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Anti-Rape Activist Gabrielle Union Speaks Out About Her Own Rape and the Richmond, CA Gang Rape

Posted by Melissa McEwan, Shakesville at 4:00 AM on November 5, 2009.


"After googling the gang rape story in Richmond and reading comments on blogs, it just leaves me sickened and really sad."

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Actress and anti-rape activist Gabrielle Union, blogging about her reaction to commentary about the Richmond rape case and about her own rape (ellipses original):

I'm sad more than anything. After googling the gang rape story in Richmond and reading comments on blogs, it just leaves me sickened and really sad. The fact that race and socio-economics have been used to explain away a brutal gang rape...just sad...maybe I just have seen every kind of rapist and survivor...every race, color, religion, socio-economic status group...it's all the same...a lack of regard for violence against women. Tolerated, and in this case encouraged by the mob surrounding the perps...laughing, joking and taking pics.

When I was 19 years old, I was raped. I was working at a shoe store in California, and the store was robbed. The person robbing the store ended up putting a gun to my head and raping me. As he was raping me, I felt as though I was floating over myself, thinking, 'This isn't happening.' I blanked out and had an out-of-body experience, like I was hovering above seeing this ­horrible thing happen to someone else...not me. I was fortunate enough to go the UCLA rape crisis center after this horrific ordeal. It gave me my life back. My dignity and self-esteem were gone and they helped me find them again.

That's why I now lobby for state legislatures across the country and the federal government to help raise funds and awareness for rape crisis centers, and I speak to all different kinds of people across the country about what happened to me. My goal is to never hear the words 'me too' from someone after I say 'I was raped.'

Blub.

Digg!

Tagged as: rape, richmond

Melissa McEwan writes and edits the blog Shakespeare's Sister.


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What an odd term...
Posted by: Illiteratilumen on Nov 5, 2009 10:30 AM   
Current rating: 1    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
"Anti-rape activist".

I'm not knocking her efforts. I'm just pondering the existence of its opposite. Who in the world would consider themself a "pro-rape activitst" besides actual rapists?

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» RE: What an odd term... Posted by: JackieD
Right to Life alert!
Posted by: zipper696 on Nov 6, 2009 6:20 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Wanna bet they pick up on:

"I was fortunate enough to go the UCLA rape crisis center after this horrific ordeal"


and claim she is a "baby killer" ?

They will point out that God sent that rapist to give her the precious seed so that a cute little baby could be her's to love and nurture....

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The US response to rape is where religion becomes a sickness
Posted by: Ian MacLeod on Nov 6, 2009 12:53 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Wanna bet they pick up on:
"I was fortunate enough to go the UCLA rape crisis center after this horrific ordeal"
and claim she is a "baby killer" ?

You're likely right. Interesting, though, that such people are the ones who most frequently abuse adopted children and ostracize victims of rape. And states where such people constitute a loud minority - and sometimes a dangerous one - are the ones that offer the least help, the fewest programs for rape victims and for poor families and children in general. All life is precious, apparently, until it's born and walks around as a living reminder of sin. Oh yeah - there's also more rape in such states, and the majority of rapists are either victims of extremely poor childhoods that often extend into adulthood, extreme religious upbringing or both.

There's a dark underbelly to radical right Christianity, and it produces monsters more reliably than anything else I can think of. Religious freedom is one thing, but how and where can the line be drawn between that and radical versions of religions that lie at the foundations of so much damage, psychological and social? The most religious states also contain the worst examples of poverty. Which causes the other?

Ian

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