The Twitter campaign was launched by Blank Noise, a community organisation working to eradicated gender-based and sexual violence
Clothes worn by sexual violence victims as part of the exhibition | Image: www.blanknoise.org
Several noted female politicians, including Shiv Sena leader Priyanka Chaturvedi, joined the social media campaign #INeverAskForIt to end shaming and blaming of victims of sexual crimes.
ADVERTISEMENT
The easiest way to absolve oneself from the responsibility of seeking mindset& societal change is to blame the sexual assault survivors-judge her for her clothes, the time she was out, her attitude, her free spiritedness, her ambition.
— Priyanka Chaturvedi (@priyankac19) November 23, 2020
Time to end this.
#INeverAskForIt
Others like NCP leader Supriya Sule, Aam Aadmi Party MLA Atishi, singers Sona Mohapatra and Ankur Tewari, activist Sonam Mahajan and journalist Barkha Dutt took to Twitter to show solidarity and end gender-based and sexual violence.
We must work towards a creating an environment wherein all we have zero crimes against women. We must Unite to End Victim Blame. #INeverAskForIt
— Supriya Sule (@supriya_sule) November 23, 2020
Read: Twitterati threaten to boycott Zomato after Swara Bhasker asked it to 'stop funding hate'
The Twitter campaign was launched by Blank Noise, a community organisation working to eradicated gender-based and sexual violence.
In school uniform, in salwar kameez, in skirt, in jeans, a rapist will rape you in any attire because it’s about him and not about you. You never ask for it, #INeverAskForIt, no woman ever asks for it.
— Sonam Mahajan (@AsYouNotWish) November 23, 2020
Stop victim blaming.
That this even needs to be said. So say it, again and again and again. There is no dress, no relationship, no context, no hour, no moment, no gray zone. #INeverAskForIt
— barkha dutt (@BDUTT) November 23, 2020
Unite against the systemic use of victim blame.
— Blank Noise #INeverAskForIt (@BlankNoise) November 18, 2020
End the justification of violence against women, girls and all persons. Believe Survivors.
Step in to build the #INeverAskForIt Mission. pic.twitter.com/fyqnZe00XH
The founder of Black Noise, Jasmeen Patheja, started this campaign back in 2018 with the aim of creating an exhibition of clothes worn by victims when they were assaulted, thereby, proving that sexual violence has nothing to do with the clothes one wears.
Patheja plans to display 10,000 such items of clothing at India Gate by the year 2023.
"I Never Ask For It" is a project making clear that a woman's choice of clothing has nothing to do with risk of sexual assault.#INeverAskForIt
— Vidya Chavan (@Vidyaspeaks) November 23, 2020
Read: I have raised you right, says Pushpak Sen's mother as he takes stand for women
“We envision 10,000 garments standing united at India Gate, knowing fully that it calls for being monumental,” The Print quoted Patheja.
“We want the building of this mission to be a process of healing; where survivors of violence feel heard and believed. The opposite of being blamed is being believed. The opposite of blaming is taking collective responsibility. We want the #INeverAskForIt mission to meet both these futures,” she added.
Keep scrolling to read more news
Catch up on all the latest Mumbai news, crime news, current affairs, and a complete guide from food to things to do and events across Mumbai. Also download the new mid-day Android and iOS apps to get latest updates.
Mid-Day is now on Telegram. Click here to join our channel (@middayinfomedialtd) and stay updated with the latest news