The White Ribbon Campaign – Breaking Men’s Silence To End Men’s Violence – Statement of Principles

August 4, 2000 Michael Kaufman

If it were between countries, we’d call it a war. If it were a disease, we’d call it an epidemic. If it were an oil spill, we’d call it a disaster. But it is happening to women, and it’s just an everyday affair.

It is violence against women. It is sexual harassment at work and sexual abuse of the young. It is the beating or the blow that millions of women suffer each and every day. It is rape at home or on a date. It is murder.

There’s no secret enemy pulling the trigger. No unseen virus that leads to death. It is only men. Not all men, but far too many men. In some countries most men will never be violent against a woman; in others, the majority of men take it as their birthright to do what they want, when they want, to women.

And just who are these men? Just regular guys. Men from all social backgrounds and of all colours and ages. Rich men and poor men, men who toil in the fields and men who sit behind desks.

All those regular guys, though, have helped create a climate of fear and mistrust among women. Many of our sisters, our mothers and our daughters, our girlfriends and our wives do not feel safe in their homes. At night they can not walk to the store for bread or rice without wondering who’s walking behind them. It’s hard for them to turn on the television without seeing men running amok in displays of brutality against women and other men. Even those women in relationships with men who are gentle and caring feel they cannot totally trust men. All women are imprisoned in a culture of violence.

Men’s violence against women isn’t aberrant behaviour. Men have created cultures where men use violence against other men, where we wreak violence on the natural habitat, where we see violence as the best means to solve differences between nations, where every boy is forced to learn to fight or to be branded a sissy, and where men have forms of power and privilege that women do not enjoy.

Men have been defined as part of the problem. But the White Ribbon Campaign believes that men can and must be part of the solution. Confronting men’s violence requires nothing less than a commitment to full equality for women and a redefinition of what it means to be men, to discover a meaning to manhood that doesn’t require blood to be spilled.

With all of our love, respect and support for the women in our lives:

  • We urge men around the world to wear a white ribbon, or hang a white ribbon from their house, their vehicle, or at their workplace each year for one ro two weeks, starting November 25, the international day for the eradication of violence against women. Wearing a white ribbon is a public pledge never to commit, condone, or remain silent about violence against women. The white ribbon symbolizes a call for any man who is violent to lay down his arms in the war against our sisters.
  • We ask unions, professional associations, student groups, corporations, religious institutions, the media, non-governmental and governmental organizations to make this an issue of priority.
  • We urge government to pass comprehensive laws against all forms of violence against women and to fund programs for survivors of this violence, such as shelters for battered women and rape crisis centres, and for services to treat violent men.
  • We call for large_scale educational programs in schools and work places, for police officers and judges, on the issue of men’s violence.
  • We believe that respect for girls and women and equality between men and women are preconditions to ending the violence.
  • We urge men to organize local and national White Ribbon Campaigns, open to all men and boys, right across the political, social and economic spectrum.

It has been the longest war, the greatest epidemic, the biggest disaster. With strength and love, we commit ourselves to work alongside women to bring this violence to an end.

What Every Man Can Do To Help End Men’s Violence Against Women

  1. Listen to women… learn from womenThe path starts with listening.Who knows better about violence against women than women who experience it? Studies tell us that, in most countries, 50 – 100 per cent of women have experienced physical or sexualviolence.

    Learn about violence by asking a woman who trusts you how violence has affected her life. Then, if she feels comfortable to talk, sit back and listen. Your role isn’t to challenge her on the details, nor debate whether something really should have bothered her or not. It is to listen. Simply trust that if she tells you something hurt her, then it did hurt her.

    And turn to your local women’s organizations. They have a wealth of accumulated experience and knowledge. Talk to them. Read their publications. Contribute financially. Learn from them.

  2. Learn About the ProblemViolence against women includes physical and sexual assault, sexual harassment, psychological abuse, or emotional abuse. Not all violence leaves visible scars. Emotional violence includes regular subjection to demeaning jokes, domineering forms of behaviour, and sexual harassment.Some forms of violence have a greater physical or emotional impact than others. But all forms of violence contribute to the very real fear and suffering that women in our society endure. The basic rights that most men enjoy – safety in their homes, ability to go out at night, a job free of harassment – are a source of fear for women in much of the world.

    The fear is greatest in women’s own homes. A common myth is that most violence is committed by strangers. In fact, women are most at risk from men they know–husbands, boyfriends, fathers, relatives, employers, and caregivers.

    Most men love and care about women. And yet frightening numbers commit acts of violence against the women they say they love. It occurs throughout the world, among the rich, poor, and middle class, and among those of every nationality, religion, and race.

  3. Learn Why Some Men Are ViolentMen are not naturally violent.There have been societies with little or no violence. Studies over the past century have found that half of the tribal societies studied had little or no violence against women, against children, or among men. Furthermore, even today, in many countries the majority of men are not physically violent.

    Violence is something that some men learn. Men’s violence is a result of the way many men learn to express their masculinity in relationships with women, children, and other men. Many men learn to think of power as the ability to dominate and control the people and the world around them. This way of thinking makes the use of violence acceptable to many men.

    Most individual acts of men’s violence are a pathetic attempt to assert control over women, children, or other men. Paradoxically, most violent acts by men are a sign of weakness, insecurity, and lack of self-esteem combined with a capacity for physical or verbal domination and feeling that they should be superior and in control.

    Women are not immune from committing acts of violence. Women’s groups have spoken out against the problem of violence against children, which is committed by both women and men, although most sexual abuse of children is by men. Women too can be violent against men or other women, but it is far less common than violence by men.

    In many violent incidents, men have been drinking alcohol. This might be because alcohol unleashes feelings, fears, rage, and insecurities that some men, cut off from their feelings, cannot handle.

    But alcohol doesn’t cause violence. Genes don’t cause violence. Ultimately, it is the attempt by some men to dominate women, adults’ attempts to dominate children, and some men’s attempts to dominate other men or groups of men. Violence is a way of asserting power, privilege, and control.

  4. Wear a white ribbonChange will occur if we each accept personal responsibility to make sure it happens. As men who care about the women in our lives, we can take responsibility to help ensure that women live free from fear and violence.Each year men around the world are wearing a white ribbon from November 25, the International Day for the Eradication of Violence Against Women, for one or two weeks. (In Canada, we wear the ribbon until December 6, the day of the 1989 massacre of 14 women in Montreal.)

    Wearing a white ribbon is your personal pledge never to commit violence against women. It is a personal pledge not to condone acts of violence, not to make excuses for perpetrators of violence, and not to think that any woman “asks for it.”

    It is a pledge not to remain silent. It is a pledge to challenge the men around us to act to end violence.

    Wearing a ribbon provokes discussion, debate, and soul_searching among the men around us. The ribbon is a catalyst for discussion. It is a catalyst for change.

  5. Challenge sexist language and jokes that degrade womenSexist jokes and language help create a climate where forms of violence and abuse have too long been accepted. Words that degrade women reflect a society that has historically placed women in a second class position. By reflecting this reality they once again put women “in their place” even if that isn’t the intention.One of the most difficult things for men is to learn to challenge other men. To challenge sexist language. To challenge men who talk lightly of violence against women. And to challenge men who engage in violence.
  6. Learn to identify and oppose sexual harassment and violence in your workplace, school and familySexual harassment refers to unwanted sexual advances or sexually oriented remarks or behaviour that are unwelcome by another person. Flirting and joking are fine if they are consensual and wanted. But sexual harassment poisons the environment.Harassment is ultimately about inequalities of power. The same action done by a woman might not bother a man because, in general, our society has not given women power over men.

    Men can join women in opposing sexual harassment by supporting efforts in our workplaces and schools to create a healthy and productive environment.

  7. Support local women’s programmesAround the world, dedicated women have created support services for women who are survivors of men’s violence: safe houses for battered women, rape crisis centres, counseling services, and legal aid clinics. Women escaping violent situations depend on these services.These and other women’s organizations deserve men’s support and our financial backing. That’s why we encourage local White Ribbon Campaigns to raise money for local women’s programs.
  8. Examine how your own behaviour might contribute to the problemIf you’ve ever been physically violent against a woman, if you’ve committed sexual assault, if you’ve hit, pushed, threatened, kicked your spouse or girlfriend, then you have been part of the problem.If this happened long ago, admit what you did was wrong and make amends if possible. But if such behaviour has any chance of continuing, then you urgently need to get help getting to the root of your problem. Don’t wait until it happens again. Please act today.

    Many men will never be physically or sexually violent. But let’s examine ways we might try to control women. Do we dominate conversations? Do we put them down? Do we limit their activities? Whether or not you’ve ever been violent, all men must take responsibility for ending all forms of violence.

  9. Work Towards long-term solutions Ending violence against women won’t happen overnight. Real solutions are truly long-term solutions. This is because men’s violence against women is rooted in inequalities between men and women, and in the way men learn to be men.Legal changes to combat men’s violence against women (such as laws against rape and battering) are very important. The police and courts must diligently enforce such laws.

    But this is not enough. Let’s work together to change our attitudes and behaviour. Let’s challenge the institutions which perpetuate inequality between women and men.

    Let’s help men be better men by getting rid of our suits of armour, that is, attitudes which equate masculinity with the power to control. Let’s make positive changes in our relationships with women, children, and other men. Let’s involve men as caregivers and nurturers of the young.

    Changes in attitude, behaviour, and institutions take time. And so we must look at how we raise future generations. We must teach our children, by example, that all forms of violence are unacceptable, and that for boys to become men, they do not need to control or dominate women, men, or children.

  10. Get involved with the White Ribbon Campaign’s educational effortsThe White Ribbon Campaign (WRC) is the largest effort in the world of men working to end men’s violence against women.The WRC is a grass-roots effort, relying mainly on volunteers. Because the purpose of the campaign is for men to take responsibility for working to end men’s violence against women, it is an organization of men. But we greatly appreciate the help and support of women.

    Aside from organizing the annual wearing of white ribbons (starting November 25 for one or two weeks), local supporters can do other things throughout the year. They can give talks in schools, communities, and

THE WHITE RIBBON CAMPAIGN 365 Bloor Street East Suite 203 Toronto, Ontario M4W 3L4 1-416-920-6684 FAX: 1-416-920-1678 whiterib’idirect.com www. whiteribbon.com

3 Comments on “The White Ribbon Campaign – Breaking Men’s Silence To End Men’s Violence – Statement of Principles

  1. I have lived for most of my 68 years as a man, husband, father of seven beautiful children.
    I committed domestic violence every day of those years of my three marriages, in the ways I expected my partners and offspring to give me the respect and power that I had learned that was my birthright as a male.
    In the past three years I have transitioned from male towards female, and I now live as a woman. I now appreciate the depth of the despicable cultural climate of gender inequality, and I am committed to doing what I can to help eradicate any form of violence against women and children.

  2. You say alcohol doesn’t cause violence and compare it to genes wich also doesn’t cause violence. As if alcohol is to people as genes are to people?

    Isn’t it so that what the Norwegian institute for Alcohol and Drug Research says is the truth, that 80% of the violence occurs together with alcohol and up to 50% is caused by alcohol? I think they are reffering to european research when they’re saying that.

    Why shouldn’t the fight against violence on women also include fight against the role that alcohol plays?

    1. Thanks Magne. I agree: alcohol certainly can play a role. By lowering inhibitions (or, to put it differently, by lowering our executive brain functions) an individual may be more likely to use violence. He (or she) may have less insight into their own behaviour, less ability to control emotions or deal with feelings. But, I would still argue that, ultimately, alcohol isn’t the cause. Most of us can drink all we want and it does not lead us to use violence. So, alcohol is at best a co-factor in physical, emotional and sexual violence; but I don’t define it as the ultimate cause. In Norway, Canada and in any studies I’ve seen, alcohol is a trigger or a factor in violence. Thanks for your thoughts on this!

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