his recent State of
the State speech, should lower itself by embracing an industry dominated by a company that tolerates joking about
sexual violence. Fighters in the UFC have joked about rape in public and one has appeared in videos that are
demeaning to women and make fun of sexual violence.

Why, in a state that just enacted tough new legislation addressing the epidemic of domestic assault,1 would we
reverse course and expose our children to the violent misogyny and perverse forms of masculinity that are
celebrated in the world of amateur and professional cage fighting?

Last year, UFC fighter Quinton “Rampage” Jackson appeared in an online video in which he makes light of sexual
assault by pretending to attempt to rape a woman in a parking garage using chloroform and zip ties.2 Even after a
coalition of women’s groups, clergy and academics expressed outrage over Jackson’s behavior, and called for his
removal from a cage fighting event, the UFC allowed him to compete on national television.3

One prominent UFC fighter wrote on Twitter, “Rape is the new missionary,” 4 while another UFC fighter wrote, “If
a rape van was called a surprise van, more women wouldn’t mind going for rides in them.” 5 UFC president Dana
White has set a despicable example by repeatedly using abusive language that is derogatory to women.”6 (See the
attached document for incidents of socially irresponsible behavior by people associated with the UFC.)

Jokes about rape are never funny. Rape jokes are not funny to the 1.4 million women in New York who reported
having been raped at some point in their lives; and they are not funny to the 3.8 million New York women who
reported experiencing sexual violence victimization other than rape during their lifetimes.7

We strongly encourage you to maintain the ban against professional cage fighting events in New York.

(See List of Supporters)

Respectfully submitted, and on behalf of the following supporters,

Joanne Archambault
Executive Director
End Violence Against Women International (EVAWI)

Lena Alhusseini
Executive Director
The Arab American Family Support Center

Larry Lee
Executive Director
New York Asian Women’s Center

Moshe Rozdzial, Ph.D.
Co-Chair
The National Organization for Men Against Sexism (NOMAS)

Joanne N. Smith
Founder and Executive Director
Girls for Gender Equity Inc.

Press Release, “Governor Cuomo Signs Legislation Strengthening New York’s Domestic Violence Laws,” Oct. 25, 2012,
http://www.governor.ny.gov/press/102512domesticviolencelegislation
2
“Rampage Jackson — How to Pick Up a Gurl — Fast,” http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SfG5amLtWEQ
3
Hirst, Ellen Jean, “Video sparks protest of Ultimate Fighting event,” Jan. 25, 2013, Chicago Tribune,
http://articles.chicagotribune.com/2013-01-25/news/ct-met-ufc-rape-video-20130125_1_ufc-fighter-lorenzo-fertitta-
quinton-rampage-jackson; NBC 5 Chicago, “Groups Want UFC Star Booted for Racy Videos,” Jan. 26, 2013,
http://www.nbcchicago.com/news/sports/ufc-chicago-quinton-rampage-jackson-rape-video-188462661.html; Hill,
Darlene, “Women’s groups protest UFC’s Quinton `Rampage’ Jackson,” Jan. 25, 2013, FOX 32 Chicago,
http://www.myfoxchicago.com/story/20711189/womens-groups-protest-quinton-rampage-jackson
4
Associated Press, “Group Criticizes UFC After Fighter’s Rape Tweet,” Nov. 12, 2012, CBS-Las Vegas,
http://lasvegas.cbslocal.com/2011/11/12/group-criticizes-ufc-after-fighters-rape-tweet/
5
McNeil, Franklin, “UFC fires Miguel Torres for tweet,” Dec. 9, 2011, ESPN.com,
http://espn.go.com/mma/story/_/id/7334939/ufc-releases-miguel-torres-rape-van-twitter-post
6
Video (1:55 to 2:00), “UFC President Dana White’s Notorious Rant,” April 3, 2009, http://www.blinkx.com/watch-
video/ufc-president-dana-white-notorious-rant/FYZcYppmYJ5wwYruuKpvpw; YouTube video (3:51 to 4:06),

7
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, “The National Intimate Partner and Sexual Violence Survey: 2010 Summary
Report,” November 2011, http://www.cdc.gov/ViolencePrevention/pdf/NISVS_Report2010-a.pdf

 

Rehtaeh Parsons — Danielle Paradis

Here we are again.

A teenage girl goes to a party. She is raped by four assailants. There are pictures taken and distributed through social media.

She does not tell her mother until four days later what happened. Too late for a rape kit. Rehtaeh’s victimization goes viral and she is branded a slut. Her mother tells the story:

Rehtaeh was suddenly shunned by almost everyone she knew, the harassment was so bad she had to move out of her own community to try to start anew in Halifax. She struggled emotionally with depression and anger .Her thoughts of suicide began and fearing for her life, she placed herself in a hospital in an attempt to get help. She stayed there for almost 6weeks. The bullying continued, her friends were not supportive. She needed a friend and eventually along the way a few new friends came along and a few old friends came forward.
Rae then moved back to Dartmouth, always with the concern of what will be said about her, said to her. Again, she was the one raped…she was the victim being victimized over and over again. One year later the police conclude their investigation to state that it comes down to “he said, she said” they believed the boys raped her but the proof in a court of law was difficult to gather. The photo sent…”well Leah, that’s a community issue!” The bullying never stopped but she learned to keep her head high and surrounded herself with the ones who truly cared.

 

The boys were not interviewed until long after the family tried to press charges.When they were interviewed it was together, easily allowing corroboration of their stories. No one was held accountable for the photographs, despite being child pornography, because the police said there was no way to tell who had taken the photograph.

For seventeen months Rehtaeh struggled to survive in the face of humiliation, bullying and shaming.

Nova Scotia’s Justice Minister Ross Landry refuses to review why the RCMP did not lay charges in this investigation. The school officials did nothing to help there’s no mention of any of the boys or other bullies being so much as suspended.

He released this statement:

“As a community, we need to have more dialogue with our young people about respect and about support to educate our young boys and our young girls about what’s appropriate behaviour, what’s not appropriate behaviour,” Landry said.

“We have to make sure that we’re cognizant about what gets online and what doesn’t get online and what the impacts are, so it’s having that dialogue.

“That still doesn’t take away the fact that we’ve lost a beautiful young woman … and I’m very upset about the loss.”

Rehtaeh Parson didn’t get a trial like Jane Doe. I never thought I would wish a trial like that on any young girl but at the very least an attempt for justice and an awareness around her story occurred  Jane Doe’s struggle isn’t over yet but Retaeh Parson’s is. Because she is dead.

And this is our society. The taunting, the photographs, the lack of accountability is what we have. We don’t have Rehtaeh anymore. She’s another victim to misanthropy. She brings to mind another young woman I wrote about last year, Amanda Todd.

 

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Once again, now that we’ve lost the young woman..now we care.

There’s a petition to demand Justice for Rehtaeh. I don’t know if it will do anything. It’s too late to do what should have been done. All I am wondering now is how many more times am I going to have to write this narrative.

She’s not some forgettable, slutty teenager she’s Rehtaeh Parsons, but she could be any young woman who dares to go outside. She was raped when she was 15. She was victimized over and over. When she was 17 she committed suicide.

She could have been any of us.

 

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