V-Day Annual Report 2013 2013 | Page 4

MESSAGE FROM EVE It was the women of Congo who first taught me the power of dance. For seven years I have had the privilege of working side by side with my sisters from the DRC. They are rising up and fighting back in the midst of an economic war that has been raging for 14 years for the minerals of their country. A war that has not only been responsible for the death of eight million, but has been fought on the bodies of hundreds of thousands of women, where systematic rape and torture has been used to occupy villages and control the mines. The grotesque atrocities women have survived are beyond our capacity to receive or comprehend and I wondered for quite some time how Congolese women could not only continue to live, but continue to live with the huge power, energy, grace, and vision they have. Then it occurred to me that the women of Congo dance. And when they dance they dance with everything. Sexual predation has become preparation and training for all further dominations and occupations occurring in the world today. After all, if you can seize a woman’s body and take what you want without consequence or reciprocity, you can do the same to the Earth, you can do the same to countries, peoples, workers. You can do the same to anyone or anything. In the 16 years we have been working, V-Day has tried endless approaches to solving this dilemma and of course we have had many successes, but we have not ended the violence. When we reached our 15th year we realized we had to go further and escalate our efforts. We had to ask how we as a global movement could take everything we have done and push it to the next level. It was there, dancing in Congo, when we realized what that next step was, when we imagined what would happen if one billion women and all the men It was in the midst of dancing with a group of 200 who loved them danced together on one day and survivors in Congo when I suddenly got the power of released the energy and power that comes through dance to transform, to be dangerous and celebratory our bodies when we move together. And so we put and disruptive and sexual and joyful. I understood out the call to rise up and DANCE. The result was the that dance can melt the walls of our divisions, dissolve biggest mass action to end violence against women class and race, and create solidarity. That it exposes in the history of the world.  our bodies to each other and the world, and that it The outcomes were vast and still being documented. creates a collective energy and freedom that liberates Many women survivors have written to say they ideas and the conviction and courage to make those reclaimed their bodies, their trust, and the right to ideas happen. fully inhabit public space by the protection and For 16 years I have spent most of my hours and days thinking about violence against women and girls. I have traveled to over 70 countries and listened to the stories of women in war time and in their every day lives. What it has taught me is that violence against women is a worldwide epidemic. It is the methodology which sustains patriarchy and it is everywhere. It may manifest itself differently from culture to culture - female genital mutilation in one place, internet bullying in another, gang rape here, acid burning there - but I believe it is the mother issue of our times. 2 inspiration of dancing in solidarity. Rising created a wave of energy and courage that birthed many public fo rums, panels, teach-ins. We witnessed Presidents and members of parliaments, First Ladies, the Queen Mother of Bhutan, and religious leaders putting their bodies on the line, dancing and deepening their commitment to the issue. We saw new coalitions formed everywhere across many issues and lines, thousands of new people coming into this issue who had never spoken up before.