The Empowering
Inner Potential to End Violence
|
Bradford
C. Perry is a graduate of
James Madison University (JMU) in Harrisonburg,
Virginia who has much community and
professional experience working in
the field of sexual assault. In 1998
Brad received a Bachelor of Science
degree in Psychology with a minor in
Media Sciences. In 2000 he received
a Master of Arts degree in Psychological
Sciences. Brad has experience working
with men's involvement in sexual assault
services, as well as a myriad of experience
in direct services for victims and
survivors of sexual assault. At JMU
he was the Men's Programs and Services
Coordinator in the Office of Sexual
Assault and Substance Abuse Prevention
and was involved with the groups Campus
Assault Response and Take Back the
Night Coalition.
Take Back the Night is an annual event
organized within many colleges and
communities to "break the silence" about
violence against women. Many Take Back the Night Rallies include
musical performances, a speak-out against sexual assault and
violence, and a candlelight march. In March 2001 Brad gave
a keynote address at the JMU Take Back the Night Rally.
Currently, Brad is working as the Training Coordinator at Virginians
Aligned Against Sexual Assault. VAASA is a group that is "working
on behalf of victims of sexual assault and fostering social
change toward the elimination of sexual assault in the Commonwealth
of Virginia."
|
|
This article
is taken from excerpts of a speech given by Brad Perry during the
Take Back the Night Rally at James Madison University in Harrisonburg,
Virginia in March of 2001.
I want to talk tonight about the power that all of us have to make an impact
on violence: the power to change ourselves. What I want everyone to take home
with them is that the greatest revolutions begin from within individuals. Our
revolution for equality has already begun when we critically examine the foundations
of the violence in our culture, and see the ways it manifests in our daily
lives. The most direct way to accomplish this is to question the roots of our
own attitudes and actions, looking specifically for any elements that might
be part of these foundations for violence. These elements are so subtle, so
taken for granted and ingrained into our culture, that many people don't want
to recognize them as problematic.
In our early years we are lumped into certain categories that will have a huge
impact on our attitudes and behavior as adults. We learn early on that there
are certain ways in which one is expected to think and act depending on how
one fits into these categories. For example, for most of my life I have been
expected to play the role of the young, white, middle-class, heterosexual male.
These roles are reinforced and solidified by a culture that tells us we should
treat people differently depending on their racial or ethnic background, their
level of wealth, their spiritual beliefs, their sexual orientation, or their
gender.
How one fits into these categories is of huge importance to understanding violence
once one realizes that this arrangement is hierarchical, or places some groups
and individuals at a higher status based on these categories. How you fit into
each of these categories will largely dictate how you are valued by our culture.
One need only look at the category into which every president and the vast
majority of our Congress fit to see which categories our culture values most:
white, middle to upper economic class, Christian, heterosexual men. This hierarchical
structure is inherently problematic because it breeds oppression, the foundation
of violence directed towards any one group.
When people of any category recognize the injustice that stems from this system,
and begin to speak out for fairness and equality, members of the dominant groups
often attempt to minimize or silence them. These efforts on the parts of the
dominant groups to maintain an unjust status quo are the essence of oppression--and
oppression has many faces. Before I concentrate on issues of oppression around
the topic of gender and how it relates to men's violence against women, I want
to acknowledge a few examples of some other types of oppression that are common
in our society, because we are more than just women or men. The other ways
in which we are categorized do have a real impact on how we are perceived and
treated.
A white police officer stops and harasses an African American man driving a
Mercedes because the officer assumes the car must be stolen. A woman from a
low socioeconomic background presses charges against a wealthy, influential
man who sexually harassed her, but she is told that she "really wanted
it" since there is "no way some girl like her is going to say 'no'
to such a prestigious man." A gay man is beaten and left for dead for
no other reason than that he is not ashamed of who he is. The common thread
through all of these examples is the dominant group's perception of an individual's
identity. Identity-an individual's search, discovery, and claiming of identity
is massively threatening to the dominant establishments. It says: "I now
see the rules you want me to play by and why you set them up in the first place,
and I will not accept them anymore. I refuse to live by someone else's pre-scripted
ideals, so I will NOT play these games ANYMORE."
One way in which claiming one's own identity can help women and men change
this climate of violence and oppression is through actively questioning the
gender roles placed upon us by our culture. The foundation of sexual violence,
as with most violence aimed at a particular group of people, is based on oppression;
in this case the oppression is largely sexism and homophobia. And like all
forms of oppression, sexism and homophobia use many tools, from myths and stereotypes
about gender and sexual orientation, to harassment and outright violence, all
in an attempt to keep women and men in line. When I talk about violence, I
am referring to any act that is intended to damage or abuse, particularly acts
intending to bring both physical and emotional harm. I call the violence I
am referring to tonight men's violence against women because I want to make
it clear who is committing 98% of sexual assault and almost 90% of all domestic
violence. I am not saying that men cannot be raped or abused-they can, and
most often at the hands of other men.
I want to talk for a second about male victims. Many of the same power dynamics
that play into men raping women also play into men raping men. And by the way,
when men are raped, it is almost always by a heterosexual-identified man. The
same power and control issues exist. Often, rapists will target anyone who
they perceive as weaker than them-if the victim is male, he tends to be perceived
as "less manly" by the rapist. A lot of incarcerated rapists say
that they chose to rape a man because it made them feel more powerful, more
of "a real man" than raping a woman. They needed their traditional "masculine" values
validated, and they did so through violence. When a rapist targets a gay man,
there is also this same power dynamic. The gay man is seen as "less manly" and
deviating too far out of the box of traditional "masculinity." Since
many rapists have very rigid, traditional, "masculine" values, they
may already have a lot of heterosexism operating, which will play into the
dehumanizing of this victim.
I became involved in groups that deal with sexual assault issues because of
my life experiences. My mother is a survivor of long-term childhood incest,
and she began to recover memories and re-experience the abuse when I was 12
years old. I watched her go in and out of mental hospitals because she was
suicidal, I watched her go into dissociative trances in the middle of a conversation,
I watched her sob uncontrollably because she thought she was a horrible mother,
I watched her suffer in indescribable ways, and I wanted answers. But in my
high school years no one seemed to care or understand. So when I got to college
and heard about groups like the Take Back the Night Coalition, I thought "A
HA! These people will understand." And they did.
When I first started dealing with the emotions that this work brought out,
I either used humor or detached reason to avoid dealing with my feelings. Or,
I was channeling everything into anger. I had gotten up and spoken during 3
of the 5 Take Back the Night speak-outs that occurred while I was at college.
The first two times I launched into angry tirades on those who had violated
the people I love. While it is entirely appropriate to be angry about sexual
assault, I was EXCLUSIVELY using anger to express all of my feelings. In doing
so I was denying my other feelings. An interesting side note: this failure
to truly deal with problems on a meaningful, internal level is thought to be
the major factor contributing to both chronic depression and suicide in men.
Last March, I was in my final year at college, and, thus, my final Take Back
the Night. Because of my embarrassment at previous years, I had told myself
I wouldn't speak out. Suddenly I found myself in line. But something was different
this time around-I was feeling more scared than angry. It was my turn-I walked
up to the mic and began to sob uncontrollably. I don't really even remember
what I said, the thing I do remember is how I felt: alive, free, exposed without
care. I felt like I had taken a giant step out of the box. I was finally able
to be honest with my emotions-there was more I was feeling than anger. This
sensation of total release was the most beautiful feeling.
So my advice to all of you, take it or leave it, is to reject the limiting
and rigid roles our culture dictates. Finding your own identity in the midst
of all the labels, categories, judgments, insults, and pain will not only help
to create a more just society, but it will help you realize a potential within
yourself you never thought possible.
MORE INFORMATION >>
Articles >> The Empowering Inner Potential to End Violence :: Glossary :: Male/Male Sexual Violence :: Secondary Survivors :: Quiz
Stories >> If Robbery Victims Were Treated Like Rape Victims :: Listen :: Missoula Rape Poem :: One Kid's Story
Resources >> Sexual Assault :: Dating Violence :: Healthy Relationships :: Emergency Contraception
Send this page to a friend >>
|