Life & Work Magazine
Life & Work Magazine


1 mins

THURSDAYS IN BLACK’ RELAUNCHED

The World Council of Churches is relaunching its “Thursdays in Black” campaign, urging women and men to join the movement and stand up against a culture that enables rape and sexual violence to take place. The campaign was origfinally inspired by existing women’s groups, such as the Argentinean “Mothers of the Plaza de Mayo,” who stood outside the presidential palace in Buenos Aires every Thursday, demanding to know what happened to their children who “disappeared” under the former military dictatorship.

Or the “Women in Black” groups that started with silent protests in Israel and Palestine and then spread to other conlict countries, such as Rwanda during the genocide and Bosnia during the Balkans war.

Or before any of those, the Black Sash movement of white women protesting against the violence of apartheid policies in South Africa.

In the 1990s, the WCC held a Decade of Churches in Solidarity with Women, highlighting the eforts of those resisting all forms of gender violence, including the use of rape as a weapon of war.

Bishop Mary Ann Swenson is vicemoderator of the WCC’s Central Committee. She also serves as bishop in residence for her United Methodist Church in Hollywood, where the recent #MeToo movement took of.

She says that wearing black on Thursdays and sharing stories of women’s resistance and resilience are a vital part of the struggle to combat the culture of rape and violence. “It’s a step toward peace in our whole pilgrimage toward peace and justice,” she says, referring to the initiative, which emerged during the last WCC Assembly in South Korea in 2013.

Swenson says that over the past 70 years of the WCC there have been inspirational women who have stood up and spoken out about the problem, even though some of them have been targeted themselves in places where WCC meetings have taken place.

She believes that attitudes within Christian churches in the past have contributed to the problem, allowing some people “to use the Bible and treat women as property.”

But she adds that she is encouraged by changing attitudes in all faith communities, noting that in Los Angeles recently she took part in an interfaith encounter with Muslim, Jewish, Buddhist, Bahá’í, Sikh and Christian women and men speaking out against violence and about the need to help young men grow up with greater respect for women. (WCC)

This article appears in the August 2018 Issue of Life and Work

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This article appears in the August 2018 Issue of Life and Work