International
Day for the Elimination of
Violence Against Women
Violence against women remains prevalent,
pervasive, systemic, and even sanctioned. The key
challenge that remains is to move the issue from awareness
that it is a human rights violation and a crime, to
making it socially unacceptable and counter to community
norms.
United Nations In-Depth Study on All Forms
of Violence against Women: Report of the Secretary-General,
2006
Today is the International
Day for the Elimination of Violence Against Women.
Whenever people claim that feminism is no longer needed
I immediately think of the 51%
of Canadian women who will experience at least
one incident of physical or sexual violence in their
lifetime. That's half of us beaten, choked, sexually
assaulted or otherwise injured in our lifetimes. The
devastating figure should demand action. Violence
against women isn't something that only happens in
faraway places.
A 2004
Statistics Canada report on family violence showed
that 7% of women and 6% of men in a current or past
spousal relationship encountered spousal violence
between 1999 and 2004. Female victims were twice as
likely to be injured as male victims and were also
three times more likely to fear for their lives, and
twice as likely to be the targets of more than 10
violent episodes.
Earlier this year two men roamed one
of York University's residence buildings in Toronto,
randomly opening students' doors, searching out lone
women to rape. In September a female Carleton University
student was beaten unconscious, suffering a dislocated
shoulder, broken jaw and sexual assault. We don't
hear about the less dramatic cases but they happen
all the time (in
British Columbia, where the sexual assault rate is
twice the national average, a whopping 47% of women
have been sexually assaulted) and they won't stop
because women limit their actions, curtail their behaviours
and remain in high alert mode. They won't be stopped
by those things because women's behaviours and actions
aren't what's causing acts of violence against them
in the first place.
Women are targets simply because they
are female and violence committed against women
can't be stopped by women alone. We can raise our
voices, raise awareness, volunteer for and help fund
anti-violence campaigns but violence against women
is as much a men's issue as it is a women's issue.
Men who find violence against women intolerable need
to raise their voices along with us and work towards
creating a Canada (and planet) where half its citizens
aren't at lifelong risk. It's not enough for any of
us to silently disagree with the status quo. Not a
minute more.

Check out White Ribbon member Richard
McAdam's blog entry taken from the latest issue
of the White Ribbon campaign newsletter.
Join Amnesty
International's Stop Violence Against Women campaign,
Men
Stopping Violence, White
Ribbon Canada or White
Ribbon U.K.