Close X
Sunday, December 1, 2024
ADVT 
National

Athletes 'Stand Together' With Sex Assault Survivors After Players Charged

The Canadian Press, 05 Dec, 2017 12:49 PM
    HALIFAX — Some female athletes at St. Francis Xavier University have come up with a remarkable response to sex charges against members of the varsity football team.
     
    Soccer players have launched a solidarity campaign with sexual assault survivors, quelling a potential backlash that experts say can sometimes rise in the wake of damning allegations against powerful, popular male students on university campuses. 
     
    Sarah Bruce, a second-year student on the X-Women soccer team, says she launched the campaign, called We Stand Together, to channel her anger and spark social change on campus.
     
    She designed a logo with the Antigonish, N.S., university's well-known X on top of a pink circle and the words "end sexual violence," which has been widely shared on social media and is now featured on stickers, pins and t-shirts.
     
    Fellow teammate Emma Kuzmyk, a first-year student and goalkeeper on the women's soccer team, created a poem and harrowing video calling attention to sexual assaults on university campuses.
     
    Late last month, police charged two defensive backs on the X-Men varsity football team with sexual assault.
     
    RCMP said Jonah Williams, 19, was charged with three counts of sexual assault, while Tyler Ball, 18, was charged with one count of sexual assault.
     
     
    The allegations first came to light after an 18-year-old woman reported an alleged assault that took place over a weekend. Another 19-year-old victim came to light during the police investigation.
     
    The charges have not been tested in court. Both accused have been released with conditions and are set to appear in provincial court in January, police said.
     
    The university administration banned one of the men from campus, while another has been granted restricted access to attend classes. All other student privileges, including participating in varsity athletics, have been revoked.
     
    The We Stand Together initiative has been widely supported by football players, says Bruce, who is from Ontario.
     
    "They've been incredible. Almost right away they started posting the logo on their social media and ordering t-shirts," she says of her fellow varsity athletes. "Ultimately at St. F.X. we're a family and we take care of each other."
     
    The campaign is selling t-shirts and accepting donations for stickers and pins to raise money for additional sexual education training at the university.  
     
    Yet one of the most moving aspects of the solidarity campaign is the tense two-minute video, produced by Donald Jewkes and with spoken word by Kuzmyk, who is also from Ontario.
     
    The video follows a woman walking home alone in the dark on campus while spoken word poetry and instrumental music gradually grows louder.
     
    The poetry raises questions about trivializing sexual assault, tolerating gendered violence and victim-blaming.
     
    "I wonder if you felt her heart break when you broke into her. I wonder if the halt of her breath ever made you wonder if you should halt as well,"  Kuzmyk says in her poem. "I wonder if the strength that you used to hold down her arms made you feel strong. I wonder if her complete inability to respond made you pause at all."
     
    The poem questions "if we can raise our voices loud enough to finally be heard" and when "every single one of us will stand behind her."
     
    The video ends with the woman being joined by a group of supporters, all standing in the dark and silhouetted against a brightly lit campus building in the background.
     
    Kuzmyk says she's been writing short stories since she was six years old, and poetry since Grade 8. But she says it's the first time she has shared her work publicly.
     
    "It was a difficult decision but if it has the possibility to help someone or create awareness I thought it would be selfish to not share it," she says.
     
    Kuzmyk says she's had lengthy discussions with fellow students and other athletes about victim-blaming and consent, and that the campaign has received overwhelming support.
     
    Bruce says she never expected the campaign to take off so quickly or to garner such widespread backing, but she credits its success to the contributions of her teammates.
     
    In addition to the We Stand Together campaign, a group of students and faculty on the university's Social Justice Colloquium penned an open letter supporting survivors and calling for more resources and education on sexualized violence.
     
    Students on the Women’s and Gender Studies Society also issued a statement of solidarity in a campus newspaper, The Xaverian Weekly.
     
    Lisa Pasolli, a women’s and gender studies instructor at St. F.X., says the solidarity movement reveals that there are social-justice minded students who understand the broader context in which these alleged assaults took place.
     
    "They understand what's happening at St. F.X. is part of the much broader #MeToo movement," she says. "They understand that St. F.X. isn't immune from these larger conversations that we seem to be having as a society right now about sexual violence and permissiveness towards sexual violence and the structures of power that sustain sexual violence."
     
    "They are linking the events unfolding on campus to this sort of broader societal reckoning with sexual violence and patriarchy," Pasolli says.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    'Lifetime Collection' Of Classic, Cars Lost In Fire In Langley, B.C.

    'Lifetime Collection'  Of Classic, Cars Lost In Fire In Langley, B.C.
    Alyn Edwards, a columnist who writes about classic cars and a good friend of the owners, Garry and Darlene Cassidy, said they are devastated by the loss.

    'Lifetime Collection' Of Classic, Cars Lost In Fire In Langley, B.C.

    Power Restored After Fire Under Queensborough Bridge Darkens Neighbourhood

    Power Restored After Fire Under Queensborough Bridge Darkens Neighbourhood
     Officials in New Westminster, B.C., say power has been restored to thousands of residents, but why high voltage lines under a major bridge exploded and burned is still under investigation.

    Power Restored After Fire Under Queensborough Bridge Darkens Neighbourhood

    VPD Officer Michael Bal Named One Of Top 40 Under 40 Law Enforcement Professionals In The World

    VPD Officer Michael Bal Named One Of Top 40 Under 40 Law Enforcement Professionals In The World
    In early 2016, Constable Bal launched Project Jawani, along with Detective Constable Steve Kingra. The project has South Asian youths gather for an open discussion about the issues they are facing.

    VPD Officer Michael Bal Named One Of Top 40 Under 40 Law Enforcement Professionals In The World

    Electrical Fire Closes Queensborough Bridge, Darkens Part Of New Westminster

    Electrical Fire Closes Queensborough Bridge, Darkens Part Of New Westminster
    Crews were scrambling to reopen a local bridge in New Westminster, B.C., that was closed when an overnight fire destroyed high voltage electrical cables under it, setting off commuter chaos on Wednesday.

    Electrical Fire Closes Queensborough Bridge, Darkens Part Of New Westminster

    Chilliwack School Trustee Apologizes To Those Hurt By Gender Identity Rant

    Chilliwack School Trustee Apologizes To Those Hurt By Gender Identity Rant
    Chilliwack's Barry Neufeld Said His Post Was A Criticism Of Use Of Educational Resources, Not Individuals.

    Chilliwack School Trustee Apologizes To Those Hurt By Gender Identity Rant

    Convicted Sex Offender Living In Vancouver, Warn Police

    Convicted Sex Offender Living In Vancouver, Warn Police
    James Ernest Armbruster is serving a 28-year, 11-month sentence

    Convicted Sex Offender Living In Vancouver, Warn Police