babble-intro-img
babble is rabble.ca's discussion board but it's much more than that: it's an online community for folks who just won't shut up. It's a place to tell each other — and the world — what's up with our work and campaigns.

End violence against women: December 6

Unionist
Offline
Joined: Dec 11 2005

V


Comments

Unionist
Offline
Joined: Dec 11 2005

From the CAW website:

Quote:
On December 6, CAW members across the country will organize memorials, forums and events to commemorate the 14 women who were murdered at L'École Polytechnique in Montreal in 1989. The day, marked as the National Day of Remembrance and Action on Violence against Women, provides an opening for all citizens and activists to challenge the issue of gender-based violence in Canada.

In a letter to CAW local union presidents as well as women's and human rights committees, Julie White, CAW Director of Women's Programs, said that this horrific event changed how Canadians confronted the issue of male violence against women. It also propelled the political mobilization of women within unions and across communities to demand societal change.

"We are breaking the silence around violence against women and men have been helping in this regard," White said. "As we continue our anti-violence campaign with women's equality seeking groups and the broader labour movement, we are hopeful that we are making a difference, but the numbers tell us otherwise."

Statistics suggest that today more than 49 women are killed each year by their partners or ex-partners in Canada.

"Eradicating violence against women lies in a systemic plan that includes well-funded support and counseling services for women. It includes a justice system that champions their rights rather than turning them once again into victims. It includes access to affordable housing, living wages and a national child care program. It also means access to unemployment benefits and decent pensions, and it means a national campaign aimed at ending violence against women," said White, who also noted that an impending federal election provides another opportunity to put gender-based violence on the political agenda.


RevolutionPlease
Offline
Joined: Oct 15 2007

You could start by laying off the one party that fights half-assedly for them.  Better than the zero-effort otherwise.


RevolutionPlease
Offline
Joined: Oct 15 2007

Virtue is fleeting.


Unionist
Offline
Joined: Dec 11 2005

By the way, anyone who hasn't seen this incredible film should do so (I don't recall whether we discussed it on babble when it first came out last year):

POLYTECHNIQUE: Montreal Massacre Drama Sweeps Genie Awards

 


Unionist
Offline
Joined: Dec 11 2005

Ontario Secondary School Teachers' Federation mark December 6 - National Day of Remembrance

Quote:
This date is a time for OSSTF/FEESO and its members to remember this tragedy and take part in events to commemorate the lives of those women, and the millions of other women at home and around the world whose lives remain vulnerable to daily acts of discrimination and gender-based violence. It is also an opportunity, individually and collectively, to renew our efforts to end violence against women and girls in our schools, workplaces, homes, and communities.

This year, OSSTF/FEESO is again distributing a bilingual poster to each of our members as an insert in the November issue of Update. The poster uses the same vivid design as last year, linking our remembrance of the tragic events of December 6th with a commitment to action today. On the reverse side, information focuses on new protections that Bills 157 and 168 provide for women and girls as both students and workers in education.

 


Unionist
Offline
Joined: Dec 11 2005
Sineed
Offline
Joined: Dec 4 2005

Unionist wrote:

By the way, anyone who hasn't seen this incredible film should do so (I don't recall whether we discussed it on babble when it first came out last year):

POLYTECHNIQUE: Montreal Massacre Drama Sweeps Genie Awards

 

I haven't wanted to see this.  For babblers who have, is this appropriate for teenage girls to see?  Or too nasty?


Unionist
Offline
Joined: Dec 11 2005

My opinion: It's not appropriate. Not because it's too "nasty" - it's too empty. There's no explanation or analysis or situating it in a larger societal context.

Now I read that first para and have no idea if it's true. The event itself (which happened way too close to our home) still echoes too maddeningly. I'm not qualified to judge the film.

So why did I recommend it?

If there are women here who have seen it, I'd like to hear their comments and prefer that they answer your question.

Today is the day.


Wilf Day
Offline
Joined: Oct 31 2002

Unionist wrote:

By the way, anyone who hasn't seen this incredible film should do so (I don't recall whether we discussed it on babble when it first came out last year):

POLYTECHNIQUE: Montreal Massacre Drama Sweeps Genie Awards

Quote:
Although Polytechnique grossed "a respectable" $1.8 million in Quebec, it earned a mere $100,000 elsewhere in Canada.

Typical. Do we have a bigger problem with anti-Quebec sentiments than with anti-feminist sentiments?

A memorial is planned this year in the Carpenter's Hall, 459 Croft St., Port Hope, Monday at 6 p.m.


Catchfire
Offline
Joined: Apr 16 2003
Polytechnique, le tabou
Quote:
Polytechnique marque une cassure dans l'histoire contemporaine du Québec, une faille dans notre armure, qui non seulement n'a jamais été reconnue, mais qu'on aimerait plus souvent qu'autrement oublier. [...]

La question du tabou entourant Polytechnique me hante depuis 20 ans. Il y a bien sûr la question du traumatisme collectif, des puissants dégâts causés par la tragédie, des victimes qu'on connaît comme de toutes celles qu'on ne connaît pas. Il y a aussi ce que j'appelle la «guerre des sexes», le fait que la simple mention du 6 décembre, encore aujourd'hui, divise les chaumières comme jamais, souvent les femmes d'un bord et les hommes de l'autre, pour ce qui est de la signification des événements. Encore aujourd'hui, il y a ceux qui croient qu'il ne faut pas chercher midi à quatorze heures, que l'homme était «fou-un-point-c'est-tout», que cela n'influe aucunement sur le «qui sommes-nous». Et puis, il y a ceux, plus souvent celles, qui croient qu'il s'agit d'un geste éminemment politique, [...] pour ne rien dire de Lépine lui-même qui n'a pas hésité à qualifier son geste de vengeance politique. Mais le tabou entourant Polytechnique va plus loin encore et, après 20 ans, je pense enfin comprendre pourquoi. Ce n'est pas simplement une question de traumatisme ou de chicanes de clocher. Il est difficile, voire parfois impossible, de parler de la tuerie du 6 décembre parce qu'il s'agit du premier événement depuis la Révolution tranquille, c'est-à-dire depuis la naissance du Québec moderne, qui vient brouiller les cartes de notre histoire.

Il y a eu, bien sûr, la Crise d'octobre, souvent qualifiée du moment où, tels Adam et Ève, nous avons perdu «notre innocence». Les événements de 1970 ont été extrêmement bouleversants, c'est clair, mais ne constituent pas à mon avis une cassure par rapport à l'histoire du Québec. Aussi dramatique qu'elle fût, cette crise s'inscrit parfaitement dans la mythologie québécoise: elle est un autre exemple de résistance face à l'envahisseur — qu'il se nomme «le fédéral» ou «les maudits Anglais». [...] La Crise d'octobre est en droite ligne avec la bataille des plaines d'Abraham et était en quelque sorte prévisible. La tuerie du 6 décembre ne l'était aucunement, et c'est pourquoi la vraie perte d'innocence, l'indéniable cassure dans l'histoire du Québec, survient avec elle, et non avec la Crise d'octobre.

Unionist
Offline
Joined: Dec 11 2005
Maysie
Offline
Joined: Apr 21 2005

16 Days of Activism Against Gender Violence

Quote:

THRIVE: Women's Voices Rising

SAT, DEC 11
9:30 am to 3:00 pm
Metro Hall
55 John Street
(King & John, 2 blocks east of Spadina)
Speakers, workshops, discussion
RSVP with registration form: thrive.forum@gmail.com OR click here.  

FOOD provided. ACCESSIBLE space. ASL and CHILDMINDING available (let us know by Nov 22nd). FREE.

Consider violence on a continuum or a spectrum - this means that in addition to the physical, financial and emotional violence that women* face and resist, but also the violence of racism, colonization, degraded environments and institutions. Join the THRIVE coalition for THRIVE: Women's Voices Rising!, a forum on violence, organizing to mark the 16 Days of Activism Against Gendered Violence.

On Saturday, December 11th, join community members and frontline workers for discussion circles, speakers, workshops and the opportunity to create spaces for dialogue, for conversation about gendered violence including the ways women resist.

Forum Outline:
9:30 am to 10:00 am - registration
10:00 am to 11:00 am - Opening + Panel
11:00 am to 12:00 pm - Discussion Circles
12:00 pm to 1:00 pm - lunch
1:00 pm to 2:00 pm - Workshops
2:00 pm to 3:00 pm - Closing

Participants can expect to speak about racism and decolonization, mental health, substance use, sex work, and much more. We will close the day with movement and/or sounds based activities to ground ourselves in this difficult work. Hear about issues and campaigns. Connect with other community members and activists.

For more information and to RSVP, register with the attached form at thrive.forum@gmail.com

*we have a trans inclusive understanding of women

Also: THRIVE presents the exhibit "Fabricating Violence: Fabric of Change" from November 25 to December 10 at the Raging Spoon (761 Queen Street West).

About THRIVE:
THRIVE, the Multicultural Women's Coalition Against Violence and Oppression, is a coalition of diverse women advancing a movement to end violence and oppression against racialized women and their communities by developing analyses and strategies to combat violence against racialized women and providing training, community-based research and political advocacy with and for racialized women.

About the 16 Days of Activism:
The 16 Days of Activism Against Gender Violence is an international campaign originating from the first Women's Global Leadership Institute sponsored by the Center for Women's Global Leadership in 1991. 


Iwant Liberty
Offline
Joined: Oct 7 2010

The only "gender based violence in Canada" that occurs these days normally relates to honor killings.  I presume that this is targeted towards the mal-adjusted new citizens?


Maysie
Offline
Joined: Apr 21 2005

Iwant, based on your recent posts, you get a week off.


Unionist
Offline
Joined: Dec 11 2005

Tory MPs not invited to Montreal massacre memorial

Quote:

Canadian politicians gathered on Parliament Hill to commemorate the 22nd anniversary of the gun slayings of 14 women at Montreal's Ecole Polytechnique, but Conservative MPs were not among them.

About 400 people attended the memorial Tuesday morning, including NDP interim leader Nycole Turmel and Liberal interim leader Bob Rae.

But organizers said they did not invite Conservative MPs because of the government's plan to scrap to the long-gun registry.

Suzanne Laplante Edward, whose daughter was among the women murdered at école Polytechnique, said the move to end the registry was a personal affront to her.

 


Catchfire
Offline
Joined: Apr 16 2003

Caissa's comment from a previous thread:

Caissa wrote:
Geneviève Bergeron, Hélène Colgan, Nathalie Croteau, Barbara Daigneault, Anne-Marie Edward, Maud Haviernick, Maryse Laganière, Maryse Leclair, Anne-Marie Lemay, Sonia Pelletier, Michèle Richard, Annie St-Arneault, Annie Turcotte and Barbara Klucznik-Widajewicz. Never Forget

Moi, je me souviens.


MegB
Offline
Joined: Nov 28 2001

Je me souviens aussi.


Catchfire
Offline
Joined: Apr 16 2003

Quote:
The facts:

Violence against women and girls continues to be a serious issue in Canada:

  • In 2008, 146 female were murdered in Canada. Forty-five of these women were victims of spousal homicide. On average, 178 females were killed every year between 1994 and 2008;
  • It is estimated that 60% of Canadian women and girls have suffered from physical or psychological violence at some time in their life;
  • Between April 1, 2007 and March 31, 2008, approximately 101,000 women and children were admitted to 569 shelters in Canada;
  • According to the 2004 General Social Survey, Aboriginal women 15 years and older are three and a half times more likely to experience violence than non-Aboriginal women. The Native Women’s Association of Canada has documented evidence that 582 Aboriginal women and girls have gone missing or have been murdered in Canada in the past few decades; and
  • Annual costs of intimate partner violence is calculated at US$1.16 billion in Canada according to UNIFEM in its report The Facts: Violence Against Women & Millennium Development Goals.
Dec. 6 - Canada's National Day of Remembrance & Action on Violence Against Women

Maysie
Offline
Joined: Apr 21 2005

Women Won't Forget

Quote:

Join Us in a Day of Remembrance for Women Murdered by Men

22nd Anniversary of the Montreal Massacre

National Day of Action and Remembrance on Violence Against Women

TUESDAY DECEMBER 6 2011

6:00 PM

Philosopher's Walk
South side of Bloor, West of Avenue Road
Toronto, Ontario, Canada

Candlelight Vigil

All welcome.
Bring a rose and candle.
Ceremony goes on regardless of weather.

 


Mr.Tea
Offline
Joined: Jul 9 2011

A heads-up regarding the event posted above at philosopher's walk at UofT: the Jewish Defence League is attempting to hijack it and turn it into a rally against honour killings.


Wilf Day
Offline
Joined: Oct 31 2002

lagatta
Offline
Joined: Apr 17 2002

La Fédération des femmes du Québec is holding a gathering and commemoration of the Polytechnique Massacre on the 6th of December, this Saturday:

http://www.ffq.qc.ca/2014/11/6-decembre-rassemblement-et-commemoration-25/

The group Odaya will greet attendees with drums and song. https://www.facebook.com/pages/Odaya/22131337257

People attending will march up Mont-Royal from la Place du 6 décembre, near métro Côte-des-Neiges (and Université de Montréal). People unable to do the march can take the 11 bus to the summit.

Marie-Claude Lortie blogs about covering the terrifying event as a young reporter: http://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/montreal/polytechnique-shooting-shattered-...


mersh
Offline
Joined: Aug 25 2005

I was in Montreal 25 years ago when this happened. To think that we still have to fight the active dismissal of the attack as random, "crazy" and undecipherable is an outrage:

 

After question period, MacKay said the massacre would never be understood “because of the insanity and the level of violence.”


lagatta
Offline
Joined: Apr 17 2002

Sylvie Haviernick, whose sister Maud was one of the Polytechnique killings victims, speaks to Mike Finnerty of CBC Montréal about the tragedy, the years after, and the commemoration to take place later today at the National Assembly:

http://www.cbc.ca/player/Radio/Local+Shows/Quebec/Daybreak+Montreal/ID/2...

Mersh, I was two buildings away, writing a graduate history exam at Université de Montréal. The utter concentration of students during exam week is part of the explanation of how the killer could get in there, armed. After I returned home from my exam, people were phoning me from many countries to "make sure I was alive". Of course I knew nothing about the events, as the Social Sciences building is on the other side of the main building from Polytechnique, and I usually took a different métro station home. It took a while for the enormity of the massacre to sink in.

But McKay is an arsehole; time and again he has proven that.

Québec solidaire pays homage to the victims, at their Congrès national in Trois-Rivières:

http://ici.radio-canada.ca/regions/mauricie/2014/11/30/001-quebec-solida...


mersh
Offline
Joined: Aug 25 2005

It was my first year as an undergrad and I was studying with a friend when one of her roommates came in and told us. I really didn't get it at first, and then a friend of mine died, and then, well, it started to sink in.

 

And here's a challenge from Michael Laxer right here on Rabble:

 

Men need to stand up for feminism


Struggling
Offline
Joined: Dec 1 2014

Why do we deal so exclusively with the more extreme cases of violence against women while ignoring its subtler manifestations. I am a recovering sex addict myself, and though I have never struck a woman nor attacked one verbally, I would still say that I had engaged in a form of violence against women. Within a year after my divorce, past trauma, depression and a few other psychological factors and other circumstances combined with bad judgement let me to seek prostitutes. Over the years it developed into an addiction. Though it might not be thought of as violence in the usual sense, it is still an exploitation of women and coercion even if it is mutually consentual. Mutual consent does not mean there can be no coercion. Even if only carrots and no sticks are presented, it is still coercion and a form of violence. Additionally it puts women at risk of STD's. One problem though is that sex addicts might not always be aware of the resources available to them and sometimes fantasies themselves become ever more extreme or even violent over time as the old ones become boring. They might not necessarily be acted on, but thought is the first step to action. Even if they have read of sex or other therapy they might have false conceptions about it thinking it's just talking with no understanding of its potential benefit to actions

I have created a thread on the regulation of the advertizing of sexual services. Though it is more of a brainstorm at present, I would be curious as to your ideas on this as a practical step to curb these subtler forms of violence too before they increase in intensity.

 

Struggling


Struggling
Offline
Joined: Dec 1 2014

Another point I can make is avoiding politically charged terminology in the therapeutic field. I remember as I started seeking therapists online as my thoughts started becoming more violent, I had come across one describing herself as applying 'feminist' principles to her therapy. I believe in the equality of men and women, and we should not assume that a sex addict's actions are congruent with his beliefs. I knew I was doing wrong from the beginning and it disgusted me. However, sense 'feminism' can have so many meanings to different people, that ad scared me away from her. I knew I was doing wrong and so did not need to be judged but helped.

Of course all if what I am saying here deals with subtler forms of violence. But how many murderous rages trace their roots back to subtler manifestations?


Struggling
Offline
Joined: Dec 1 2014

Another point I can make is avoiding politically charged terminology in the therapeutic field. I remember as I started seeking therapists online as my thoughts started becoming more violent, I had come across one describing herself as applying 'feminist' principles to her therapy. I believe in the equality of men and women, and we should not assume that a sex addict's actions are congruent with his beliefs. I knew I was doing wrong from the beginning and it disgusted me. However, sense 'feminism' can have so many meanings to different people, that ad scared me away from her. I knew I was doing wrong and so did not need to be judged but helped.

Of course all if what I am saying here deals with subtler forms of violence. But how many murderous rages trace their roots back to subtler manifestations?


Maysie
Offline
Joined: Apr 21 2005

Get the fuck out of this thread.


Maysie
Offline
Joined: Apr 21 2005

Women Won't Forget: Vigil in Toronto

Quote:

Join Us in a Day of Remembrance for Women Murdered by Men

25th Anniversary of the Montreal Massacre

National Day of Action and Remembrance on Violence Against Women

SATURDAY DECEMBER 6 2014

6:00 PM

Philosopher's Walk
South side of Bloor, West of Avenue Road
Toronto, Ontario, Canada

Candlelight Vigil

All welcome.
Bring a rose and candle.
Ceremony goes on regardless of weather.

Vigil consists of a Native healing ceremony, speakers, and musical and spoken word performances, including 

  • The daughter of a murdered indigenous woman
  • Katarina MacLeod
  • Renée Ashanta Henry & Charmie Deller (musicians)
  • Gabriel V Nicolau (spoken word)

 

 

December 6th FundDonate if you can

Quote:

What does this program offer?

Loans of up to $750 can be used to:

  • pay rent
  • pay hydro
  • pay bills in arrears
  • buy furniture
  • cover moving expenses
  • cover other approved items

 

Who is this program for? 

Women who:

  • are fleeing an abusive situation within the last nine months
  • have a bank account
  • have a source of income (social assistance is accepted)
  • have a support letter from a referral agency
  • live in Toronto or the Region of Peel
  • over 18 years of age 


Comment viewing options

Select your preferred way to display the comments and click "Save settings" to activate your changes.
Login or register to post comments