As a woman in her 30s, I know all too well how common violence against women and girls (VAWG) is. From the seemingly innocuous – the jeers from men in vehicles, the ‘accidental’ brushing up against you as they walk past, the hand that lingers for too long – to the more insidious – surviving domestic violence and rape, I know that VAWG is something that has penetrated the lives of all the women I love in some form or another.
We all know how it plays out in our every day life, the ‘text me when you’re home safe’ when we say goodbye to our girlfriends, to walking the long way home to make the most of the streetlights. Sometimes we joke about it – perhaps as a survival mechanism, perhaps because it’s become the norm. But the dark nature of it always lies beneath.
Read more:
- Scapegoating asylum seekers is not the answer to violence against women and girls
- Anti-migrant protesters ‘hijacking’ women’s safety to push ‘racist’ agenda, women’s groups warn
- This innovative new project helps get both domestic violence victims and perpetrators off the streets
I am a survivor of domestic violence. I know what it feels like to live in fear, to monitor my every word, every gesture, every move, hoping it won’t trigger a violent episode. I know what it means to survive violence – not from strangers – but from someone I knew, someone I trusted, and someone who claimed to love me.
This is why I find the recent protests that claim to ‘protect women and girls’ so deeply disturbing. The banners, the chants, the rhetoric – they pretend to be about women’s safety. But they are not. They are about stoking fear and fuelling division. They seek to blame the ‘other’ and to scapegoat. They allow perpetrators of VAWG to hide behind lies and to point the finger in the opposite direction. This doesn’t protect survivors like me. In fact, it does the opposite.
Let me be clear: VAWG is an epidemic. It permeates every element of our society and is perpetrated by men from all walks of life. We should be outraged by this. It is an injustice. A tragedy. Survivors like me do need men to speak up about this too, to take action, and to dismantle the misogyny and patriarchy that harms us all. But the protests we have seen in recent weeks are co-opting women and girls’ pain to further their own political agenda.