Close X
Tuesday, November 19, 2024
ADVT 
National

Canadian Sex-Assault Survivors Share #Whyididntreport Stories Amid U.S. Scandal

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 25 Sep, 2018 12:09 PM
    TORONTO — Fresh debate surrounding a sexual assault allegation involving a U.S. lawmaker has spurred hundreds of Canadians to offer support to silent survivors by adding their names to trending online hashtags including #WhyIDidntReport and #BelieveSurvivors.
     
     
    The wave of social media warriors included Ontario NDP member of provincial parliament Jill Andrew and former Ontario MPP Cheri DiNovo, who each referenced the hashtag #WhyIDidntReport on Twitter in recent days to call attention to the reasons many assault victims don't speak out.
     
     
    "Because I was 7. Because he said he would cut my mother up, put her in a black plastic bag and put her body in a river," Andrew tweeted from her account @JILLSLASTWORD.
     
     
    "I didn't report for the same reasons they don't — someone you care for. How would the justice system help?" DiNovo tweeted from her verified account @CheriDiNovo.
     
     
    DiNovo said Monday she was reminded of the #BeenRapedNeverReported hashtag of 2014, which emerged in the wake of allegations surrounding Jian Ghomeshi. The former CBC Radio star was acquitted in March 2016 of sexually assaulting three women following a high-profile criminal trial.
     
     
    DiNovo says she's continually stunned by the number of sex-assault allegations she hears as a minister in the United Church.
     
     
    "What is upsetting is that there's a new hashtag every year or couple years saying the same thing and still the numbers (of allegations) are pouring in and they're young women," says DiNovo.
     
     
    "A lot of these are recent assaults and again, they're not the kind of assault where it's a stranger crawling in your window at night with a knife or a gun. These are what most assaults are: friends, lovers, relatives and you're not going to turn them in. Justice is not an option for you for a variety of reasons."
     
     
    The #WhyIDidntReport hashtag exploded following a tweet from U.S. President Donald Trump who asked why a woman accusing his Supreme Court pick did not report her decades-old claim of sexual assault.
     
     
    Christine Blasey Ford, a California psychology professor, alleges that U.S. Supreme Court nominee Brett Kavanaugh tried to sexually assault her when both were teenagers more than 30 years ago. Another accusation emerged over the weekend, when Colorado resident Deborah Ramirez alleged Kavanaugh thrust his penis in her face at a party during his first year at university. Kavanaugh has denied both allegations.
     
     
    Meanwhile, thousands of women answered Trump's question on Twitter in recent days, including many in Canada, where a concurrent social media campaign around #BelieveSurvivors also found some support. That movement urged people to wear black on Monday and participate in a "walk out" in solidarity with Ford.
     
     
    Toronto resident Nicole Rajakovic shared a photo of herself on Twitter wearing black jeans and a black shirt on Monday, tagged #BelieveSurvivors.
     
     
    "A lot of the reasons that this woman in the U.S. has spoken about were very, very similar to mine, which is why it's become very top of mind for me," says Rajakovic, identifying herself as a survivor, but noting she has not spoken to her family about the assault.
     
     
    "I have a daughter. I want to be able to speak openly about it, to show her how important it is for women to speak up."
     
     
    Seeing scores of others reveal their experiences is "powerful," she adds.
     
     
    "The more people you meet, the more you realize how it's really not that unique of a situation, that there are so many people who have experienced this," she says.
     
     
    Communication, media and film professor Jessalynn Keller, who has studied digital feminist activism through her work at the University of Calgary, says people seem emboldened to participate in thorny debates around sexual misconduct as they increasingly unfold in public.
     
     
    But any notion that it's easy for victims to come forward and share their stories is false, she says.
     
     
    "The predominant narrative is that everyone just jumps online and posts their story and in actuality, research is telling us that it's not quite that simple. A lot of women post it and then delete it. And then repost it again," says Keller, noting that while it can be cathartic for some victims, many have said they agonized over whether to participate in #MeToo-related hashtags in the past.
     
     
    "A lot of women thought for several days of whether they wanted to post — how their friends and family would react. The participants of these hashtags are quite self-reflective. This is not an easy decision to even decide to share their story online, even if it was years ago or even if their name isn't attached."
     
     
    Keller says the Ghomeshi story resonated deeply in Canada and points to a sustained effort to keep the conversation going.
     
     
    And she's hopeful that today's teenagers are much better informed on issues surrounding gender and consent, noting that many Ontario youth battling over a contentious sex-ed curriculum seem very plugged in to social issues.
     
     
    "They have a very sophisticated language around these issues and a keen understanding about what consent is and it seems like adults don't have this," says Keller.
     
     
    "These conversations we're having — they're filtering down, they're making sense. But it takes a long time for us to see those changes in our institutions."

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Online Map Shows Crabby Crows Dive Bombing Pedestrians In Metro Vancouver

    Online Map Shows Crabby Crows Dive Bombing Pedestrians In Metro Vancouver
    VANCOUVER — Cantankerous crows are dive bombing unwary pedestrians in Metro Vancouver as the annual example of avian helicopter parenting hits its height.

    Online Map Shows Crabby Crows Dive Bombing Pedestrians In Metro Vancouver

    Two People Killed Two Edmonton Convenience Store Workers On Same Night: Crown

    Two People Killed Two Edmonton Convenience Store Workers On Same Night: Crown
    A jury heard Tuesday that three people wearing bandanas over their faces and similar clothes walked into both stores on Dec. 18, 2015. In both robberies, one suspect was armed with a handgun and another had a machete.

    Two People Killed Two Edmonton Convenience Store Workers On Same Night: Crown

    B.C.'s Team-Based Health Care Renewal Will Include 50 New Clinical Pharmacists

    B.C.'s Team-Based Health Care Renewal Will Include 50 New Clinical Pharmacists
    Health Minister Adrian Dixsays the pharmacists will be embedded in the health teams announced last month as part of a renewal program to offer more care options to patients.

    B.C.'s Team-Based Health Care Renewal Will Include 50 New Clinical Pharmacists

    Openroad Auto Group Acquires Mercedes-Benz Surrey

    Openroad Auto Group Acquires Mercedes-Benz Surrey
    OpenRoad Auto Group, B.C.’s largest automotive retail group, is pleased to announce the acquisition of Mercedes-Benz Surrey. This newest addition to the OpenRoad family is the company’s first Mercedes-Benz store.

    Openroad Auto Group Acquires Mercedes-Benz Surrey

    Kelowna, B.C. Woman Says Feces From Plane Fell Through Car's Sunroof And Into Her Eyes

    Kelowna, B.C. Woman Says Feces From Plane Fell Through Car's Sunroof And Into Her Eyes
    A woman in Kelowna, B.C., says an afternoon drive with her son turned into a "devastating" experience when human feces fell from the sky and into her eyes from the open sunroof of their car.

    Kelowna, B.C. Woman Says Feces From Plane Fell Through Car's Sunroof And Into Her Eyes

    Trudeau To Talk Trans Mountain Pipeline With Indigenous Leaders In B.C.

    Trudeau To Talk Trans Mountain Pipeline With Indigenous Leaders In B.C.
    The prime minister is expected to meet with Indigenous leaders in British Columbia today, including a First Nations chief who has been a vocal supporter of the Trans Mountain pipeline expansion.

    Trudeau To Talk Trans Mountain Pipeline With Indigenous Leaders In B.C.