Gulf Today

Left out of #Metoo, survivors of colour float new drive

- Jocelyn Noveck,

It’s been more than three years since the #Metoo movement launched a cultureshi­ting conversati­on about sexual violence. But Tarana Burke, the activist who gave the movement its name, says concrete change has been incrementa­l at best — and especially for Black survivors. Now, Burke is part of a new initiative called “We, As Ourselves” in which three prominent groups are focusing on those survivors, who she says oten feel that #Metoo has passed them by.

In an interview, Burke said that when #Metoo exploded into view in 2017, a result of the Harvey Weinstein scandal, “Black women just kept saying, ‘Where are WE? Where ARE we? Where do we show up?’”

“The world was changing but we weren’t being swept up in those changes,” she said. “It’s almost like trickle-down theory: ‘Let’s just hope some of this goodness will trickle down to Black folks and they will benefit from it.’ Well, that’s not going to happen unless we are intentiona­l” about addressing the issue. The initiative, announced Wednesday, is a collaborat­ion between ‘me too.’ Internatio­nal, the group founded by Burke; the National Women’s Law Center; and the TIME’S UP Foundation. Burke said the most important immediate impact will simply be that a national conversati­on is being had.

“The biggest part is there IS an initiative,” Burke said. “There’s been work done on local levels, by grass-roots community organizati­ons. But we’ve never had a national campaign specific to Black survivors of sexual violence.”

She added that few people realize just how litle the issue is spoken about in the Black community. “So raising the flag and having decided to talk about it alone is a big deal.”

Among the initiative’s concrete plans: narrative research; conversati­on guides; a five-part event series; and “rapid-response tools” to support Black survivors who come forward. A week of action is planned for Sexual Assault Awareness Month in April. The coalition also released a “Love Leter to Survivors,” a video tribute from activists and celebritie­s like Gabrielle Union-wade, Jurnee Smollet, Tamron Hall and Valerie Jarret, the former adviser to President Barack Obama.

“The labour of Black women lies at the core of our culture, our economy, and our democracy, yet our voices and our needs are continuall­y sidelined and ignored both by the media and our institutio­ns writ large,” said Fatima Goss Graves, president and CEO of the National Women’s Law Center, in a statement. “Safety begins by listening to Black survivors and trusting them to know the conditions that will allow them to rise to the fullest of their potential, above the harm and trauma that continuall­y tries to silence them.”

Added Monifa Bandele, chief operating officer for TIME’S UP Foundation: “For generation­s, Black women have been excluded from the conversati­on and, when they are included, the narratives created around Black survivors, women, and girls are dangerous, destructiv­e, and undermine their credibilit­y and experience­s at every turn ... We will no longer allow this to happen under our watch.”

Burke noted that one of the main obstacles for Black survivors of sexual violence is the fact that conversati­on is dominated in the media by accusation­s against powerful and famous men — and litle else. “We had the R. Kelly documentar­y, the Russell Simmons documentar­y,” she said, “and we were, like, ‘OK that’s not really our stories. That’s A story, but it’s not representa­tive of most people’s lives and experience­s.”

She also said that during the conversati­ons about racial equality that dominated the national stage in recent months, there had been litle mention of sexual violence, and that when she tried to raise it she was told by some: “This is not the time.”

“We tend to segment things,” she said, but “these things are inextricab­ly linked to me.”

 ?? Valerie Jarrett ??
Valerie Jarrett
 ?? Tarana Burke ??
Tarana Burke

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