Refuges Part 4 - Reassurances From Hostages
aka "yes, we are being treated very well"
Stonewall like to present a united front, saying they surveyed women's refuges across the country on their feelings about self identification and how it impacted their work, and found that everyone's been doing it for ages, and no one has ever had a problem - You can read it all here at Supporting Trans Women in Domestic and Sexual Violence Services
They like to say there are no problems or concerns, but that is a lie. In fact, it's such a shocking mischaracterisation it strikes me as bitterly ironic that charities set up to counter male violence are having to keep quiet (for fear of losing funding and suffering targeted abuse) while Stonewall crow about their happy, progressive consensus.
In response to a petition (signed by 10,000 people) asking Stonewall to acknowledge a variety of views exist in relation to trans ideology; that there can be conflict between women's sex based rights and trans rights; and a plea to reduce the toxicity of the debate around self identification, Stonewall replied that the "petition asks us to acknowledge that there are a range of viewpoints around sex and gender.
"We do not and will not acknowledge a conflict between trans rights and ‘sex based women’s rights’.”
πSTONEWALL
I first interspersed the following quotes in the text throughout Refuges; part three, but there are now too many.
I believe they are too important to miss and they deserve a space of their own. I've collected these from a variety of sources, which you can find linked.
First, a couple of comments from women I have seen online:
From What is a Woman:
"I know of many women using the service who are fearful of losing these safe spaces. Wanting to discuss this, and to express our worries does not make us transphobic. It simply means that we want to protect what we fought for.
Ms Dickie James MBE, Chief Executive, Staffordshore Women's Aid
~
“I have not felt able to speak out because of the repercussions, particularly of funding being withdrawn, the vicious attacks we have seen on services and individuals.
On one level I think ‘I will not be silenced’. But on the other I know that the people who would suffer are the victims of sexual violence.”
Professional in the women's refuge sector
~
"It is very misleading of Stonewall to claim that their report reflects the views of the Violence Against Women and Girls (VAWG) sector, when most organisations did not take part"
- Professional
~
πFOVAS - Response to Stonewall contains the following quotes. They begin with their own statement:
"As survivors of abuse we are very angry at Stonewall’s report (Supporting trans women in domestic and sexual violence services), claiming that the women’s sector believes there is no issue with having trans identifying males in women’s spaces.
~
Karen Ingala Smith gave oral evidence to the Women and Equalities Committee about enforcing the Equalities Act.
~
πWhen I was raped, it was female only spaces which helped me recover
~
"Because of this extensive experience and safeguarding training I am extremely concerned about the implications for vulnerable women and children in refuges if self ID allows admittance to males who identify as women, many of them will have an involuntary trauma response to biological males, regardless of how they identify.
Expecting women to share spaces with biological males (including transwomen) when they are vulnerable and trying to heal, is inhumane, even more so to children, it is not appropriate to expect women to control their own instinctive trauma responses to males and also that of their children.
~
"To whom it may concern,
I am writing to voice my concerns regarding the inclusion of trans identified males in single sex domestic violence (DV) provision. Having worked at a senior level for over 20 years in the DV sector...
During my time in the refuge I worked with women and children who have experienced extreme violence, coercion and sexual assaults at the hands of men... children who have seen their mothers repeatedly beaten, raped, starved, screamed at, locked away and many other horrifying sights.
"More often than not when these children come to a refuge it is the first time they have felt safe. They are always traumatised, some to the point that they cannot speak for days or weeks.
"I have seen children drop to the floor and scuttle under the nearest table at the mere sound of a man’s voice. Many are unable to go to school for months because they can’t cope with male staff ...the mother child bond which is often destroyed ... takes years of patience & work to heal these children and their mothers.
"I am incredibly concerned that women and in particular children would be re-traumatised by the sight and sound of a male person in a women’s refuge.
They will be incredibly confused by this and I believe in some cases their original trauma will be triggered setting them back.
I also have huge concerns around the safeguarding ... single sex facilities for women [are] to keep them safe. We don’t allow males to work or use certain facilities for reasons I have listed above.
The risk and safeguarding issues do not go away simply by a male identifying as a female, nor will the effects of a male bodied person around already traumatised women and children be any less simply by them stating they are a woman.
"I am by no means saying all trans identified men are a risk to women and children, I am saying that in general the great majority of women and children using single sex facilities have been abused by males.
"Having witnessed the lengths males will go to find the safe houses and access vulnerable women I have worked with I honestly believe if we allow trans identified males to use female single sex facilities it is simply a matter of time before it’s abused"
Regards, Miss Heidi Siggers BA Dip C (was Senior DV Young Parent and Child Outreach for Coventry and Warwickshire)
~
"There was a time in the provision of women’s services when the women using that service were consulted about everything from the layout of accommodation to the standard of professionals. Now, silence, nobody wants to hear.
And worse, any understanding of how domestic violence impacts on women is being lost.
"Women need and deserve safe, male free spaces to be silent or not but operating with a real agency. Then, women assert self with the support of other women. This is the chance to break free from the version of femaleness which was used to abuse us!
"My stance in essence is that women are generally socialised to be silent, less verbal, quite per se than men. When with men we are conditioned to ‘give way’ to them.
~
"In the years that I have been working at the shelter, no woman has ever lurked in the bathroom petitioning other women for oral sex. Women have not been made so uneasy by the gaze of another woman that they felt the need to change their clothes, or found themselves too anxious to sleep. It has been men who have done these things. It is men’s behaviour that has made women feel unsafe" Anonymous
~
"There is no evidence that a Recognition Certificate, or indeed so-called transition without a certificate, reduces men’s capacity for violence and abuse of women, or indeed social domination.
~
"We have been notified by a reliable source from one of the organisations interviewed by Stonewall that they chose to deliberately leave out responses about concerns over women’s physical and mental safety with having trans identifying males in places like women’s refuges.
~
"I’m sorry to break it to you, and this may come as a shock to some, but no matter how much you agree with the ideological stance that ‘trans women are women’ a survivor of domestic abuse and sexual violence may never see that trans woman as a woman.
"Should survivors really have to agree with an ideology, in a space that is meant to be reserved for them?
That isn’t feminism to me. It isn’t the purpose of single sex spaces in the VAW sector and it isn’t why the women fled to that space in the first place"
~
"In my view, the Stonewall report is at best a disingenuous depiction of the views in the VAW sector on the proposed changes to the GRA.
~
From victim's organisation FOVAS: "For some of us, our perpetrators were trans at the time of abuse, or transitioned later after abusing us.
"Some predators are males who identify as women and others are just men posing as trans for the purpose of exploiting women. "This will not matter under the reformed GRA as any male will have instant access through being able to declare themselves a woman at any point using a simple administrative procedure" - Via What is a Woman
πStonewall report - disingenuous or gaslighting?
"As I mentioned in my first blog there is a real reason why the voices from the VAW sector are missing. It is the same reason why I write these blogs anonymously.
~
πThe silencing of feminists silences survivors
~
“I am so angry I am even having to write this. Just yesterday I was researching
suicide methods. This is how severely traumatised I am by my abuse.
"I can barely function. I cannot even make meals for myself and have to have carers.
"I should be accessing healing women’s spaces but they are all disappearing…
our voices.”
~
"As someone who has worked with many survivors of violence over the last two decades, I am terrified – both professionally and personally – about the impact of self ID on ensuring safe spaces are available to women who have experienced and are escaping male violence.
πLisa Townsend, police commissioner for Surrey told the Daily Mail
"One of the areas I feel most strongly about is domestic abuse,' she said. 'I've been really fortunate to visit organisations and to have met survivors, both in Surrey and outside of the county. And the one thing that comes through every time is how terrified they are of being forced to admit males. These services are life-saving, and to many of the women who use them it is vital they stay single-sex'
Townsend was later accused of transphobia (the anti-woman brigade keepin' it fresh) but some refuges (link here) were brave enough to speak out in her support:
"The sound of a male voice can be absolutely terrifying when they've been subjected to violence from males and shouting in a loud, deep voice," she said. "When you hear that again it brings back that trauma, so they need some time."
"Unfortunately people are very quick to jump on the bandwagon that if you're pro women-only spaces then you're automatically transphobic.
"Charlotte Kneer, CEO of Reigate and Banstead Women's Aid, also said gender neutral services do not work for women who have suffered domestic abuse"
“Lisa came out to one of our refuges and was interested to know what the women who live there thought about the subject. We found her to be very supportive and wanting to listen and make a difference.
“We should be listening to the voices of the vulnerable women in the refuges. Even if their views could be seen as unpalatable to some, they’re vulnerable and their views should be taken into account.”
πFair Play for Women did their own study and report, which you can read here. This is what they gleaned from a sector clearly embattled and afraid -
"I have been active in the feminist movement for over 20 years, much of it working in the women’s voluntary sector, but also in community activism and volunteering.
“We have seen people and organisations facing targeted campaigns of
harassment, people losing their jobs, organisations losing funding for even
suggesting that some services should be provided on the basis of sex, not
gender identity.
~
“Many professionals – particularly in front line services – are deeply afraid or
intimidated about speaking up on the proposed changes to the GRA. They
are afraid of being smeared, targeted and their organisation’s funders being
contacted by extremist trans activists that also frequently refer to ‘CIS scum’ or
‘Kill/punch a TERF’.”
~
“The silencing of anybody who has justifiable concerns about the impact on
women and girls of including transwomen in women-only spaces is significant.
Most who work in the women’s sector are afraid to share their concerns publicly
as they witness the verbal and sometimes physical attacks on those who do
speak out publicly.
~
“Above all, what stopped me from speaking out before I retired were the
consequences for the women and children in our refuges. The threat of loss of
contracts, time spent fighting legal challenges – they are the ones impacted.
services open anyway, and to keep women and children alive. I’m not frightened
of abusive men, and I’m not frightened of what people say about me – but I do
care about vulnerable women and children.” - Professional
~
“The threat to organisations who take a stand on protecting female-only service
provision is very real.
implications of self-ID for VAWG services." - Professional
~
“Those of us that still exist are all too aware that we are only one contract-cycle
away from forced closure on the grounds of loss of funding.
~
“I personally have to be very careful about what I say in public for fear it could
affect the organisation I work for and my job there.” - Professional
~
“When you see someone accused of transphobia, and calls for them to be
sacked, simply because they have signed a letter saying that women should be
able to talk about a change to the law without fear of violence, this has a chilling effect.
"I have spoken to women MPs who are very concerned about these changes, but frightened of speaking out, journalists who are frightened to write about the issue and women’s organisations who are frightened to discuss the issue in public.
"I know academics who have chosen not to write or teach about these issues because they have seen colleagues face organised campaigns by students to get them sacked.
"None of these people are ‘transphobic’ –
they all want to protect the human rights of trans people.
~
"I am disappointed and furious that so-called second tier organisations who are
supposed to represent us appear to be choosing not to. I don’t know whether
that is through lack of comprehension or fear" - Service user & survivor
~
"I feel utterly betrayed by Survivors Network in Brighton.
have no referral pathway for the women for whom sharing therapeutic or self-
help space with male-bodied people is harmful to their own recovery.
first in the services that we set up with our own money and efforts"
~
“Women-centred providers and feminists who understand domestic violence and feminist theory are the ones who are aware and are afraid to speak out.
"But a large number in the sector have no idea of the dangers, of the needs
of traumatised victims, of the problems these policies would cause.
"Women were murdered in women’s refuges. That’s changed because of lessons
learned and now these murders have stopped. But men are still a threat to
women"
~
"Twenty years on from the physical and sexual abuse I suffered, I am happily
married to a gentle and kind man.
around men I do not know and feel afraid if I am in situations where I feel
vulnerable with unknown males around.
"Female-only spaces are incredibly
important to me and I place huge value on them as they are spaces in which I
can feel safe and know that I will not encounter anyone with a male body.
"I am incredibly distressed by the idea that I and other women like me may be about
to lose those spaces, and the idea that people with an agenda are dismissing
my fears as irrational and weaponising it as transphobia just adds to that.
~
“I have been consistently bombarded with demands to admit men who say they
are victims of abuse which they have experienced from women.
space.
assertion that men are violent to women. "Today I receive hostile messages on
twitter and bullying emails from people who say we should support what they
call transwomen.”
~
“Over the course of many years, I’ve watched the public realm become increasingly toxic with accusations of transphobia, ‘literal violence’ and ‘questioning the right of trans people to exist’ as females – some, but not all of them, feminists – asked questions about the potential impact of self-ID on
VAWG services and, more broadly, on female-only spaces.
"I’ve watched as trans activists and their supporters target funders, employers, meeting venues, and political parties in response to people asking for a broader public dialogue on the issue.
"There urgently needs to be a public debate on gender self-ID and its implication for the protections offered to women as a biological sex class.
~
“It is not a new concept to posit that men pose a threat to female people.
"It is entirely rational for women to be
afraid of males in spaces that are supposed to be safe. And whether or not people are inclined to agree with it, that
includes natal males who now identify as women.”
- Service user & survivor
~
“In six years of working in women’s refuges… we only once [permitted] a man to
come on a childcare outing.
the mothers were anxious that retraumatising situations could happen.
"We had been lucky that time … trans-identified males being allowed near, in any way, or to enter a women’s and children’s refuge [is] not protecting women’s and
children’s needs.
"Since when do we allow women’s safety to suffer to appease people’s identity issues?” - Professional
~
“We do not feel safe having males in our spaces.
ring 999.
safety of other women, yet if he puts on a dress and calls himself a woman you
could welcome him into the refuge – and call women bigots for objecting.”
~
“There is no assessment and no price that can be put on how a woman feels after
male violence and how much she needs, if she so chooses, a female-only space.
"There is, however, research that has been done to evidence this need.” - Professional
~
"Coming from child sexual abuse and trauma by men and I would feel so at risk if
I had to be near trans-identified males.” Service user & survivor
~
“After I was physically assaulted (by a man I didn’t suspect would attack me) I
felt alert, vigilant and distrustful in male company and only felt more relaxed
comfortable and at ease in the absence of male company.
~
“I have experienced habitual male sexual violence since the age of five, when I was at school and supposed to be protected …
- Service user & survivor
~
“A frequent question I get from the women who come to our groups is. ‘Is this
a female-only group?’
session.” - Professional
~
“In the refuges I have worked in over the years the kids arrived very traumatised
from the men in their lives. The male-free environment enabled them to flourish
and gain confidence again.
"They felt safe for the first time ever.
Many of them were bed wetters, would smear faeces, would shake when men were around.
The single-sex environment was essential for them to heal.”
~
“… a great many of the women I supported had not just been abused by one man
but a succession of men, sometimes from childhood (including sexual abuse
by family members)
- Professional
~
“I have worked, campaigned and volunteered alongside, and been friends with transwomen [throughout my twenty year career in this sector] in many
different capacities, and have always supported their right to live their lives
with safety, dignity and respect.
"But I am very worried that the move to self ID creates real risks for the safety and dignity of women.
“We provide services to both women and men, (including both transwomen and transmen) but organised so that there is a women-only space.
"The vast majority of our clients are women (to be clear I mean adult human females)
and we know from talking to them that women-only space is really important
to them to feel safe and to heal.
"The women we support have suffered from
horrific forms of male violence, sometimes over many, many years.
come to our service because they know it is women-only and would not access
services if there were people they perceived to be male present.” - Professional
~
“[It is important to understand] how completely traumatised most women and children in refuges are.
"How important it is to them to have a safe haven where they won’t encounter
any males.
"Adult sons are not even allowed to visit their mothers in refuge.
"These are wonderful safe places that are for women to recover and heal.
trigger a woman into leaving refuge and going back to her abuser.”
- Professional
~
"I was a woman’s aid volunteer in Northern Ireland, both in the refuge and in a charity shop.
"We all know that over 90% of violence is caused by men. It is not ok to throw women’s rights, safety and language ...
To be told that women can be educated out of a trauma response is gaslighting.
"[We are told] that ‘transwomen are women’ and therefore of no risk to us, even as we see headlines about these males who have raped, abused and even killed women.
"Women had to fund and build refuges, fight for toilets and fund and build other women only space. Now we are told that we must allow males in because they are also female/ women.
~
“Anecdotally, I was chatting to a refuge worker the other day.
refuge. Every single one of them said they would leave.”
~
“I am very concerned about Women’s Aid refuges admitting men who say they
are women, either as users of the refuge service or as staff.
"Having been both a Women’s Aid Advice worker and a refuge worker I would be very unhappy in either case.
"Women’s refuges are by definition a place of sanctuary.
"I believe it will seriously affect whether a
woman will stay in the refuge if there are men there who are saying they are
women.”
~
“I was raped as a child and again as an adult.
of my life. Every relationship.
"Women’s Aid gave me the strength to leave my abuser and save my children and myself. But even now, I am terrified around strange men.
"If I even find myself alone in a lift with
a strange man, I have to get out because I can feel an anxiety attack starting.
"It is an in-built biological reaction to years of rape and abuse.
- Service user & survivor
~
“I am a survivor of an abusive Lesbian relationship.
into refuges if they need to.
refuge I would not consider this a safe space for me and would not use the
refuge.”
~
“As a woman I believe I have the right to feel safe and secure when seeking
help.
environment that permitted men there, in whatever guise.
~
“When working in women’s refuges I worked with women who were terrified
that their cross- dressing partners would follow them into the refuge”
~
“My father used to dress up in my mum’s clothes and a mask to abuse me. It’s
essential for me to have women only space.” - Service user & survivor
~
“What we found was the Islamic community would tolerate women in refuges as
they knew they were a woman-only space.
“They still told women lies to stop them coming.
"It is hard to tell when you are not from the UK what is true and what is not. But it reached a point where the community and
women knew that we had other Muslim women in the space, it was female only
and they could come back and say that honour had been served.
“Once the word gets out that these are no longer female-only spaces – and
it will – many Muslim women will no longer be able to use this space safely and it could have life-threatening consequences if they return to their communities.”
~
“It should be obvious that in a place like [Survivors Network] what mattered wa s
we were all of the same sex, not that we shared a letter on a driving licence or
a reissued birth certificate.
I imagine myself in my late teens, plucking up the courage to go a meeting and finding myself sharing the space with someone
physically male. All the vital lessons – about truth telling, boundaries, trusting
my instincts and speaking up would have been undone in that moment. I would
have been uncomfortable and silenced – familiar experiences from years of
abuse – and retraumatised. I would not have gone back.”
~
“The Stonewall report incensed me – suggesting women get lectured or guilt-
tripped for speaking out if they felt uncomfortable with males in their refuge.
It is wrong and it is a gross abuse of women. "You should be believing what they
say if there are issues they want to deal with.
~
“Many women who have been subjected to domestic violence and coercive
control struggle to assert boundaries because of the abuse they have been subjected to, and often because their reality has been so distorted they have to learn to be confident again in their ability to assert reality.
“To tell women in a refuge who have been subject to reality-distorting techniques by an abuser !that they cannot call a man a man but must call him a woman is horrific abuse.
“For that to happen within the confines of a refuge and for women to be publicly
called together in a group by so-called experts to be shamed and ‘re-educated’
is totalitarian, sinister and totally undermines everything a women-only
refuge should be about.
Shame on anyone who subjects women survivors to this.”
~
“I’ve read in the [Stonewall] report how some professionals in the sector would
see the [women objecting to a male-bodied transwoman in their space] as a
chance to ‘re-educate’ survivors about trans issues.
"Apparently some feel it is akin to homophobia and racism.
"I’m afraid this is something I disagree with
entirely.
~
“We talk a lot about being ‘trauma informed’ in our sector. “Traumatic reactions are instinctive, they are not a choice
like homophobia and racism. Telling a traumatised survivor that a male bodied person, who instigates their terrifying
flash backs, is actually a woman is not only cruel, it doesn’t make sense.
~
“For those professionals suggesting that trainers and experts should be brought
into female spaces to re-educate survivors that the man they see, is actually a
woman, I’d suggest they’d be better investing money in their staff and training
them on trauma and person-centred approaches to female survivors.” - Professional
~
“You cannot make this gender-neutral or ignore the danger to women. This
is not just around re-education. You can’t just say ‘these women need to be
re-educated’. No they don’t. This is about male violence, their lived experience
and fear that exists for good reason. You can’t connect this with gender fluidity
– that makes no sense when you have the lens of violence against women and
girls.” - Professional
~
“My need for female-only spaces is hardwired into me as a result of the abuse I
suffered. Pretending that traumatised women can’t tell the difference between
male- and female-bodied people is gaslighting. Asking us to deny the effects of
our trauma, to override all those dreadful feelings destroying us from the inside
out, in order to be kind and inclusive, is simply wrong.” - Service user & survivor
~
“Amongst other female survivors I learned that I wasn’t alone, that it wasn’t my fault, that I was entitled to feel
angry, that my boundaries were important, my truth and understanding of reality were important – not the lies imposed on me by the man who assaulted and raped me.
That my instincts to protect myself – which I had suppressed in a situation where I had no hope of escape – were good ones to be trusted.
I needed women-only space
to learn these lessons. Because I had experienced very intimate sexual crimes – male violence against me as a girl
– I needed to be with members of my own sex. It is not easy
to share those very personal experiences.”
- Service user & survivor
~
"As survivors who are healing we know all too well the effects of trauma. Often
around males, especially those who don’t respect our boundaries, our bodies
grow tense, shoulders stiffen, breathing quickens, and thoughts become cloudy.
We fold in ourselves to try to make ourselves less visible, safe.
It is well known from the work of trauma experts that in such a state of hyper- or hypo arousal, healing cannot take place and attempts at processing what has happened to us simply re-traumatises us, taking us around in circles, which is why female-only spaces are vital to us.
“Demanding women who have been subjected to male violence accept the lie
that ‘this man is now a woman’ violates women’s material reality and reinforces
the lies and intimidations men inflict on women in order to dominate and
control us.” FOVAS
~
“As providers of services for women survivors of men’s violence, in refuges in
particular, we say that we are providing a safe space and one of the ways that
we do this is by providing a woman-only space.
For some women, this may be their first experience of being able to put themselves and/or themselves and their children first.
Too many women grew up being expected to serve and be secondary to their fathers and brothers, socialised to put others first and to be a care-giver before moving into a heterosexual relationship where sex-roles and inequality is repeated.
“I will never forget the woman who cried tears of joy when I worked in a refuge in the 1990s, because I gave her a choice
and she was not required to check with a man before she made it. She told me that it was the first time that she had done that in her life.
I don’t want to allow other women to
be robbed of the freedom that comes with a woman-only space. Freedom from the immediate threat of violence,
from men’s privilege and entitlement, from men’s scrutiny and from the male gaze.”
- Professional
~
“When Survivors Network was set up, we had discussions about our relationship
with similar groups for male survivors of childhood sexual abuse.
We decided that we wanted a relationship of solidarity but not shared space. This was not
only because including men would have hindered the valuable work I’ve just
described, but also because, as women, we are socialised to take care of men,
and didn’t want to also take on that care-taking role for male survivors.
For many of us, with boyfriends or husbands, this was the one space where we put
our own needs first.” - Service user & survivor
~
“I have previously worked in, and run, refuges for Women’s Aid.
The idea of any male who identifies as a woman having access scares me.
People … speak of the assessment process to access a refuge and how this would weed out potential abusers. Firstly, this is ridiculous because it is impossible to tell someone’s
intentions and many abusers are good at putting on a front (it’s the same logic
that says that women should automatically know who is a rapist and who isn’t).
“Secondly, I think people who believe this have no idea how basic the assessment to actually enter the refuge can be, especially if out of hours.
The over-the-phone assessment done at weekends or in the night is incredibly basic
(a handful of questions) and also relies on the person replying honestly and we did not meet the person before they turned up to the refuge…
In this situation a male could arrive on the doorstep of a house staffed by one female worker at three in the morning, with abused women and children in bed, and with hardly
any assessment of any kind.” Professional
~
“I am amazed at the bold claim by some professionals in [the Stonewall
report] that state they can risk assess for a sexual predator trying to access
a refuge! They really ought to tell the probation service, the police and
safeguarding professionals how this is done. It would save a lot of money
and, more importantly, a great deal of heartache for survivors of sexual
violence.” - Professional
~
“There wouldn’t even be a need to dress in women’s clothes – since we are
constantly told that the only thing that makes someone a woman is how they
identify. Since we can’t see inside the mind of another person, we can only
judge identity by what they say, so effectively self ID means anyone who says
they are a woman, is a woman.” - Professional
~
“The idea that an abusive man won’t try and use self-ID to get into a refuge is a nonsense. Beyond a shadow of a doubt they would.
I don’t see how referral systems would
work this out. How easy is it going to be for an abusive man to get in? It won’t take them long to work it out. “There is no acknowledgement that male perpetrators of violence will go to any
lengths to access vulnerable women and children.” - Professional
~
"With self-ID policies we will effectively be giving the keys to women’s refuges
to abusive men. If that happens, beyond a shadow of a doubt, women will die.
Never ever underestimate the potential for abusive men to track down, find and
torture their victim if they decide they are going to.
“I remember in the 80s when we were just starting to set up women’s refuges a
woman was kidnapped from a refuge and a short while later her cut up remains
were dumped on the refuge doorstep.
Police will rapidly respond to calls to
women’s refuges now but people are forgetting these experiences, the violence
we faced. They are throwing away the safety and security of women and
children if they throw away the lessons we have learnt from the past.
“These men will use anything, any piece of legislation they can find to try and
get at women and children.
We must never forget that children in refuges have also been subject to horrendous abuse by male perpetrators who will stop at
nothing and will use every legal system going to regain control of the children,
and use that control as a lifelong weapon of abuse against their mothers.
They are making the same mistakes as some liberal refuges did in the early days who
decided to let in men. It wasn’t until things went wrong that they realised ‘Oh
that wasn’t such a good idea.’”- Professional
~
“Violent men lie. Of 37 men who pleaded not guilty to murdering women in 2016, 28 were found guilty of murder, four were found guilty of manslaughter, four remained
charged (by October 2017), only one was found not guilty
of murder.”- Professional
~
“Of course some women can be violent, of course there can be conflict between
women and of course there are inequalities between women – but refuges are
safer because they exclude men. We are no more casting aspersions on the
nature of a male who identifies as transgender than we are on men who do not
use violence. The fact remains that risk assessments are at best imperfect tools
and that blanket exclusions help us create safe spaces for women, and for many
women they are a necessary respite from which they can move forward after
abuse.” - Professional
~
“There are real issues for women’s safety in services that provide accommodation (like refuges) or in prisons as a result of self-ID.
This is already happening, before any
change in the law. Once you say that anyone who says they are a woman has to be allowed into a women-only space this creates opportunities for violent men to enter
those spaces. This is sometimes presented as a transphobic fear of transwomen – but the real risk is from men who are not trans, but claim to be so in order to enter women’s
services.”
- Professional
~
“Self-identification will increase the numbers of males, with a sense of
entitlement, fostered through their male socialisation, who feel justified in
attempting to access services developed to support women who have been
subjected to men’s violence.
Services that are already in short supply.” - Professional
~
“How will we prevent predatory males accessing women’s spaces when we
firstly have no access to their records to know if they are a rapist?
Secondly, [services] are not allowed to ask if they are trans and thirdly even if we know they are trans we are not able to prove this because under the GRA their birth
certificate will now say female.
How can services refuse any male on this basis?
If you do you could be subject to endless legal challenges draining time, energy
and resources. We also worry the onus will be put onto vulnerable women to
say they don’t want trans people in their spaces.” FOVAS (Survivor’s Collective)
~
“I have worked for decades in the area of violence against women and girls. This
is a gendered area in the sense of biological sex. It is about violent misogyny
against women and girls as a sex.
because it is collected on the basis of gender identity not biological sex then
we are getting into real danger here. We will no longer be able to see the real
nature of this violence.” - Professional
~
“I remember having a bizarre conversation on the phone years ago with a psychiatric hospital who wanted to refer a patient. I spoke to the patient, who was clearly a man so I went to visit them on site because I wanted to be sure before taking them back to a place of safety, the refuge. This person was on a woman’s ward and the hospital had told me they were a woman, but they were clearly a man. Back then I could simply say ‘No, no men are allowed in a woman’s refuge’ – but now I don’t know if I would get away with that.
that he was a woman. How much worse will it now be if the law tells me I must
now accept that man as a woman.” - Professional
~
“I am a woman who comes from a background of domestic violence as a child. I am severely male -phobic due to the severity of the abuse I suffered.
some distress and confusion.
- Service user & survivor
~
“Domestic violence on women is so raw – men, whether truly men or trans –
need to understand why women need their own space and think about setting
up their situation for those who don’t mind instead of criminalising women who
don’t feel safe or comfortable in situations which include men.” - Service user & survivor
~
“Most decent transwomen – and they are the majority – would understand how
triggering their presence could be and would not take a job in a refuge. Which
leaves those with less than honourable reasons, plus males who can ID as
female to access vulnerable women, including their ex partners.” - Professional
Women's refuges are between a rock and a hard place, terrified of activists. Several women's refuges have lost funding in 2021 alone, all for being single sex.
It is time to stand up for these women, their children and also for those trying to establish trans spaces.
Be brave. Not everyone can afford to.