According
to the Men's Rape Prevention Project in Washington DC, 58,000 soldiers died
in the Vietnam war. During that same period of time, 51,000 women were killed
mostly by men who supposedly loved them. In the summer of 1990, that
statistic became the catalyst for a coalition of women's groups on Cape Cod,
Massachusetts to consciously develop a program that would educate, break the
silence and bear witness to one issue - violence against women.
This
small, core group of women, many of whom had experienced some form of
personal violence, wanted to find a unique way to take staggering,
mind-numbing statistics and turn them into a provocative,
"in-your-face" educational and healing tool.
One
of the women, visual artist Rachel Carey-Harper, moved by the power of the
AIDS quilt, presented the concept of using shirts - hanging on a clothesline
- as the vehicle for raising awareness about this issue. The idea of using a
clothesline was a natural. Doing the laundry was always considered women's
work and in the days of close-knit neighborhoods women often exchanged
information over backyard fences while hanging their clothes out to dry.
The
concept was simple - let each woman tell her story in her own unique way,
using words and/or artwork to decorate her shirt. Once finished, she would
then hang her shirt on the clothesline. This very action serves many
purposes. It acts as an educational tool for those who come to view the
Clothesline; it becomes a healing tool for anyone who make a shirt - by
hanging the shirt on the line, sirvivors, friends and family can literally
turn their back on some of that pain of their experience and walk away;
finally it allows those who are still suffering in silence to understand that
they are not alone.
October
of 1990 saw the original Clothesline Project with 31 shirts displayed on a
village green in Hyannis, Massachusetts as part of an annual "Take Back
the Night" March and Rally. Throughout the day, women came forward to
create shirts and the line kept growing.
A small blurb appearing in Off Our
Backs magazine was picked up by Ms magazine and everything changed for the
Clothesline Project. In the following years, the Ryka Rose Foundation and
Carol Cone's advertising agency took an interest in our work and helped
create a national push with small pieces appearing in USA Weekend magazine,
Shape magazine and others. This outreach created an overwhelming national
response and brought the Clothesline Project from a single, local, grassroots
effort into an intense national campaign.
At
the moment we estimate there are 500 projects nationally and internationally
with an estimated 50,000 to 60,000 shirts. We know of projects in 41 states
and 5 countries. This ever-expanding grassroots network is as far-flung as
Tanzania and as close as Orleans, Massachusetts.
Survivor
= A woman who has survived intimate personal violence such at rape,
battering, incest, child sexual abuse.
Victim
= A woman who has died at the hands of her abuser.
The
Clothesline Project honors women survivors as well as victims of intimate
violence. Any woman who has experienced such violence, at any time in her
life, is encouraged to come forward and design a shirt. Victim's families and
friends are also invited to participate.
It
is the very process of designing a shirt that gives each woman a new voice
with which to expose an often horrific and unspeakable experience that has
dramatically altered the course of her life. Participating in this project
provides a powerful step towards helping a survivor break through the shroud
of silence that has surrounded her experience.