Thursday, November 01, 2007

Great Essay on Ending Violence Against Women from the Brilliant Kevin Powell



Ending Violence Against Women and Girls
By Kevin Powell

In my recent travels and political and community work and speeches around the country, it became so very obvious that many American males are unaware of the monumental problem of domestic violence in our nation. Since October just ended and was Domestic Violence Awareness Month, this seems as good a time as any to address this urgent and overlooked issue. Why is it that so few of us actually think about violence against women and girls, or think that it’s our problem? Why do we go on believing it’s all good, even as our sisters, our mothers, and our daughters suffer and a growing number of us participate in the brutality of berating, beating, or killing our female counterparts?

All you have to do is scan the local newspapers or ask the right questions of your circle of friends, neighbors, or co-workers on a regular basis, and you’ll see and hear similar stories coming up again and again. There’s the horribly tragic case of Megan Williams, a 20-year-old West Virginia woman, who was kidnapped for several days. The woman's captors forced her to eat rat droppings, choked her with a cable cord and stabbed her in the leg while calling her, a Black female, a racial slur, according to criminal complaints. They also poured hot water over her, made her drink from a toilet, and beat and sexually assaulted her during a span of about a week, the documents say. There’s the woman I knew, in Atlanta, Georgia, whose enraged husband pummeled her at home, stalked her at work and, finally, in a fit of fury, stabbed her to death as her six-year-old son watched in horror. There’s the woman from Minnesota, who showed up at a national male conference I organized a few months back with her two sons. She had heard about the conference through the media, and was essentially using the conference as a safe space away from her husband of fifteen years who, she said, savagely assaulted her throughout the entire marriage. The beatings were so bad, she said, both in front of her two boys and when she was alone with her husband that she had come to believe it was just a matter of time before her husband would end her life. She came to the conference out of desperation, because she felt all her pleas for help had fallen on deaf ears. There’s my friend from Brooklyn, New York who knew, even as a little boy, that his father was hurting his mother, but the grim reality of the situation did not hit home for him until, while playing in a courtyard beneath his housing development, he saw his mother thrown from their apartment window by his father. There’s my other friend from Indiana who grew up watching his father viciously kick his mother with his work boots, time and again, all the while angrily proclaiming that he was the man of the house, and that she needed to obey his orders.

  • Read the complete essay by clicking here. "Ending Violence Against Women and Girls," by Kevin Powell
  • 8 comments:

    1. I loved Kevin Powell ever since I first saw him starring on the first season of MTV's REAL WORLD.

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    2. Tyhitia ~ I teach his nonfiction books, especially Who's Gonna Take the Weight and Someday We'll All Be Free all the time. I think he's just so smart and self-reflective that it makes it impossible not to be captivated with his prose...

      Gwyneth

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    3. Kevin makes me proud everytime

      blessings,
      angelia

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    4. Anonymous9:24 AM

      Kevin Powell is so underrated. He's a very intelligent man. I recommend his books to young black men and they are touched after reading them because they are amazed that a man that looks like them have insight to things that affect them.

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    5. Angelia ~ He's a good brother, a smart brother...

      Shelia ~ I agree. I do the same thing. Every brother that I have turned on to Kevin Powell's books has come back to me amazed and just elated to find a brother saying what they are feeling and providing a model for how to grapple with their issues as black men, and the societal stuff... He's just on point and really self-reflective and a powerful voice that more people need to be aware of...

      Gwyneth

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