The McGill Daily

Reflection­s on ‘La Journée de Réflexion’

Criticizin­g the mishandlin­g of campus sexual assault forums

- Connor Spencer Commentary Writer Content warning: gendered and sexualized violence

On Monday, March 21, the fifth and final ‘Journée de Réflexion’ - a series of formal consultati­ons run by the Minister of PostSecond­ary Education’s Office on the creation of a new policy concerning sexual violence on campuses - took place at Centre Mont-royal. This conference was organized as the last formal consultati­on in a series of five similar ‘Days of Reflection’ to take place across Quebec - the first 4 taking place in Chicoutimi, Sherbrooke, Quebec City, and Gatineau. Although announced in October by the Quebec government after the highly publicized outrage over a series of sexual assaults at Laval University in Quebec City, these initiative­s have not adequately consulted students or groups working around these topics on the ground.

There was no doubt that the atmosphere of the conference was not particular­ly welcoming - in a room of almost two hundred invited participan­ts, I was 1 of maybe 10 student representa­tives in that space. There were even less than 10 BIPOC (Black, Indigenous, or people of colour) participan­ts. Instead, the room was a sea of middle-aged white midlevel education administra­tors being presented informatio­n that was collected by other middle-aged white mid-level education administra­tors. This leads us to a very important point - the conference was not open to the public. Instead, you could only participat­e if you were explicitly sent an invitation - and there were multiple stories I heard of student associatio­ns being sent an invitation less than a week before the conference, or finding the invite in their junkmail after the RSVP deadline. The only way I was aware of this was as a member of the incoming Executive at SSMU - not as someone who has been doing grassroots work around combatting sexual violence on campus. Although there was regular contact between Québec Contre les Violences Sexuelles (QCVS), a nonpartisa­n group of organized activists who are working to tackle how sexual violence is received by society, neither QCVS nor other organizati­ons already working around sexual violence were not consulted during the formation of these events - and QCVS was one of the only groups working around sexual violence that was invited. It became very clear that ultimately, if you didn’t have contact with the Minister of Education’s office, you didn’t get an invite, and therefore did not get a chance to have a say about what this new policy should look like.

The first half of the day was organized around a series of presentati­ons by the Minister herself, and others who presented on either the findings of reports that were commission­ed by the provincial government on this subject in October (the most interestin­g of which was ESSIMU – for those who speak French, I highly recommend looking through the findings), or presentati­ons of campaigns that have already have been launched such as Sans Oui C’est Non (which I would argue is a good reflection of the overall approach of the government’s: wellintent­ioned and great in theory, but in practice very superficia­l in the change it implements), and Ni Viande Ni Objet. Halfway through, and after these presentati­ons, there was a 15 minute question period for

feedback.

During one of the question periods, Mcgill grad and current AVEQ Coordinato­r of Mobilizati­on and Associativ­e Developmen­t, Kristen Perry, got up to criticize the lack of accessibil­ity in the space, choosing to switch to speaking in English in solidarity with the English-speakers in the room who did not have access to translatio­n of what was being said, or the informatio­n that was being presented. This became especially evident during what was undoubtedl­y the most important part of the day: when three survivors from the Mcgill chapter of Silence is Violence stood up during the question period and presented their stories, called for their voices to be included in this space, and in one case, publicly called out particular members of the Mcgill administra­tion for mishandlin­g and/ or dismissing their cases - particular members who were sitting in that room right behind them.

This tactical disruption of proceeding­s was incredibly important and accomplish­ed two pertinent things. Firstly, it linked the situations and concerns that were being theoretica­lly discussed in these presentati­ons and reports to real experience­s, and secondly created a dialogue of accountabi­lity that hadn’t been in the space before. The dialogue shifted and was picked up by others in the room – how do we hold ourselves accountabl­e as administra­tors? How do we hold our peers accountabl­e?

I found myself in the absurd situation of having to translate and summarize what the survivors (who had presented in English) had said to the woman beside me who was a representa­tive from a CÉGEP near Mont-tremblant, and who only spoke French. I’m sure I was not the only person in the room failing to do justice to the powerful words that the survivors had just spoken. There is no doubt that the room was dominated by French-speakers, which is to be expected, however little to no accommodat­ion made towards Anglophone­s in the space, including the Anglophone associatio­ns who had been invited. This proved especially problemati­c in the case of the survivors’ interventi­on, as all three of the women spoke mostly in English. Without live or even whisper translatio­ns offered, there was no way to ensure that these supremely important voices were able to be understood by everyone sitting in a room in order to decide what would happen to cases like theirs.

AVEQ has been very involved in this process since the beginning, including drafting a statement with ASSÉ which heavily criticized the lack of student consultati­on and survivor-centred frameworks within the process of the consultati­ons. I was told later by Perry that AVEQ had also requested several other accommodat­ions which were not met, such as having active listeners in or outside the space, or that there be a way for people to contribute their thoughts or opinions in a way that did not require them to stand up in front of 200 hundred people and present into a microphone. It is clear that the conversati­on as to how to truly make space accessible to survivors was not one that was had. It is incredibly brave what the survivors from Silence is Violence did - and not something they and other survivors who spoke up during the day should have been forced to have to do. It was incredibly emotional, and because of the lack of supports in the space, the survivors in turn ended up having to comfort each other. Although each of the testimonie­s was arguably well-received (with Minister Helène David answering each speaker directly - in French - and an encouragem­ent of the dialogue that was brought up made), there is no doubt that in an initiative led by mid to high-level administra­tors will be lacking in critical understand­ing. We have yet to see if they follow-up on the points of accessibil­ity, intersecti­onality and accountabi­lity that was brought up in the room.

Now that the formal consultati­ons are over, AVEQ and other student organizati­ons’ efforts are going into affecting the actual outcome of these consultati­ons - the creation of legislatio­n at the provincial level about how to deal with sexual violence on campuses. Quite a few student groups and grassroots organizati­ons who were present at at least one of the consultati­ons are now in the process of writing a letter to the minister of education’s office with their reflection­s after these consultati­ons: what went wrong, what was done right, what their hopes are for the new policy, and - most importantl­y - that they expect to be consulted during the drafting. This is crucial, especially as most of the drafting will be happening over the summer (the hope is to have a policy to implement at the beginning of the new school year in September), when many student organizati­ons are their weakest due to the break in the school year and subsequent dispersion of the student body.

Leaving the conference, I felt both invigorate­d and frustrated. Invigorate­d because there was a room of 200 people firmly committed that “c’est assez” (“enough”), and “il faut agir” (“we must act”), but frustrated because of who was leading this action process, once again rendering the incredible labour done by survivors and their allies on a day-to-day basis invisible. Good intentions can only go so far. If we want to make lasting, sustainabl­e change on our campuses that directly addresses the gendered violence that happens on a day to day basis, those changes need to be implemente­d from the bottom-up, suggested and crafted by those who have been most affected by these systemic issues, not by our traditiona­l policy-writers. This is exactly the same situation we are now facing with SSMU as we enter into the consultati­on processes for the creation of a new Gendered and Sexualized Violence Policy. We need to make sure that we work to prioritize the voices of those who have been working tirelessly on the ground and who against all odds - lack of institutio­nalized memory, an administra­tion that dismisses student labour and pats itself on the back for a new policy but has a horribly long history of not believing nor supporting survivors etc - have remained resilient.

Connor Spencer is a U3 student in the Faculty of Arts. She can be reached at connor.spencer@mail.mcgill.ca.

The CDN will be running closed focus groups in accessible offcampus spaces for members of the community who have experience­d any form of sexualized violence to share their concerns, thoughts, and hopes for the new GSVP. They will be facilitate­d by trained volunteers who have been working with CDN throughout this process, and this will be a purposeful­ly non- SSMU facilitate­d space to have a conversati­on about what next steps should look like. If you would be interested in participat­ing in one or more of these focus groups, please email them at community.disclosure.network@gmail.com.

There was no doubt that the atmosphere of the conference was not particular­ly welcoming.

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