untitledfeministproject:

This speak out will be happening TOMORROW!
5:00
YWCA, 30 3rd Ave, Brooklyn
Hope to see you there!
untitledfeministproject:

[Image Description: A flyer for an event for survivors being held on April 7th, put together by the (Untitled Feminist Project).  The flyer has a picture of a microphone and text. The text of the flyer reads:
Police and hospital staff sometimes don’t adequately provide for victims of sexual assault.
Intimate partner violence happens in all types of relationships.
Sometimes, we are violated by those we trust the most.
Have you experienced any of these situations?
Have you experienced anything similar?
Has anyone you love?
We are often encouraged
to not speak about those things
that have traumatized us the most.
(Untitled Feminist Project) invites you to
please come share with us in a Speak Out:
Sunday, April 7th, 2013
5pm (doors open at 4.30pm)
YWCA, 30 3rd Ave, Brooklyn, New York
Accessible venue with gender neutral restrooms
FREE ADMISSION
Resources & support services will available for those in attendance.
If you are interested in receiving more information about this event or partnering with us, you can reach us at:
wespeakup.speakout@gmail.com
facebook.com/UntitledFeministProject
untitledfeministproject.tumblr.com
@UntitledFemProj
(Untitled Feminist Project) is a diverse group of survivors and allies who have come together through a mutual commitment to combat rape culture at all its intersections. We hope for this event to be a step towards creating a new community working together to combat this crisis.]
Click on the image to go to the facebook page for this event!

untitledfeministproject:

This speak out will be happening TOMORROW!

5:00

YWCA, 30 3rd Ave, Brooklyn

Hope to see you there!

untitledfeministproject:

[Image Description: A flyer for an event for survivors being held on April 7th, put together by the (Untitled Feminist Project).  The flyer has a picture of a microphone and text. The text of the flyer reads:

Police and hospital staff sometimes don’t adequately provide for victims of sexual assault.

Intimate partner violence happens in all types of relationships.

Sometimes, we are violated by those we trust the most.

Have you experienced any of these situations?

Have you experienced anything similar?

Has anyone you love?

We are often encouraged

to not speak about those things

that have traumatized us the most.

(Untitled Feminist Project) invites you to

please come share with us in a Speak Out:

Sunday, April 7th, 2013

5pm (doors open at 4.30pm)

YWCA, 30 3rd Ave, Brooklyn, New York

Accessible venue with gender neutral restrooms

FREE ADMISSION

Resources & support services will available for those in attendance.

If you are interested in receiving more information about this event or partnering with us, you can reach us at:

wespeakup.speakout@gmail.com

facebook.com/UntitledFeministProject

untitledfeministproject.tumblr.com

@UntitledFemProj

(Untitled Feminist Project) is a diverse group of survivors and allies who have come together through a mutual commitment to combat rape culture at all its intersections. We hope for this event to be a step towards creating a new community working together to combat this crisis.]

Click on the image to go to the facebook page for this event!

untitledfeministproject:

[Image Description: A flyer for an event for survivors being held on April 7th, put together by the (Untitled Feminist Project).  The flyer has a picture of a microphone and text. The text of the flyer reads:
Police and hospital staff sometimes don’t adequately provide for victims of sexual assault.
Intimate partner violence happens in all types of relationships.
Sometimes, we are violated by those we trust the most.
Have you experienced any of these situations?
Have you experienced anything similar?
Has anyone you love?
We are often encouraged
to not speak about those things
that have traumatized us the most.
(Untitled Feminist Project) invites you to
please come share with us in a Speak Out:
Sunday, April 7th, 2013
5pm (doors open at 4.30pm)
YWCA, 30 3rd Ave, Brooklyn, New York
Accessible venue with gender neutral restrooms
FREE ADMISSION
Resources & support services will available for those in attendance.
If you are interested in receiving more information about this event or partnering with us, you can reach us at:
wespeakup.speakout@gmail.com
facebook.com/UntitledFeministProject
untitledfeministproject.tumblr.com
@UntitledFemProj
(Untitled Feminist Project) is a diverse group of survivors and allies who have come together through a mutual commitment to combat rape culture at all its intersections. We hope for this event to be a step towards creating a new community working together to combat this crisis.]
Click on the image to go to the facebook page for this event!

untitledfeministproject:

[Image Description: A flyer for an event for survivors being held on April 7th, put together by the (Untitled Feminist Project).  The flyer has a picture of a microphone and text. The text of the flyer reads:

Police and hospital staff sometimes don’t adequately provide for victims of sexual assault.

Intimate partner violence happens in all types of relationships.

Sometimes, we are violated by those we trust the most.

Have you experienced any of these situations?

Have you experienced anything similar?

Has anyone you love?

We are often encouraged

to not speak about those things

that have traumatized us the most.

(Untitled Feminist Project) invites you to

please come share with us in a Speak Out:

Sunday, April 7th, 2013

5pm (doors open at 4.30pm)

YWCA, 30 3rd Ave, Brooklyn, New York

Accessible venue with gender neutral restrooms

FREE ADMISSION

Resources & support services will available for those in attendance.

If you are interested in receiving more information about this event or partnering with us, you can reach us at:

wespeakup.speakout@gmail.com

facebook.com/UntitledFeministProject

untitledfeministproject.tumblr.com

@UntitledFemProj

(Untitled Feminist Project) is a diverse group of survivors and allies who have come together through a mutual commitment to combat rape culture at all its intersections. We hope for this event to be a step towards creating a new community working together to combat this crisis.]

Click on the image to go to the facebook page for this event!

untitledfeministproject:

[Image Description: A flyer for an event for survivors being held on April 7th, put together by the (Untitled Feminist Project).  The flyer has a picture of a microphone and text. The text of the flyer reads:
Sometimes, we are violated by those we trust the most.
Intimate partner violence happens in all types of relationships.
Police and hospital staff sometimes don’t adequately provide for victims of assault.
Have you experienced any of these situations?
Has anyone you love?
We are often encouraged to not speak about those things that have traumatized us the most.
(Untitled Feminist Project) invites you to please come share with us in a Speak Out:
Sunday, April 7th, 2013
5pm (doors open at 4.30pm)
YWCA, 30 3rd Ave, Brooklyn, New York
Accessible venue with gender neutral restrooms
FREE ADMISSION
Resources & support services will available for those in attendance.
If you are interested in receiving more information about this event or partnering with us, you can reach us at:
wespeakup.speakout@gmail.com
facebook.com/UntitledFeministProject
untitledfeministproject.tumblr.com
@UntitledFemProj
(Untitled Feminist Project) is a diverse group of survivors and allies who have come together through a mutual commitment to combat rape culture at all its intersections. We hope for this event to be a step towards creating a new community working together to combat this crisis.]
Clicking on the image links through to the facebook event page.

untitledfeministproject:

[Image Description: A flyer for an event for survivors being held on April 7th, put together by the (Untitled Feminist Project).  The flyer has a picture of a microphone and text. The text of the flyer reads:

Sometimes, we are violated by those we trust the most.

Intimate partner violence happens in all types of relationships.

Police and hospital staff sometimes don’t adequately provide for victims of assault.

Have you experienced any of these situations?

Has anyone you love?

We are often encouraged to not speak about those things that have traumatized us the most.

(Untitled Feminist Project) invites you to please come share with us in a Speak Out:

Sunday, April 7th, 2013

5pm (doors open at 4.30pm)

YWCA, 30 3rd Ave, Brooklyn, New York

Accessible venue with gender neutral restrooms

FREE ADMISSION

Resources & support services will available for those in attendance.

If you are interested in receiving more information about this event or partnering with us, you can reach us at:

wespeakup.speakout@gmail.com

facebook.com/UntitledFeministProject

untitledfeministproject.tumblr.com

@UntitledFemProj

(Untitled Feminist Project) is a diverse group of survivors and allies who have come together through a mutual commitment to combat rape culture at all its intersections. We hope for this event to be a step towards creating a new community working together to combat this crisis.]

Clicking on the image links through to the facebook event page.

The organizers of SWNYC will be present at NY Coalition for Abortion Defense’s march and demonstration in commemoration of Roe vs. Wade. There will be a speak-out and then we’ll be marching to a crisis pregnancy center in the area. Reproductive health, especially in the South Bronx, is under attack and we hope to see you there! 

Tomorrow! Spread the word and make sure to click attending on the facebook event page! We need to fight back against the rampant assaults on our reproductive freedoms! We need to build and become part of a fighting movement! 

Tomorrow! Spread the word and make sure to click attending on the facebook event page! We need to fight back against the rampant assaults on our reproductive freedoms! We need to build and become part of a fighting movement! 

Spanish language flyer for the crisis pregnancy center teach-in next week. 

Spanish language flyer for the crisis pregnancy center teach-in next week. 

Here’s the flyer for the event: print it and spread it around! We want a big presence at our meeting and at the march! We want big ideas! We want reproductive justice!

Here’s the flyer for the event: print it and spread it around! We want a big presence at our meeting and at the march! We want big ideas! We want reproductive justice!

Hi, we are back after a long, introspective hiatus. We are ready to rebuild our coalition with a new name and a most definitely improved identity.

We are going to start that rebuilding with an event on reproductive health and justice and on the need to take down crisis pregnancy centers in our city and everywhere, all in preparation for our presence at Roe Vs. Wade Anniversary March, lead by NY Coalition for Abortion Defense! 

Spread the word and come to the event! 

On 10/13/2011 a number of our organizers met with members of Black Women’s Blueprint and partners, to have a conversation about the Open Letter as well as the racist sign carried by a participant at the rally on Oct 1st. Our meeting was honest, intense, challenging, occasionally painful and very needed. We are excited by the movement towards a possible anti-rape movement that centres narratives of race, sex, gender, class, sexuality, ability, nationality, and more. We are committed to continue to work as individuals and organizers on anti-oppression. In solidarity with The Blueprint and their partners, we agreed this is only a beginning, plan on several upcoming conversations, and will collectively provide a summary to the public on the outcome of this and future meetings.

To our community:

We are responding to the outcry in regards to an incredibly racist sign carried by one of the participants in our rally on October 1st.

The sign read “Woman is the N—— of the World.” It was in reference to a song penned by John Lennon and Yoko Ono. The sign was carried by a young white woman and it is clear that she was carrying it openly for some time before someone asked her to take it down. The woman who asked for the sign to be removed is a former co-organizer of SWNYC, and was at the march in solidarity. She is also a black woman.

We regret that the woman who was carrying this sign felt it was appropriate for our space. We regret that it took so long for someone to tell her how wrong it was; and that this woman was a Black woman, a woman of colour, as we know that anti-racism is not the sole work of people of colour. We sincerely apologize for the emotional trauma this sign has evoked in everyone who has been affected by it. We apologize for not making it clearer to everyone who attended on October 1st that racist, or indeed any oppressive language or behaviour, is unacceptable. We apologize that this space was not safer for Black women, Black people, and their allies.

SWNYC understands that the language of this sign erases Black women’s identities by creating a monochromatic identity for women and a monolithic identity for Black folks. We understand that no oppression is a metaphor for another. Our organizers represent a multiplicity of identities and voices, as did the participants and our speakers. The marginalized folks in our movement are also the leaders of our movement; we are grassroots, and we chose our speakers because they are leaders in grassroots movements.

This sign is in direct conflict with our mission statement. We believe that no matter who you are, no matter where you work, no matter how you identify, no matter how you flirt, no matter what you wear, no matter whom you choose to love, no matter what you said before: NO ONE has the right to touch you without your consent. No survivor or ally should be excluded from the table based on any other aspect of their identity.

We recognize that SlutWalks around the world have been critiqued from anti-racist standpoints since the first Walk. We agree with many of these critiques, and have attempted to engage with them in our organizing. We recognize that under the banner of SlutWalk, we put logistics over politics in many cases, and that this was a failing. But now as we are moving forward, we realize that we cannot cultivate an identity as a coalition without upholding all of the intersecting identities of our organizers and participants.

It is unfortunate that this young white woman’s voice has been amplified through media and all over the internet, and the voices of our intelligent, passionate speakers and MC’s, many of whom occupy marginalized identities, or are allies, continue to be ignored. In an effort to break this silence, listed at the end of this letter are the names of all our speakers, with links provided where available.

We find it saddening that three of our speakers who are trans women of colour, two of whom are Black women, are being erased from public dialogue around SWNYC. This speaks to a deeply rooted cissexism, which we are committed to interrogating. We thank all of our speakers for their passion, for challenging and empowering us.

We also stand by our MC’s, who were elected for their sincerity, intelligence, and personality. We find the personal attacks on any of our MC’s both highly unproductive and deeply hurtful.  If we are all fighting for social justice and a world without rape, we must foster a movement that is both critical and respectful.  We are committed to productive dialogue.

We realize that privilege within our movement must continue to be decentered. We are currently searching for strategies to resist replicating oppressive patterns within our organizing. We are willing to do this work for the rest of our lives, because we recognize that anti-oppression is life-long work. We recognize that we cannot do this on our own. We need to look to radical communities whose knowledge and experiences are as diverse as we wish to be.

Our weekly organizing meetings are open and democratic, and are currently held on Thursdays from 7-9pm at the Puck Building, 295 Lafayette St at Houston, at the BDFM Broadway-Lafayette stop. Among other things, we are looking for a new name for our coalition, a discussion of our organizational structure, defining our political character and opportunities for mobilization. Furthermore, we are having an open dialogue session on October 13th, from 6-9pm at Walker Stage (53 Walker Street, between Broadway and Church, at the Canal N and R stop). We invite anyone to attend, bringing your critiques and your ideas for how we can move forward as a more representative and supportive community and movement.

In Solidarity,

The Organizers of SWNYC

—————————————————-

Folks who spoke at our rally:

Stephanie Lane Sutton, Eboni Hogan, and Emily Kahan Trenchard (poets)

Kenyon Farrow (Queers for Economic Justice)

Amber Stewart (Radical Women)

Audacia Ray (Red Umbrella)

Sarah Patterson (Sex Worker’s Outreach Project)

Lourdes Hunter (Community Activist)

Mariah Lopez (STARR)

Chloe Angyal (Feministing)

Nancy Schwartzmann (The Line Campaign)

Ceyenne Doroshow (Trans Community Activist)

Jen Roesch (ISO)

Suzy Exposito, Kimberlynn Acevedo, Jaime Barak, Anoushka Ratnarajah (SWNYC MC’s)