Since 1978, Take Back the Night has provided a forum for
hundreds of survivors, activists, and supporters representing the community
to demand that sexualized violence not be tolerated. During the rally
survivors tell their stories, musicians and poets express their experiences,
and this year we welcome Denise Diggs-Taylor as our activist speaker.
Following the rally, participants take to the streets with voices raised in
an act of solidarity to protest sexual victimization in all forms.
While Take Back the Night marches initially began as
protests against the sexual victimization of women, AACAR and UWAR recognize
that sexualized violence is used as a tool to oppress many other populations
as well. Following a very successful 2000 event, AACAR and UWAR have again
voted to make the march open to anyone who has experienced sexual
victimization, their loved ones, and supporters who wish to add their voice
in our demonstration.
Take Back the Night benefits the community at large by
creating an opportunity for community members to speak out against
sexualized violence and providing an environment of awareness, healing, and
empowerment. We hope all those interested will join us in making this year�s
Take Back the Night the most powerful ever!

The Take Back The Night rally and march are protests
against sexualized violence in our community, country, and world. As
sexualized violence, we protest rape and sexual assault, domestic violence,
sexual abuse, and violence due to one�s perceived sexual orientation or
gender. The U.S. Department of Justice estimates 18% of all women have
experienced a completed or attempted rape; 54% of these women survived their
first rape or rape attempt prior to the age of 18. ["Prevalence, Incidence,
and Consequences of Violence Against Women: Findings From the National
Violence Against Women Survey." U.S. Department of Justice, Violence Against
Women Office, November 1998.] The prevalence and atrocity of sexualized
violence should motivate each of us to speak out and protest these
injustices.
The rally brings together musicians, artists, activists,
and survivors to speak out against sexualized violence. Previous rallies
have featured spoken word poets, all-women drum circles, and moving stories
of survival and vitality. This year�s rally promises to be empowering and
educational for all who attend. Each year, the rally includes a statement of
demands to achieve a violence-free society and world.
The march that immediately follows the rally then strides
through the streets of Ann Arbor. Participants in the march chant, shout,
and sing their opposition to sexualized violence in a powerful, exuberant
"taking back" of the night. A group of peacekeepers and counselors accompany
the marchers, assuring a safe-space for all participants and support for
survivors. "The Take Back The Night march reclaims the spaces taken away by
the ever-present threat of violence," said Anna Phillips, an organizer of
this year�s march, "while celebrating our collective strength, and the
strength of those who marched before us."
This year [2000], the march will be open to all people
for the first time ever in Ann Arbor. The decision to allow any participant
to join in the traditionally "women-only" march came from a heart-felt
dialogue amongst the organizers of the march, students, and members of the
Ann Arbor and larger Washtenaw community. In our consensus, the Take Back
The Night rally and march should serve as a protest and action against
sexualized violence in our community. We invite every member of our
community to participate in this action, as sexualized violence harms all of
us, whether as survivors, friends and family of a survivor, or as citizens
outraged by the existence of sexualized violence around us.
We also recognize the difficulties, if not the
impossibility, of defining who is, or is not, a "woman." Gender identity is
fluid, and cannot be perceived with a simple glance. Recourse to biology, to
separating the females from the males, would conflate sex into gender
identity and [recourse to biology] would ignore Ann Arbor�s strong and
vibrant transgender community. We take the distinction and difference
between sex and gender, and the mosaic of gender identity, as central
principles of our feminism; these principles leave us little basis by which
to separate the "women" from the "men."
We also hope the move to an all-inclusive march will
serve as a statement against the gendering of sexualized violence. Although
men commit the clear majority of sexualized violence against women, women
also survive violence at the hands of other women. A 1992 study found
domestic violence to occur in approximately 25% of lesbian relationships,
near the rate for heterosexual couples. [Renzetti, Claire. Violent Betrayal:
Partner Abuse in Lesbian Relationships. Newbury Park, CA: Sage Publications,
Inc., 1992.]
Transgender violence remains an often ignored,
under-studied, yet deeply troubling problem for our community. A 1997 study
found the murders of 14 transgendered people in the United States, a rate of
over 1 per month. Nearly 20% of the transgendered people surveyed in the
study reported being assaulted with a weapon. Moreover, strangers committed
50% of the incidents reported, and 65% of all incidents occurred in
non-private locations, such as the streets, parks, bars, stores, and
restaurants. [Wilchins, Riki. "First National Survey of Transgender
Violence". GenderPAC.] Men experience sexualized violence as well, often as
children, or as victims of "gay-bashing," which we recognize as a form of
sexualized violence to be confronted. As Cathryn Antkowiak-Howard, a
long-time participant in Ann Arbor�s marches, remarks, "In the year 2000, we
cannot ignore the 1 in 4 women and the 1 in 6 men who are survivors of
sexualized violence. We must take a stand against sexualized violence
against anyone."
The White Ribbon Campaign (Men Against Violence Against
Women) is organizing an alternative event during the march. Also
all-inclusive, the event will focus on how men specifically can change their
own lives to help put an end to violence against women. "I hope many men
will see thealternative event as a better opportunity for personal education
and growth," remarked Gary Brouhard, an organizer of the alternative event.
"While I�m glad I have the choice to march, I also respect how empowering
�women-only� space must feel."