Posts tagged sex trafficking

THE SURVIVOR STORIES PROJECT: Robin Blue, 53, USA

The Pixel Project is proud to present the Survivor Stories Blog Interview Project in honour of Mother’s Day 2014. The project runs throughout the month of May 2014 and features an interview per day with a survivor of any form of violence against women (VAW) including domestic violence, rape, sexual assault, female genital mutilation, forced/child marriage, sex trafficking, breast ironing etc. A total of 31 VAW survivor stories will be featured. This project was created to provide:

  • VAW survivors a platform to share their stories and solutions/ideas on how they rebuilt their lives and healed/are healing.
  • Girls and women currently experiencing or who have survived VAW ideas, hope, and inspiration to escape the violence and know that there is light at the tunnel and there is help out there.

This project is also part of a programme of initiatives held throughout 2014 in support of the Celebrity Male Role Model Pixel Reveal campaign that is in benefit of the National Coalition Against Domestic Violence and The Pixel Project. Donate at just US$1 per pixel to reveal the mystery Celebrity Male Role Models and help raise US$1 million for the cause while raising awareness about the important role men and boys play in ending violence against women in their communities worldwide. Donations begin at just US$10 and you can donate via the Pixel Reveal website here or the Pixel Reveal Razoo donation page here.

Our twentieth Survivor Stories interview is with Robin Blue from the U.S.A.

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The Survivor Bio:

Robin Blue is an advocate, public speaker, and juvenile intervention specialist. She received her certification for the Treatment of Eating Disorders in 2008, and also holds certifications for batterers’ intervention group facilitation, anger management, and domestic violence groups. She never imagined having the opportunity to finish her education, but is now in her first year of graduate school, after receiving her Bachelor’s Degree in Psychology in 2013. She has survived domestic violence, rape, sexual assault, and sex trafficking. Above all, she is a mother, grandmother, daughter, sister, aunt, and friend.

Robin Blue1. What is your personal experience with gender-based violence?

I am a survivor of childhood sexual assault, though I had no memory of it until I was 29 years old. I remembered the incident in a session of psychotherapy after I had been going to therapy for nearly five years. I was coerced into sex trafficking at the age of 17 and experienced multiple beatings by pimps and partners. It was impossible for me to maintain a stable relationship with anyone even after I got away from that danger of the streets. I felt weak and vulnerable, though still strong for surviving as long as I had. I did not know what hit me the first time I was struck by a domestic partner. I believed I deserved it because of who I was. In trying to escape my past, it would get thrown in my face, literally with a hand, fist, or object.

2. How did you escape the violent situation/relationship/ritual?

I remember running to a phone booth in California with a bloody nose after being abused by a pimp and calling my mother in Oregon, pretending everything was fine. I told her I wanted to come home for Thanksgiving. Somehow she knew that I was not okay and sent for me with a one-way ticket. I was six months pregnant and weighed 96 pounds when I arrived. A little over a month later, I delivered a very premature baby boy. His birth was pivotal in my life; he changed me. I started believing in myself and understood that there was another human being that depended on me for his life. Becoming a mother was the beginning of my escape, though it would take several years to experience complete freedom from abuse. Escape came in many forms – sometimes running for my life in the middle of the night or taking a cab with my children in tow. I reached out to anyone who would help me and, eventually, I was finally free.

3. How did you heal and rebuild your life after the violent situation/relationship/ritual? What actions did you take?

Healing and rebuilding from abuse is a lifetime process. I have learned that self-care needs to take precedence, while health care is also incredibly important. I have had over 30 surgeries to rebuild and repair my body after a violent attack in 1989. Having survived traumatic injuries, it became a priority for me to learn about rape and abuse, and to teach others what I had learned. I have done street outreach for women in the sex industry, worked with adolescents by talking about date rape, shared my story and provided prostitution and pornography trainings, as well as provided workshops on domestic violence to local organisations and shelters. All of these things helped me heal from my own wounds. Eventually, I started my own non-profit organisation and wrote a programme to help people heal from their own personal traumas. I still seek counselling and find safe people to talk to when I am triggered. I remember that no one has to go it alone!

4. What would you suggest to or share with another woman or girl facing the same situation as you did?

I would tell her that gender-based abuse and violence are never the fault of the victim and would encourage her to believe she is courageous because she survived. I would share with young girls who were in situations like mine the value of their worth. It is important to be reminded all that they have to live for. When gender-based violence occurs, the part of you that is intimately and beautifully female gets skewed and stripped away, bit by bit. I would share that, while people might not understand what you are going through, it is still your process and there is hope. I would share all resources I have with her. I would applaud her bravery.

5. How do you think we can end violence against women?

I think we can end violence against women through collaborative projects like this. I am of the worldview that women are typically silenced for their thoughts and behaviours globally, and this is something that needs to change. Education is the key to prevention. Providing curriculums to schools that specifically address issues of gender-based violence starting in middle school and allowing students faced with violence to receive counselling is a huge first step. Supporting survivors is essential to stopping violence in the home, emergency room, church, and school. Believing her is the first step. Taking a stand requires action.

6. Why do you support The Pixel Project?

I support The Pixel Project because I am the mother of three children, two of which are adult males who are amazing, loving, and non-violent. Initiatives that support the roles of men in stopping violence against women are crucial to actually stopping violence. My adult son is involved and engaged in his community as a role model for other young adolescent boys and this achievement cannot be understated. I am in support of this project because it is critical that violence against women be stopped. The National Coalition Against Domestic Violence, one of The Pixel Project’s partners, supported me when they came to my state and gave me a forum where I was able to share my story. It is because of wonderful, caring people and the services that they were able to provide for me that I was learn about domestic and sexual violence. In turn, I am able to help others.

THE SURVIVOR STORIES PROJECT: Sakura Yodogawa-Campbell, 40, USA

The Pixel Project is proud to present the Survivor Stories Blog Interview Project in honour of Mother’s Day 2014. The project runs throughout the month of May 2014 and features an interview per day with a survivor of any form of violence against women (VAW) including domestic violence, rape, sexual assault, female genital mutilation, forced/child marriage, sex trafficking, breast ironing etc. A total of 31 VAW survivor stories will be featured. This project was created to provide:

  • VAW survivors a platform to share their stories and solutions/ideas on how they rebuilt their lives and healed/are healing.
  • Girls and women currently experiencing or who have survived VAW ideas, hope, and inspiration to escape the violence and know that there is light at the tunnel and there is help out there.

This project is also part of a programme of initiatives held throughout 2014 in support of the Celebrity Male Role Model Pixel Reveal campaign that is in benefit of the National Coalition Against Domestic Violence and The Pixel Project. Donate at just US$1 per pixel to reveal the mystery Celebrity Male Role Models and help raise US$1 million for the cause while raising awareness about the important role men and boys play in ending violence against women in their communities worldwide. Donations begin at just US$10 and you can donate via the Pixel Reveal website here or the Pixel Reveal Razoo donation page here.

Our twelfth Survivor Stories interview is with Sakura Yodogawa-Campbell from the U.S.A.

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The Survivor Bio:

Sakura Yodogawa-Campbell has been working to end violence against women for over 20 years. She is the Domestic Violence/Sexual Assault Programme Manager for the Women’s Center for Advancement in Omaha, Nebraska and oversees the programming and staffing of the three-agency 24-hour crisis lines. She has an extensive trauma history including rape, domestic abuse, child sexual abuse and sex trafficking. As a former cutter and now coping with PTSD and Anxiety, Sakura works with survivors of trauma in finding positive ways to cope and speaking about the trauma.

She is currently pursuing a degree in Women’s and Gender Studies as well as her certification for Intentional Peer Support work. She is on the Nebraska Commission for the Deaf and Hard of Hearing’s Mental Health Advisory Committee and is a member of the Nebraska Coalition for Victims of Crime. Sakura received recent recognition for outstanding advocacy service as the Keynote Speaker for the 4th Judicial District in Iowa’s Crime Victims Rights Week luncheon. She was also a Hometown Hero Nominee from the FBI Citizens Academy Alumni Association in 2013 and a Purple Ribbon Award from the Domestic Violence Council in 2008. 

Sakura Yodogawa-Campbell1. What is your personal experience with gender-based violence?

My personal experience is quite extensive. I was first sexually abused around age 6 or 7 and then from there I was first raped at age 11 and began cutting myself. I hated myself and my body and that transferred over to abusive relationships in high school and college. I was raped once in high school and the first weekend in college. As a result, I turned to drugs and alcohol to escape. I can honestly say during those years I was raped no less than 100 times. From 2000-2002 I was in my most physical and sexual violent relationship where the sex trafficking occurred, as well as strangulation.

2. How did you escape the violent situation/relationship/ritual?

It was music, the support of friends and family and finally, and the will to survive that got me out of what I call “the fog”. It took a final act of strangulation for me to wake up and realise that I wasn’t ready to die. My mom was able to help me and I haven’t looked back since.

3. How did you heal and rebuild your life after the violent situation/relationship/ritual? What actions did you take?

Most importantly, I learned to love me. As I tell everyone I have been advocating for women over 20 years but for myself about 8. It really did take me being comfortable with my body and who I am to open up to a healthy relationship, which I have with my partner of 6 years. I also work as an Advocate for victims of violence against women so every day, I am doing for others what was done for me. My experience has given me the energy to survive, thrive and fight. Every day is a new day and I have worked hard to focus on the forward and live in the now versus letting my past lead. I still have PTSD and anxiety issues as a result but I cope with those and am not ashamed of it.

4. What would you suggest to or share with another woman or girl facing the same situation as you did?

First we have to stop blaming ourselves. We have to start loving ourselves. We have to continue to reach out to others and not be ashamed or afraid to tell our stories. Once we OWN it (our experience) it no longer defines us or limits us. By speaking out, we are taking the power on and the person or persons who did this, no longer have that assumed power. There is power in numbers and there are more of us than there are of them (perpetrator’s).

5. How do you think we can end violence against women?

We can end violence against women by being educated. Know that it is real and around us everywhere. We need to educate our children and communities. Prevention is KEY. As survivors, we  need to speak out. Remaining silent and hiding it only keeps it alive. If we speak out, we take that power from those who did the crime. The more we speak out, the more people will have to listen.

6. Why do you support The Pixel Project?

The Pixel Project’s Survivor Story Blog Interview Project is an amazing way to reach people and have survivor’s voices heard because The Pixel Project uses social media and all things techie in the 21st Century to wake people up to what is really happening! I am grateful for this opportunity!

CALL TO ACTION: The Survivor Stories Blog Interview Project

Blog and PenIn honour of Mother’s Day 2014,  The Pixel Project cordially invites women and girls who have survived gender-based violence to join the Survivor Stories Blog Interview Project which will debut on 1 May 2014.

The project will feature an interview with a survivor per day on The Pixel Project’s blog throughout the month of May 2014. A total of 31 survivor stories will be featured and the focus of the interviews would be on how survivors have rebuilt their lives and/or healed from the violence.

The Survivor Stories Blog Interview Project is created to:

  • Give interviewees a platform to share their stories and solutions/ideas on how they rebuilt their lives and healed/are healing.
  • Give girls and women currently experiencing or have survived the violence ideas and inspiration and hope to escape the violence and know that there is light at the tunnel and there is help out there.

This project is also part of a programme of initiatives held throughout 2014 in support of the Celebrity Male Role Model Pixel Reveal campaign which aims to:

  • Raise US$1 million for NCADV and The Pixel Project to fund our respective programmes, project and campaigns to end violence against women and girls.
  • Raise awareness about the role of men and boys in helping stop violence against women in their communities through highlighting the importance of positive non-violent prominent male role models.

Survivors of any form of violence against women including domestic violence, rape, sexual assault, female genital mutilation, acid attacks, sex trafficking, breast ironing, and forced marriage/child marriage, are welcome to participate. Survivors may also come from any part of the world.

The interview will take the form of filling in a short Word-format interview form in English; then returning it to The Pixel Project by emailing it to info@thepixelproject.net or pixelprojectteam@gmail.com by the new extended deadline of 25 April 2014.

To download the interview sheet, click this link:

http://reveal.thepixelproject.net/wp-content/uploads/2014/03/The-Pixel-Project-Survivor-Stories-Project-Interview-Sheet_25April2014.doc

For further information and assistance:

Email The Pixel Project team – info@thepixelproject.net  

For more information about the Celebrity Male Role Model Pixel Reveal campaign:

Visit http://reveal.thepixelproject.net