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Friday 22 May 2015

Women Go Topless To Protest Killings Of Unarmed Black Women By Police In America #SayHerName



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Nearly 300 protesters on Thursday gathered in San Francisco’s Financial District to draw attention to unarmed black women who have been killed by police in recent years.

And, in an unexpected departure from the rest of the nationwide movement, many of the activists did so topless.
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The demonstrators, composed primarily of black women, blocked traffic during the morning rush hour, and honored the names of women like Aiyana Stanley-Jones and Rekia Boyd, who have been recent victims of fatal police brutality.



Following the release of the African American Policy Forum’s report “Say Her Name: Resisting Police Brutality Against Black Women,” social justice organizations announced a national day of action to draw attention to black women who have been gunned down.



Chinerye Tutashinda, a founding member of the BlackOUT Collective, told BuzzFeed News that the decision to carry out the protest by exposing their bodies was a local one, and that she did not expect other demonstrations in other cities to follow suit.

She added that the reasons behind the bold choice ranged from ancestral homage to social critique.

“We wanted to be able to say ‘enough is enough’ and draw on traditions from Nigeria, Gabon, Uganda, and South Africa, from women who bare their chests and other parts of their bodies in protest,” she said.



Exposing their breasts also served as a statement on the societal tendency to fixate on black women’s physical bodies, but not when those same bodies face violence.

Rose Berry works for the local chapter of the Black Youth Project 100, and described the disconnect to BuzzFeed News.

“When it’s in the name of pop culture, and what’s expected in mainstream society, people applaud it, but when it’s in the name of peace and justice and liberation, they ignore it,” she said.



The organizers also talked about the third, more personal impact of protesting topless: For black women who had been victimized by various forms of violence to reclaim their bodies in public space.

Tutashinda said some of the women who removed their shirts “were women who’ve been survivors of rape, who’ve had abortions, who’ve lost children.”

Putting yourself out there makes you very vulnerable,” she said.

As someone who also protested with her chest exposed, Tutashinda said she was terrified.

According to Berry, the protest, while relatively small compared to other related demonstrations, still made a sizable impact.

“There were black women on their way to work who stopped and cried, thanked the women who were protesting,” she said.

Some men joined the demonstration, and while they experienced a few unpleasant words from frustrated commuters, the police were cooperative, Berry added.

“We wanted to kick off the day, give them a dose of black women’s liberation with their morning coffee,” she said. “We won’t be ignored anymore. We’re not invisible. We’ve never been invisible.”



















































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 Photo Credit: BlackOUT Collective

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