Today marks the start of Domestic Violence Awareness Month. Our friends at Collective Action for Safe Spaces are doing a great project to raise awareness that everyone deserves respect everywhere they go, be that their homes or public spaces.
“New posters are going up around the city reminding people they deserve to be treated with the respect and providing resources for survivors of abuse, courtesy of SafeBars and the D.C. Coalition Against Domestic Violence.
The posters, designed by Baltimore-based muralist Maura Dwyer, depict a diverse set of people. “We wanted to highlight the faces of some of our city’s marginalized identities,” says Jessica Raven, co-founder of SafeBars and executive director of Collective Action for Safe Spaces.
The images speak to incidents that have taken place in D.C. in the past year. A reported incident of a library officer kicking a woman out of Shaw Library for wearing a hjiab, a breastfeeding patron at Tenleytown Library said she was “warned” by a library assistant that teen boys would be entering the facility, and misgendering at Banneker Pool led to bystander intervention training for D.C. Parks and Recreation staffers.
Volunteers are plastering the 2,500 posters—500 of each of the five designs—throughout bars, coffee shops, storefronts and other locales to mark October as Domestic Violence Awareness Month. The theme for this year’s campaign is “Spread Love D.C.,” with the idea of generating conversations about what makes for a healthy relationship.”



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Street harassment is always an unpleasant experience. Catcalls, whistles, instances of being followed or grabbed in public places, inevitably leave victim feeling scared, threatened or embarrassed. What is perhaps even more disturbing is that most women experience street harassment for the first time as children. Young people often fall victim to a particularly malevolent form of harassment because of their increased vulnerability: they are more likely to be startled by a passing car screaming obscenities, more likely to be rattled by a sexist or degrading comment, and more likely to be coerced by a man who won’t take no for an answer.