Take Back the Night

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Take Back the Night (also known as Reclaim the Night) is an international march and rally intended as a protest and direct action against rape and other forms of violence against women, originated by the radical feminist movement.

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History

The term "Take Back the Night" came from the title of a 1977 memorial read by Anne Pride at an anti-violence rally in Pittsburgh [1]. The first "Reclaim the Night" march was held in Belgium in 1976 by the women attending the International Tribunal on Crimes Against Women [2]. They marched together in solidarity, holding candles to protest the ways in which violence permeates the lives of women worldwide. Other marches were held in Rome in 1976 as a reaction to recently released rape statistics, in West Germany in 1977 demanding "the right to move freely in their communities at day and night without harassment and sexual assault," and in 11 towns in England later in 1977 in response to the "Ripper Murders" in Leeds. The first known "Take Back the Night" march in the United States was organized in San Francisco, California on November 4, 1977, by Women Against Violence in Pornography and Media, and marched through the red-light district of San Francisco in protest of rape and pornography which they identified with the sexualized subordination of women. Susan Brownmiller, a radical feminist journalist who participated in the San Francisco march, recalls,

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Events

Events typically consist of a rally, followed by a march, and often completed with a speak-out or candlelight vigil on violence against women. The marches are often deliberately women-only, in order to symbolize women's individual walk through darkness, and to demonstrate that women united can resist fear and violence. (Other marches include men; the organization differs as each event is organized locally.)

While the march began as a way to protest the violence that women experienced while walking in public at night, the purpose of these marches was to speak out against this violence and raise community awareness as a preventative measure against future violence. The movement has since grown to encompass all forms of violence against all persons, men, women, and children, though violence against women is still the movement's main focus. The word night was originally meant to be taken literally to express the fear that many women feel during the night, but has since changed to symbolize a fear of violence in general. This helps the movement incorporate other feminist concerns such as domestic violence and sexual abuse within the home. The march has grown from a widely publicized event that took place in major cities to an event that happens internationally from large metropolitan areas to small college campuses, all advocating for the right of everyone to feel safe from violence.

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The march has since spread to many locales.

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References