| Break the Silence! by Donald J. Hunt
Break the Silence:
If you take a couple of minutes to read this Commentary, maybe while you enjoy a
Sunday morning cup of coffee, you should know that while you're reading and
sipping, thirteen women will be physically abused in America. Two of those women
will be raped, one or both of them by a man she knows. Eight or more of those
women will resist the attacks, verbally and/or physically.
Half the women in America will be in abusive relationships during their lives.
Women are nine times more likely to be attacked at home than on the street, and
they're more likely to be raped by someone they know than by a stranger. When
they know their attackers they're more than twice as likely to suffer injuries
as they are when they don't know them. Many of those injuries will be so severe
the victims won't be able to drink coffee for a long time, if ever again.
Put
your cup aside and I'll tell you how I know these statistics: I have had the
pain and the awakening of seeing the Clothesline Project on display.
The National Clothesline Project was started in 1990. It consists of T-shirts
created by women who have been the victims of violence, or by their surviving
family or friends. There's a color scheme to the shirts, though it's not rigidly
followed: yellow or beige is for women who have been battered or assaulted; red,
pink or orange is for women who have been raped or sexually assualted; blue or
green is for women survivors of incest or child sexual abuse; purple or lavender
is for women attacked because of their perceived sexual orientation; black is
for women who have been gang-raped; and white is for women who have died as a
result of violence.
The Ventura County Clothesline Project currently has fifty-five shirts, all made
by local victims, or by their families. I assure you that every color and
category listed above is included in the display. I have never in my life
experienced a more moving, more haunting, more shaming feeling than what I felt
while I stood before the silent cloth witnesses to what is happening to women
and girls in this nation.
In fact the point, the purpose of the Clothesline
Project, nationally and locally, is to "Break the Silence" and put an end to
this cycle of cruelty.
More than 58,000 Americans died in the Vietnam War. During that war 51,000
American women were killed in the U.S., by men who supposedly loved them. We
built a wall to honor those who died in Vietnam, a long, black slash across the
national conscience, so that we would not forget those who gave their all. But
we have built no such wall, no monument, to the women who died and continue to
die in such awful numbers, or to so many more women who suffer emotional and
physical injuries yet somehow survive. We hope that as a nation we learned
something from Vietnam, but there is no indication that we have learned what a
price we all pay when we continue to allow this epidemic of violence.
Stand before the clothesline, read the stories the T-shirts tell. They're all
graphic and compelling, regardless of the words used to describe what their
creators went through. Those women, and all the women who have created shirts,
all the women who have been victims of violence, are as courageous as any
decorated combat veteran, any soldier who stood before an enemy, any Medal of
Honor winner - they were all those things and more, because they too often had
to stand alone.
One definition of society is "The institutions and culture of a distinct
self-perpetuating group." We are certainly a society, markedly so when we
realize that the institutions and culture with which we surround ourselves seem
so intent on perpetuating violence against women. But no society can rightfully
call itself a civilization, civil being the operative part of the equation, so
long as it allows such violence to continue, or depends on the victims of that
violence to stop it.
It's time to "Break the Silence" and become a civilization. You can help by
seeing the Clothesline Project, or by supporting it. For information on how you
can do both, contact your local NOW chapter (National Organization for Women) or
Victims of Abuse Hotline. Make a difference, and your coffee won't taste as
bitter as it does right now.
Lighting the way to a brighter future!
The author is Donald J. Hunt. Send him an e-mail and let him know that his
editorial made a difference. Please feel free to copy this editorial........pass
it around........you, too, can make a difference in someones life.
All the author and I require is that you keep the editorial intact and give the
author credit.
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