'Draw the Line': women's rights activist, abuse survivor Julie Lalonde speaks in Sudbury
Lalonde helped to create the interactive provincial campaign, Draw the Line
There is still plenty of work to be done to end violence against women, says Julie Lalonde and you can help.
Lalonde, an award-winning Ottawa-based women's rights activistoriginally from Sudbury, Ont., was the guest speaker at Sudbury'sTake Back the Nightrally on Thursday. The annual event and march, which is observedinternationally, is an effortto "end sexual assault, domestic violence, dating violence, sexual abuse, and all other forms of sexual violence."
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Lalondeknows all too well the pain of that violence.
"Isurvived intimate partner violence," she said. "I left a man who was abusive to me, and I was stalked for over 10 years. And I would do work publicly on violence against women, and then go home and suffer in silence because it wasn't safe for me to talk about."
"I want to be the person that I needed when I was suffering."
Lalondehas sincehelped to createDraw the Line, an interactive provincial campaign that"challenges common myths about sexual violence and equips bystanders with information on how to intervene safely and effectively."
Lalonde saidfewer than 10 per cent of sexual assaults are reported to authorities. She wants people who witness sexual violence happening in bars, at parties, on campus and anywhere else to stand up and do something about it especially call out the perpetrators.
"Socially, we're not even standing up and saying, 'This person can't party with us anymore.'"
Listen to the complete interview with Julie Lalonde here.
Way to #TakeBackTheNight Lancers - let's march together to stop violence against women! @LSSLancerNews @JulieSLalonde pic.twitter.com/vL7i7oZTci
—@Ms_Dupuis