Elimination of Violence Against Women Day – 25 November 2021
The International Day for Elimination of Violence Against Women should be one of the most important days of the year for the whole world. Why
is this so important? Isn’t the fact that nearly half of the world’s population
is either female or born female, enough? This is more than enough, but it isn’t.
Women and girls face violence every day in
some form or the other. From physical and sexual abuse (which are pandemics on
their own), to more invisible forms of violence such as emotional abuse, gaslighting
and more, we experience these every day, across the year. There comes a point
in each of our lives when we think and say - it is enough and take measures to
put a stop to it. This happens when we are empowered to do so. What about those
who don’t have the same empowerment or privilege? Can we just say ‘it is what
it is’ and turn a blind eye to it – let the victims deal with it the way they have
been, so far? No – we cannot and should not.
I have experienced violence in the form of abuse in nearly every form that it exists. I am honestly afraid to find out if it exists in more forms that the ones I have endured. I can affirm that violence exists not only at home or in public spaces but also in places of work/education, worship, health and childcare.
Most of us are aware of what violence at
home looks like. Let me give you an insight into what it may look like at work,
and these are a couple that I have experienced.
In the past, male colleagues have held on to my
shoulders while looking at my computer screen from behind me, saying they were
trying to “help me”. The weight of those arms is too heavy to bear physically
and mentally, a shrug with a big effort is the only way I could communicate
that this was crossing physical boundaries. Most times the hands would continue
to rest on my shoulders. Another physically violent incident that shocked me at
one organisation, is when a male colleague asserted that he didn’t want my help
by aggressively taking hold of my hands and pushing them away from my keyboard
(because I was making changes on his file). I had bruised wrists for days and
even that was not evidence enough for the management of the company to act against
this colleague. No one stood up for me. It was incredibly demoralising.
Those are just a couple of examples of physical violence
I endured in workplaces. Here are some for invisible violence.
Example 1: A boss of mine asked me to smile and
get friendly with all his fellow managers to get a promotion I deserved. I
count this as violence as it was manipulative.
Example 2: A bunch of male colleagues I
worked with a few years ago hissed (made actual hissing sounds) at the sound my
heels would make on the office floor.
Example 3: Male
colleagues have stared at my chest, my bottom and various parts of my body,
shamelessly and smirked at me when I caught them doing it (a very perverse smirk,
that makes one shrink).
I could go on listing more such non-physical
ways that violence is directed towards women very casually. Most of the world
will tell you this is normal behaviour and something must be wrong with women
to feel anything at all about such aggressive actions. Let me reassure you,
this is not normal. It is violent, aggressive and unacceptable - and it needs to stop.
So, we now have a call to eliminate violence against women but how many of us are going to take this seriously?
Women bring empathy, ethics and care into any situation - be it work, family or activism. This is why, we see more women from any major professional field, whether it is journalism, entertainment or sports; speak up more, stand up more and take action. The reason we need the Elimination of Violence Against Women Day is that the world needs more people, of all genders, to join this movement.
When we stand-up for a woman and her humanity, we stand up for her family, a community, a country, and the whole world. We all need to be equal contributors to make this world a better and safe place. Making the world a fair and beautiful place
for everyone is in your hands but are you brave enough to be a part of this
change? What decision are you going to make today? Are you going to stand up
for the women around you, and how are you going to do this? Tell me so I can
learn.
Comments
I have a daughter who is 4 years now, and we as parents consciously instill that she is no less, and equipping her mentally and physically. I strongly believe in working through the grass root levels and building from there. Foundation has to be strong to wither the storm.