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Fighting Rape With Art

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  • Fighting Rape With Art

    The Indypendent, NY
    March 17 2007

    Fighting Rape With Art

    By Anoush Ter Taulian (Zaum)
    >From the March 16, 2007 issue

    Anoush Ter Taulian's `Arising From The Circle Womb Of Life'

    Women of Color Art Exhibit on Violence Against Women at the Brecht
    Forum,
    451 West St., between Bank and Bethune. The exhibit runs until March
    31.

    When I was in Kenya a man flung me into a ditch and lay on top of me
    to rape me. When I started screaming, he pulled a machete out from
    the back of his shirt and said, `Be quiet or I will kill you.'

    I continued to scream and he ran away. I made a Stop Rape poster in
    Swahili and English of a woman kicking her attacker, armed with a
    knife, in the balls. A policeman who said my poster was
    antigovernment arrested me. I spent a night in jail for my poster.

    Most of my artistic work deals with violence. I have co-produced with
    Fred Nyugen an audio CD called The Cost of Genocide - Armenia 1915.
    Most of the Armenian women in the deportation caravans were raped by
    the Turks but they are ashamed to talk about it. I spent nine years
    as a volunteer in the Artsakh (the part of Armenia that was attacked
    by Azerbaijan) liberation army and videotaped Armenian hostages and
    torture victims.

    I feel an important part of ending wars is ending the patriarchies
    that disrespect women and are destroying Mother Earth. I believe,
    during the matriarchy 5,000 years ago, when people didn't know it
    took sperm to have children, women were worshipped as life givers and
    there was no private property. I feel indigenous women and all women
    of color have a deep matriarchal artistic memory from which we can
    get knowledge of how to overturn the patriarchy. So I decided to have
    a women of color art exhibit that brought together African, Asian,
    Pacific Islander, Latina, Caribbean, Native American and Near and
    Middle Eastern women creating medicine art to help heal violence
    against women. Most of the women in this exhibit had never created
    work dealing with violence against women and produced original works
    for the show.

    All of our cultures have experienced imperialistic attacks so
    devastating that it has been hard and often taboo to address the
    violence against women in our own cultures. The Western world wants
    us to believe the Third World is more barbaric toward women,
    notwithstanding Christian witch hunts and the 25 percent of young
    American girls who have been victims of incest. The male art world
    generally ignores the problem of violence against women and the
    feminist art movement is white controlled and sometimes racist,
    despite some highprofile shows like `Global Feminisms' currently at
    Brooklyn Museum.

    It is time for women of color to regain their matriarchal power to
    end male privilege and the rape, beating, mutilation and murder of
    women for merely being women.

    http://www.indypendent.org/?p'4
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