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Sonke
Gender Justice: Exploring the
links between gender, violence, and HIV through digital stories.
The Sonke Gender Justice Network works with
men, women, youth, and children in the South African Development
Countries (SADC) region to achieve gender equality, prevent gender
based violence, and reduce the spread of HIV and the impact of AIDS.
Sonke employs various social change strategies to promote a healthy,
equitable society, ranging from individual skill building and community
education, to organizational development, community mobilization,
and policy advocacy.
Since 2007, Silence Speaks has been coordinating
digital storytelling workshops with Sonke in Johannesburg and Cape
Town, South Africa. In these workshops, youth and adults are exploring
how past life experiences have supported their personal commitments
to taking a stand against violence and exposing its connection to
HIV and AIDS. Stereotyped representations of men, women, and gender-based
violence abound in global popular media. The Sonke digital stories
present an alternative vision that emphasizes the importance of
reflection, hope, and a commitment to social change. Some of the
stories are raw testimonials about survival; others challenge misperceptions
about men and masculinity and offer examples of the role both men
and women play in confronting gender inequality and other forms
of injustice. The sessions include a full participatory process
in which storytellers write and edit their own stories, with support
from facilitators.
A collection of stories that mix English with
the first languages of storytellers (including subtitles where necessary),
and an accompanying facilitators’ guide are emerging as crucial
tools in Sonke’s work. Sonke and its many partners are screening
stories with careful facilitation across Southern Africa as a way
of educating local communities, training service providers, inspiring
policymakers, and promoting sustained community action for change.
generationFIVE:
Digital storytelling to end child sexual abuse in five generations.
generationFIVE (G5) envisions a future in which
child sexual abuse no longer occurs.
The organization approaches its work from the
liberatory perspective of transformative justice, which seeks to
provide survivors of child sexual abuse with immediate safety and
long-term healing and reparations while holding offenders accountable
within and by their communities. Beyond survivors and offenders,
transformative justice aims to transform inequity and power abuses
within communities by building their capacity for collective local
action towards addressing larger issues of injustice and oppression.
G5 also takes an approach to trauma that is grounded in generative
somatics, which understands human
beings as integrated mind/body/spirit entities.
In 2005 and 2006, Silence Speaks worked closely
with G5 to develop an approach to digital storytelling that would
honor the group’s analysis and meet its need for stories that
link individual experiences of abuse with larger social, economic,
and political issues. Following a pilot workshop with key staff
and organizers, we collaborated with G5 on a series of workshops
in Washington, D.C., New York, and Berkeley focused on understanding
child sexual abuse through the lens of class privilege and exploring
the impact of child sexual abuse on male victims, bystanders, and
offenders. The sessions included a full participatory process in
which storytellers wrote and edited their own stories, with G5 staff
and consultants playing a key role in the script feedback process
as well as in guiding the group through somatic centering exercises
to facilitate presence and groundedness.
The resulting collection of stories has been
incorporated into G5’s regular trainings for activists, which
aim to deepen participants’ understanding of child sexual
abuse and steer them to an analysis that recognizes the intersections
of individual experiences of abuse with broader social norms and
oppression. Stories are also screened regularly in local community
settings in order to mobilize involvement in G5’s work and
raise funds to support it.
Digital
Stories - Migration: Stories by
labor migrants and their family members in Sub-Saharan Africa.
The International Organization for Migration
(IOM) is an intergovernmental agency committed to the principle
that humane and orderly migration benefits migrants and society.
Countless men and women throughout Africa are forced to travel long
distances for work simply so that they and their families can survive.
Some thrive as members of their new communities, and many make significant
economic and cultural contributions to the countries to which they
migrate. Others, however, are subjected to harassment by the general
public and mistreatment by the very health and government agencies
that should be ensuring their wellbeing and protecting them from
violence.
In March 2007, the Digital Stories: Migration
Project, a collaboration of IOM, Market Photo Workshop, and Silence
Speaks, recruited eight men and women from countries in Southern
Africa to tell stories that highlight the issues and consequences
of labor migration. Following a series of orientation sessions in
Lesotho, Swaziland, and several rural areas in South Africa where
participants were provided with disposable cameras, taught some
photography basics, and asked to take photos of their homes and
neighborhoods, the group attended a four-day digital storytelling
workshop in Johannesburg. This session included a modified process
in which participants wrote and recorded their own stories, and
students from Market Photo provided hands-on computer help as requested.
The goal of the Project was two-fold. First, it aimed to create
a safe workshop space in which labor migrants and family members
could share stories with others like themselves and gain a clear
sense of individual achievement, group solidarity, and a final product
they could feel proud of. Second, it aimed to develop a collection
of short-form media pieces appropriate for use in a variety of settings
as tools for opening hearts and minds about the realities of labor
migration.
The Project’s A Better Life Than Me DVD
(featuring all stories in English as well as in the first languages
spoken by storytellers, with English subtitles) and accompanying
Facilitators’ Guide give presenters easy-to-use tools that
can help raise awareness about labor migration and build skills
for better assisting and advocating for migrants and family members
among those in health, community development, and policy contexts.
Instituto
Promundo: Youth activists in Brazil
speak out against family and community violence.
Promundo’s mission is to promote gender
equity and prevent violence against children, youth, and women in
Brazil and around the world. Promundo’s Violence Prevention
Program takes an interpersonal approach that recognizes that, beyond
the emotional, cognitive, and physical aspects of infant and youth
development, the social context in which children and youth grow
up also needs to be understood in order to unravel the causes and
impact of violence.
The Silence Speaks partnership with Promundo
is built on an awareness that young people in Brazil need to see
and hear themselves in media and, more importantly, that they need
the chance to take control of media content which claims to represent
their lives and experiences. In May 2008, Silence Speaks traveled
to Rio de Janeiro to conduct an intensive, six-day Train-the-Trainers
workshop in digital storytelling, for key Promundo staff and youth
leaders. This workshop included a full participatory process in
which storytellers wrote and edited their own stories. Trainees
will go on to lead follow-up workshops (using a modified production
process, given the lack of easy access to adequate computer labs)
in various cities in northern, central, and southern Brazil, to
gather stories by youth taking action against violence in their
communities.
The resulting collection of stories will be featured
on a final compilation DVD that will be produced with menus in both
English and Portuguese (all stories will be recorded in Portuguese
and subtitled in English). Promundo will share the stories in a
variety of community settings and training venues to support its
work to end violence and advance youth voices in its prevention.
Digital
Hero Book Project: Formerly abducted
youth in Northern Uganda share their struggles and triumphs.
REPSSI’s Hero Book approach leads groups
of children through a series of autobiographical storytelling and
art exercises to find solutions to personal and social challenges
they face. It has been used in sub-Saharan Africa for five years,
primarily as a way of providing psychosocial care and support to
children affected by HIV/AIDS, poverty, and conflict. For formerly
abducted children in Northern Uganda (sometimes referred to as “Child
Soldiers” in western media), Hero Book-making (in tandem with
intensive individual and group psychosocial support) has been transformative,
enabling these children to express their pain in a safe setting
and overcome the stigma they often face upon returning to their
villages.
In 2006, REPSSI
initiated the Digital Hero Book project, which creates tools and
arranges for opportunities for young people who have made paper
Hero Books to create digital versions and share them, if desired,
online. As a partner in this work, Silence Speaks worked with REPSSI
staff and colleagues at Transcultural
Psychosocial Organization (TPO)
Uganda to lead a digital storytelling session in Arua, Uganda with
a group of formerly abducted young men and women. All participants
had previously created paper Hero Books. The session included a
modified workshop process in which participants wrote, illustrated,
and recorded their own stories and then guided facilitators in taking
additional necessary photographs and video clips and assembling
the videos on laptops.
Silence Speaks produced a compilation DVD of
the stories, which has been shown to great acclaim in Ugandan villages
faced with the challenges of reintegrating young people returning
from the bush in the wake of the country’s decades-long conflict.
TPO is also using the stories in family counseling meetings to support
parents in recognizing that the children they may have viewed as
“damaged” are, in fact, healthy and hopeful about the
future.
Asian
Women's Shelter: Multi-lingual
advocates and former residents speak out.
Asian Women’s Shelter (ASW) has been providing
vital domestic violence and anti-trafficking services and advocacy
in the San Francisco Bay Area and across the United States for nearly
twenty-five years. Their expertise in offering support in multiple
languages and in assuring access to, and sensitive, ethical treatment
by, health, law enforcement, and criminal justice systems is widely
recognized. They serve women and children from South, East, and
West Asia, as well as Pacific Islanders, with a range of culturally
driven and empowerment-based programs, including emergency shelter,
transitional housing, court accompaniment, and more.
For the past three years, Silence Speaks has
partnered with AWS on a series of multi-lingual workshops with their
volunteer language advocates and former clients. Following an orientation
workshop and considerable planning to determine how best to lead
digital storytelling workshops with their constituents, key AWS
staff coordinated and led special orientation meetings for the storytellers,
to build relationships, convey the value of personal storytelling,
and address questions about privacy and confidentiality. Next, two
workshops were held for women who told stories in Thai, Indonesian,
Mandarin, Cantonese, Japanese, Mien, and other languages. Special
attention was paid to ensuring anonymity where desired/necessary.
The resulting stories illustrate the resilience and wisdom of women
who have escaped from abusive relationships, negotiated long journeys
to find a new home in California, and confronted xenophobia and
insensitivity from intimates and institutions in the U.S.
Workshop participants gave varying levels of
permission regarding the use of their stories. Some will be shown
only in the context of AWS support groups/counseling sessions, while
others will become part of trainings for incoming multilingual volunteer
advocates, service providers and the general public, to raise awareness
of the specific dilemmas faced by Asian-Pacific Islander women.
Learn
From My Story: Ugandan women reveal
the challenges of surviving obstetric fistula.
Despite the devastating impact of obstetric fistula
on the lives of thousands of women and girls each year, the international
health community has largely neglected the problem. The ACQUIRE
program has responded to this gap by working with national governments
and other local partners to strengthen and/or implement comprehensive
fistula initiatives. The ACQUIRE approach to fistula is holistic;
the program works with stakeholders at the facility and community
levels to collaborate on the development of strategies that can
prevent fistula from occurring in the first place, increase women’s
access to clinical treatment and counseling, and provide rehabilitation
services to help affected women reintegrate into their communities.
In 2007, ACQUIRE partnered with Silence Speaks
to gather stories of Ugandan fistula patients. After weeks of dedicated
outreach by ACQUIRE collaborators, a group of eleven women assembled
in July in the town of Masaka for an orientation session. They viewed
sample digital stories and talked about the purpose of the workshop.
They were also given disposable cameras, taught how to use them,
and asked to take photos of their homes and villages. One month
later, they traveled again to Masaka, cameras in hand, for a four-day
workshop. This session included a modified process in which participants
told and recorded their stories and drew pictures to illustrate
them. Facilitators then combined these materials with scans of the
photos taken by participants and other images/video clips to create
the actual videos on laptops. While editing was underway, participants
visited the local hospital where they had been treated and offered
advice and support to other women awaiting fistula repair.
The digital stories, both in participants’ first languages
with English subtitles and in English, are featured on a compilation
DVD with additional short video excerpts from interviews with ACQUIRE
fistula counselors and providers. Together, these tools are being
used as part of ongoing trainings about fistula treatment and care.
The program is also exploring ways to share the stories in local
settings and as radio spots, in order to educate rural villagers
about prevention and support women in seeking fistula repair.
The Sheila Wellstone Institute:
Stories of the court backlash against women and children facing
family violence.
The Sheila Wellstone Institute is committed
to building power and visibility to ensure that ending violence
against women and children is a national priority in the United
States. The Institute has taken a particular interest in challenging
the increasing influence of “father’s rights”
groups on the family court system. While domestic violence advocates
stress that awarding sole or joint child custody to an abusive parent
can lead to continued and possibly increased physical and/or emotional
abuse of the mother (through forced and unsupervised interaction
with the father), father’s rights organizations have, in recent
years, prompted the passage of state legislation that requires joint
custody in every case.
Silence Speaks collaborated with the Institute in July 2007 and
conducted a workshop in Berkeley, California with a group of women
and youth who have struggled with challenging custody situations
in the context of domestic violence. This workshop included a full
participatory process in which storytellers wrote and edited their
own stories. The stories capture the pain of fractured relationships,
the confusion of being accused of “parental alienation syndrome”
(a term invented by father’s rights groups and condemned as
bogus by the American Psychological Association), and the desire
of this courageous group of participants for resolution and justice.
The Wellstone Institute is screening its collection
of stories at Camp Sheila Wellstone, as a concrete tool for organizing,
mobilizing, and lobbying around father’s rights issues. The
storytellers have shared their stories at sessions of the Camp and
remain involved in the Institute’s work to advance the rights
of battered women and their children.
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