April is Sexual Assault Awareness Month, an opportunity to raise awareness and get involved.
April is Sexual Assault Awareness Month, an opportunity to raise awareness and get involved.

Five easy ways to support Sexual Assault Awareness Month

By Adele Pincock

April is Sexual Assault Awareness Month, an opportunity to raise awareness and get involved. DOVE Center is a proud provider of services to survivors of sexual assault in the greater St. George area. Take part in one or more of the following events to commemorate SAAM and show support for survivors.

Visit What Were You Wearing, an interactive exhibit that demonstrates clothing has nothing to do with sexual assault

On April 1, (and that’s no fooling!), the DSU Women’s Resource Center and DOVE Center launched What Were You Wearing, an interactive exhibit that demonstrates that clothing has nothing to do with sexual assault. This is the second year the two organizations collaborated to bring the exhibit to life. It’s a highly compelling exhibit that received critical acclaim last year and had a profound impact on all who viewed it.

Sexual assault has always been a violent crime intended to exert power and control over another. But a long-lasting myth has endured that sexual assault is a crime of sex and seduction and can therefore be excused or understood if a victim’s clothing was provocative or revealing. But there is no excuse for sexual assault, and certainly the responsibility for its perpetration lies solely with the perpetrator, not a victim’s clothing.

Take a walk through the exhibit so you can literally see for yourself the insidiousness of the argument that clothing invites or leads to sexual assault. The exhibit will be on display in the Holland Centennial Commons at DSU through April 12. It will be moved to the lobby of the Eccles Fine Arts Center for viewing April 15–19. There is no fee for admission.

Wear teal on April 2

April 2 is Wear Teal Day. Teal is the color of sexual assault awareness, and wearing teal shows that you care about consent and respect and that you believe and support survivors. So find that shirt, scarf, bracelet, or pair of socks with a little teal in it and don it proudly!

Take the Start By Believing pledge

On April 3, the DSU Police Department is launching its Start By Believing campaign at an open house, also in the Holland building, from 11 a.m. to 1 p.m. Start By Believing is a global campaign working to create positive change in the way we respond to sexual assault. Its three-pronged universal action plan when someone discloses rape or sexual assault is to start by believing, be supportive, and ask how you can help. Stop by Wednesday to meet your campus police officers, learn more, and take the pledge.

Wear your fave jeans to work on Denim Day

And finally, there’s Denim Day, which will be celebrated April 24. Denim Day is a 20-year tradition that originated after a ruling in the Italian Supreme Court that overturned a rape conviction because, the justices reasoned, the victim was wearing tight jeans and therefore must have helped her assailant remove them, thus indicating consent. The next day, the women in the Italian Parliament wore jeans to work in solidarity with the victim. Wearing jeans on Denim Day has since become a symbol of protest of the destructive attitudes about sexual harassment, abuse, assault, and rape. Wear your favorite jeans April 24 to show you support victims and reject the myths that surround sexual violence.

Making room for intentional awareness

The other day, I heard a television pundit say, “80 percent of Americans want clean air and clean water” during a panel discussion about climate change. “Excuse me?” I thought to myself, “only 80 percent?” I immediately challenged the assertion because I find it impossible to believe that number is not 100 percent! Everybody wants clean air and clean water. Don’t they? I tried to imagine a dissenter saying, “Nope, not me. I hate clean air and water. Yuk, no thank you!” But I couldn’t imagine it, there’s just no way I can believe such a person even exists.

I’m also quite certain that I heard this remark out of context. I was in and out of the room and mostly distracted when I happened to overhear it. I’d be willing to bet that in its proper context, the comment made some sense and probably informed a broader topic. However, I’ll never know because I didn’t linger to hear more of the discussion and possibly gain understanding or insight because, well, I was busy.

This illustrates what it can feel like some days for social justice advocates, those on the front lines fighting for the dignity and rights of victims of sexual assault and other intimate partner abuses. You would think that everyone is fundamentally opposed to sexual assault — the 100 percent, if you will. Yet every day, we hear accounts of victim blaming and other excuses used to justify the perpetration of sexual assault and harassment, leading us to believe that everyone is not on the same page. At least not yet.

Part of DOVE Center’s mission is to “relentlessly pursue community education to increase bystander awareness and shift cultural norms.” We believe that education is the primary key to unlocking solutions that will end intimate partner violence including sexual assault. But if we aren’t paying attention, choose to hear only part of the message, or refuse to challenge our biases, we miss the bigger picture: that context that informs the broader topic. Approaching matters of sexual assault in this manner unintentionally contributes to toxic norms in our culture that tolerate bad behavior and worse, actual crimes of sexual violence. We understand the topic is hard to talk about, which is why so many just keep on walking, so to speak, and let the topic stay in the other room while they go about their business.

One in three women and one in four men will experience sexual violence in their lifetime. Nearly one in five women and one in 38 men have experienced attempted or completed rape in their lifetime. In Utah, one in eight women and one in 50 men will be raped in their lifetime. If we truly want to live in a healthy, thriving community, and enjoy meaningful, lasting, committed relationships, we can no longer afford to tune-in part way. We can no longer afford a victim-blaming mentality. We can do better to create a supportive culture for victims. Again, it starts with education. But we won’t get anywhere until each individual makes the personal commitment to believe victims, hold perpetrators accountable, explore opportunities for perpetrator treatment and prevention education, and keep the conversation going. With our collective commitment, we can absolutely create change to the point that domestic and sexual violence no longer exist.

In the meantime, DOVE Center’s doors are open to provide supportive services to those who have been victimized by sexual assault and rape. You are not alone and we believe you.

DOVE Center is a 501(c)(3) nonprofit organization committed to cultivating an informed community free from domestic and sexual violence. To access services or speak with an advocate, call DOVE Center’s 24-hour helpline at (435) 628-0458.

The viewpoints expressed above are those of the author and do not necessarily reflect those of The Independent.

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