San Francisco, USA, 1978. The slogan "Take Back the Night"
is first used as a theme for a national protest march down San
Francisco's pornography strip. The march took place at night.
Take Back the Night was a profound symbolic statement of our
commitment to stopping the tide of violence against women in
all arenas, and our demand that the perpetrators of such violence
-- from rapists to pornographers to batters -- be held responsible
for their actions and made to change.
Five
Thousand women had gathered in San Francisco from November 17
- 19, 1978 to attend a conference organised by Women Against
Violence in Pornography and Media entitled "Feminist Perspectives
on Pornography." The TBTN protest happened on one of the
evenings of the conference.
As night
fell, 3000 marchers gathered to hear Andrea Dworkin's "Exhortation
to March." Then we wound our way toward Broadway, which
was crowded with tourists and neon signs advertising live sex
shows, adult bookstores and pornographic theatres.
Chanting
slogans such as "No more profits off women's bodies",
we filled the street entirely, blocking off traffic and completely
occupying the Broadway strip for three blocks. For an hour,
and for the first time ever, Broadway belonged not to the barkers,
pimps or pornographers, but instead to the songs, voices, rage
and vision of thousands of women.
(Source:
TAKE BACK THE NIGHT, edited by Laura Lederer.)
*
* * *
A woman
from Vancouver Rape Relief was part of this historic event.
She brought back her memories for future use. Since that time
in San Francisco, women around the world have organised protests
naming them TAKE BACK THE NIGHT or RECLAIM THE NIGHT. Vancouver's
herstory of TBTN demonstrations is exciting and proud.
All
have been "women only" protests to show that all men
are responsible for the violence done to women, and to show
we will walk the streets unafraid, alone, without a male escort.
I use the term "women" to mean females from birth
to death. If men want to be supportive, they are asked to help
with childcare, to give a donation and/or encourage all the
women they know to participate.
Throughout
the years, organisers in Vancouver have refused to ask for a
mandatory city permit to demonstrate. In fact, we see it as
a contradiction in terms. Why would we ask male authorities
for a permit to demonstrate when it is their behaviour we are
protesting? Every TBTN is an illegal action. The marches include
safety women, wearing some visible piece of clothing. Although
all women are responsible for each others safety, these safety
women have particular responsibility
The
police have invited themselves to every TBTN march in Vancouver,
and almost every year have not been useful; have been, in fact,
disruptive, a bother or increased the fear level of women participating
(e.g. riding their motorbikes within inches of the demonstrators,
trying to isolate a few women from the crowd, making demeaning
comments). The safety women have been fabulous throughout the
years at protecting the crowd from traffic, hecklers and the
police, and encouraging all women to take responsibility for
the safety of us all.
*
* * *
Vancouver's
first TBTN was organised in 1978 by an adhoc group calling themselves
the "Fly-by-Night" Collective.
Women
gathered in witch-like costumes and proceeded to demonstrate
in the rain, through the streets of the West End.
They
carrying an anti-woman effigy, which they set afire on one of
the beaches along the Pacific Ocean. At one point en route,
the police attempted to divide women by isolating a few with
their cars. Women's response was to call all women to the police
car, surrounding it, and plaster it with stickers that demanded
an end to violence against women, all the while chanting "take
one, take all". A fine example of bravery and cleverness:
I do
not know why there was no TBTN in 1979. Maybe it was the lull
before the storm. Between 1980-85, thousands of Vancouver women
have taken part in yearly actions. These were all organised
by Vancouver Rape Relief, the first rape crisis centre in Canada.
In 1983 another rape crisis centre started up in the city. By
then Rape Relief had bought a house and had changed our name
to Vancouver Rape Relief and Women's Shelter.
In 1980,
the event took place in the Grandview-Woodlands neighbourhood.
"Out of the kitchens and into the streets" was the
rallying cry of the organisers. The publicity was distributed
in English, as well as Italian, Punjabi and Chinese in an attempt
to reach women more broadly in the city's multicultural community.
The
next year, 1981, was a momentous one. Rape Relief was, and is,
a member of the Canadian Association of Sexual Assault Centres
(CASAC), an umbrella organisation with members across English
Canada and Quebec. We asked ourselves why TBTN couldn't be organised
across the country on the same night each year, and brought
such a proposal to the next CASAC Convention, in the spring
of 1981. This convention unanimously agreed, and a united Canada-wide
TBTN was born, to be held on the 3rd Friday of September.
In September
of 1981, 6000 women took part across the country. This was also
a year of fear and grief for the people of B.C. Eleven children
had disappeared in the lower Mainland area and had later been
found brutally, raped and murdered. We held the demonstration
in the city of New Westminster, the home of several of the missing
children. We wanted to show support for KIDS (Kids in Distress),
a support group formed by parents in response to the disappearances.
We rallied in the rain to hear a brief speech by candlelight,
and walked through the dark, residential streets alongside the
griev ing mothers, in protest. The infamous Clifford Olson was
later charged, tried, and jailed as responsible for some of
these child murders.
By 1982,
pornography was becoming more visible and more widely distributed
than before in Vancouver: corner stores, supermarkets and drugstores
flaunted displays and Red Hot Video stores sprang up all over
B.C. -- the first video store to sell mostly pornography. One
store opened up only 3 blocks from our shelter. TBTN in 1982
was the first of what came to be many public actions against
Red Hot Video. The store in our neighbourhood was the first
stop where angry marchers gathered to hear a speech about the
effects of pornography on women's lives and the daily reality
of fear and violence we live with.
The
protest moved on to the steps of City Hall, where we heard a
speech for the first time ever from the newly-formed Alliance
for the Safety of Prostitutes (ASP). This group would have increasing
prominence over the next few years, as city and provincial and
federal governments directed the brunt of repressive "street
cleaning" measures at the women being sold on the streets
of Vancouver, and across the country.
The
last stop of 1982 was near the home of Ivan Henry, a rapist
exposed in the local papers that year as being responsible for
several attacks in his own neighbourhood. This demonstration
rang through the streets of Mount Pleasant with the now-familiar
chants of "Incest, rape, battered women -- we have had
enough" and "Women unite, take back the night"
and "What do we want? Freedom! When do we want it? Now:"
*
* * *
After
TBTN, many women's groups in Vancouver focussed a multitude
of protests at the Red Hot Video Chain. Several of the stores
were firebombed by a group calling itself the "Wimmin's
Fire Brigade" and this advanced the campaign greatly. Before
long most of the country knew of Red Hot video and the mounting
opposition to its existence -- which intensified as a result
of the bombings. Police and other authorities were alarmed,
not only at the bombings, but the growing activism, and increased
surveillance of any political activity was evident. Many more
cops showed up at any demonstrations, and a number of activists
from various groups had their homes broken into by police.
Although
we wanted to continue uniting with this growing movement against
Red Hot, Rape Relief was concerned that direct violence against
women continue to get attention, and not just the depiction
of it. We know violence against women takes place in our own
homes, or the homes of the men who attack us. Throughout 1983
there were several attacks highlighted at bus stops as well.
We wanted to mark some places where women had actually been
attacked that year.
So,
in 1993, our march again took to the streets of Mount Pleasant,
and again had three stops. The first was a bus stop where we
heard from a representative of India Mahilli Association how
much more vulnerable to street attack we are at night. She spoke
about race and poverty as factors which increase our vulnerability
as well.
On a
quiet, residential street a woman from Rape Relief spoke of
the violence she had experienced in her own home and demanded
an end to it for herself and all women. The final stop was at
Red Hbt Video, the focus of a year's worth of rage shared by
the women united on this night. A spokesperson from the Northshore
Women's Centre expressed this rage on behalf of her own group,
which had done a great deal of anti-porn work, and on behalf
of all of us. The demonstration kept a lot of discipline that
year -- some who wanted to raid the place chose not to act on
what we all didn't agree to. We danced off this energy at the
dance later that night.
*
* * *
Early
in 1984, the North Shore Women's Centre made public their research
on Jim Pattison, a local multi-millionaire and born-again Christian.
This man, who bad his name in the paper every second day, was
well-known for his rags-to-riches sucess in venture capitalism
and for his contributions to society -- or at least his church
and the well-being of the Social Credit party. The North Shore
Women's Centre reported that one of his businesses, Mainland
Magazine, was the major distributor of pornography in B.C. Pattison,
and once again Red Hot Video, became the target of TBTN in 1984.
Along
with our sisters across Canada, about 200 of us gathered, this
time downtown, and marched and chanted through Vancouver. As
we passed Red Hot there were no speeches, but we left our mark.
At the start of the march every woman had been given a supply
of bright yellow stickers which read STOP RAPE and WOMEN UNITE.
Somehow, without planning, and without breaking the pace of
the march, most of them ended up plastered over the windows
of Red Hot Video. They seemed best put there.
Police
managed to get in the way, as usual. They pretend they are protecting
us and we all know they don't do that. This time they divided
a truck with P.A. equipment off from the rest of the march,
as we continued to the downtown main office of Pattison's corporate
empire. There, we managed to make our speech despite their "help"
-- focussing on the pornography profits Pattison made. The remainder
of the stickers were plastered on the polished windows of his
building. We returned for tea and coffee to the basement of
Christ Church Cathedral, the site earlier in the year of an
occupation in protest of harassment of prostitutes.
The
women's liberation movement in Canada had been the target of
severe attacks from government from 1983 to 1985. Cutbacks in
funding had forced many groups to fold and weakened others.
Attempts were made to discredit the statistics on violence against
women that feminists had uncovered -- and replace them with
new theories by male criminologists and psychiatrists. Women
who refused to testify against their abusers in court were imprisoned
for contempt.
One
of the ways Rape Relief rose in response to these attacks was
to decide to make Take Back the Night a household word in 1985.
We wanted many new women mobilised. We produced a film and discussion
series, held once a month from May through September, where
women came to view films, slides and videos and discuss the
reality of violence against women. Each month more women turned
up, or returned with a few of their friends, and by September
we had distributed a flyer all over town advertising the film
nights and the September march.
Following
the initiative of a local Vancouver artist, we also conducted
workshops throughout the summer to create placards, visuals
and 6 - 10 ft. female figures to add to the political content
and visual impact of the event. Both the film nights and the
workshops were opportunities for many more women to help built
the march ahead of time then had ever done so before.
And
the results? Over 500 women took to the streets last September
in the largest women-only demonstration that Vancouver has ever
seen! With drums beating, face painters at work, placards waving,
and the fabulous huge dolls looming over the crowd, it was the
most spirited and lively Take Back the Night ever.
1986
-- Here We Come!
Joan