Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Gabrielle Union on #MeToo: ‘The floodgates have opened for white women’

- By Bethonie Butler

The Washington Post

The #MeToo movement has gained prominence amid a national reckoning about sexual harassment and assault in (and beyond) Hollywood. But Gabrielle Union says not everyone’s voice is being heard.

“I think the floodgates have opened for white women,” the actress told The New York Times in an interview published this week. “I don’t think it’s a coincidenc­e whose pain has been taken seriously. Whose pain we have showed historical­ly and continued to show. Whose pain is tolerable and whose pain is intolerabl­e. And whose pain needs to be addressed now.”

Ms. Union has been speaking out about sexual assault for years. At 19, she was raped at gunpoint while working in a shoe store. She talks openly about the assault in her book “We’re Going to Need More Wine,” which was released in October. Ms. Union recently told The Washington Post that she first discussed her experience with colleagues on the set of a show that had a storyline related to sexual assault, and more publicly in a 2001 cover story interview with Savoy magazine.

“During the whole interview, I knew I was sitting on informatio­n that could help a lot of people. I wasn’t sure that I was prepared emotionall­y, mentally, spirituall­y, financiall­y even to share that,” she said. “I didn’t know what the consequenc­es could be. But when I saw the route the questions were taking, I thought: I could either answer these silly, benign questions, or I could share with people a very big piece of my soul and perhaps help other people.”

Ms. Union’s comments tap into a common critique of the #MeToo movement, which gained steam on social media this year in the wake of allegation­s against movie mogul Harvey Weinstein. In October, actress Alyssa Milano called for women to share their own experience­s with sexual assault on Twitter, where she wrote that “if all who have been sexually harassed or assaulted wrote ‘Me too’ as a status, we might give people a sense of the magnitude of the problem.”

After the hashtag began trending, some social media users pointed out that a campaign based around phrase “Me Too” was started more than a decade ago — by Tarana Burke, a black woman who had experience­d sexual assault and wanted to help other survivors, particular­ly black women and girls. Ms. Burke was among the “silence breakers” recognized as Time’s 2017 Person of the Year, but the magazine’s decision to feature Ms. Burke on an inside page (instead of the cover) has caused some controvers­y.

And it’s not just about giving Ms. Burke due credit. As Ms. Union alluded in her New York Times interview, the vast majority of Mr. Weinstein’s accusers have been prominent white actresses.

“If those people hadn’t been Hollywood royalty,” Ms. Union said. “If they hadn’t been approachab­le. If they hadn’t been people who have had access to parts and roles and true inclusion in Hollywood, would we have believed?”

Ms. Burke raised similar questions last month in an op-ed for The Washington Post.

“Black women have been screaming about famous predators like R&B singer R. Kelly, who allegedly preys on black girls, for well over a decade to no avail,” Ms. Burke wrote. “Anita Hill, thanklessl­y, put herself and her career as a law professor on the line more than 25 years ago to publicly name Clarence Thomas for sexually harassing her at work.”

Ms. Burke tweeted last week that Ms. Union was “part of the fabric” of her campaign. “When I started out doing workshops with Black girl survivors she was one of the few examples of resilience I could point to,” Ms. Burke wrote.

Ms. Union retweeted Ms. Burke, thanking her for her “tireless work.” “I’m here to help, support and amplify the message!” she wrote.

 ?? Gioncarlo Valentine/The New York Times ?? Actress Gabrielle Union, who has been on the road of late to promote her memoir, "We're Going to Need More Wine," at the Gramercy Park Hotel in New York in November.
Gioncarlo Valentine/The New York Times Actress Gabrielle Union, who has been on the road of late to promote her memoir, "We're Going to Need More Wine," at the Gramercy Park Hotel in New York in November.

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