Saturday, November 14, 2009

Skeleton Structure of Sexual Assault Support During Mass Mobilizations

saworkingroup(a)gmail.com

We believe that sexual assault support should be and can be incorporated into mass
mobilization organizing, the same way that medical, legal, and housing logistics are
now taken into account. Below we present an outline of possibilities for organizers
of mass mobilizations. The following suggestions should give any group of activists
who take on the organizing role for a large-scale protest or other mass event the
tools they need to find experienced survivor advocates, set up a structure for them
to work within, and offer resources to support survivors of sexual assault. We feel
that with a clear outline of actions and structures that make mass demos more
welcoming to survivors of assault, even event organizers who have no experience
doing support work, can create spaces that challenge patriarchy and truly value the
participation of survivors.
Skeleton Structure of Sexual Assault Support During Mass Mobilizations:
Some Suggestions

CALLOUT FOR SUBMISSIONS!
We are looking for more practical experience, stories from the frontlines,
criticism, resources, and suggestions! We hope to turn this into a zine complete
with example consent policies, handouts, guides for giving support, and stories.
DEADLINE: January 1st 2010.
E-mail to saworkingroup(a)gmail.com


Introduction

We believe that sexual assault support should be and can be incorporated into mass
mobilization organizing, the same way that medical, legal, and housing logistics are
now taken into account. Below we present an outline of possibilities for organizers
of mass mobilizations. The following suggestions should give any group of activists
who take on the organizing role for a large-scale protest or other mass event the
tools they need to find experienced survivor advocates, set up a structure for them
to work within, and offer resources to support survivors of sexual assault. We feel
that with a clear outline of actions and structures that make mass demos more
welcoming to survivors of assault, even event organizers who have no experience
doing support work, can create spaces that challenge patriarchy and truly value the
participation of survivors.

We have tried to come up with a broad menu of suggestions that organizers can use,
change, or ignore as best fits their particular context. Successful support
structures need not include everything listed below. Invariably, many people will
have different ideas and disagree with some of ours. Diversity and discussion should
be embraced. If you have something you would like to add to this ever-changing,
growing document, please let us know.

In solidarity,

The Pittsburgh G20 Resistance Project Ad-hoc Sexual Assault Response Working Group
November 2009
saworkingroup(a)gmail.com



Why We Must Respond to Sexual Assault at Mass Demos

Sexual assault happens at mass mobilizations.
The transient and chaotic nature of protests makes them an especially likely time
for assaults to happen. Perpetrators of assault may feel less accountable for their
actions when they are outside of their usual communities. Abusers can take advantage
of the instability of things like housing and travel, as well as heightened levels
of emotional trauma, and the sudden bonds of comradeship that come from facing a
common adversary. At the same time, protesters often temporarily suspend the usual
mechanisms they employ to ensure their safety while they focus on demo actions and
goals. Solidarity is an assumed and necessary part of shared struggle—and abusive
people have time and again shat on our trust.

Meanwhile, the state uses sexual assault as a weapon of torture against dissent.
Police repression is often gendered and sexualized. Many of our friends who are
abused by the police or imprisoned will be further targeted because of their gender,
gender presentation or identity, and sexuality. Queer, trans, and gender-variant
activists may be particularly singled out, as the state imposes patriarchal binaries
onto the bodies of those who reject them. It is essential that we are ready to
support our comrades through police abuse and repression, affirm and celebrate each
others' right to self-identity, and offer loving care for the long haul.

Some survivors of sexual assault avoid mass demos because perpetrators and abusers
participate in them.
When our communities refuse to stand in solidarity with survivors, we welcome
perpetrators into them. Because abusive people face no real accountability for their
actions in most activist spaces, they feel entitled to those spaces. Survivors are
left on their own to decide how and if they want to navigate that scene. Some of us
work really hard to know in advance the movements of people who have abused us so
that we can avoid seeing them, or at least so we can steel ourselves for whatever
further abuse or trauma an interaction with that person may bring up. Even if
survivors are choosing not to allow a perpetrator’s presence to deter us from our
participation in mass demos, that person’s presence can still mess with our ability
to devote all our energy to our goals. We might need to secure different housing; we
might stay up all night or have to deal with latent trauma that that person triggers
(instead of taking care of the trauma of battling the cops all day); we might freeze
up in the middle of an action when we realize that that person is there beside us.

Some people avoid mass demos altogether because they feel the culture of summit
protests encourages patriarchal domination and sexual assault. Militant protest is
not the domain of some macho boy’s club. But when we don’t organize our protests in
solidarity with survivors, we force those who face sexualized oppression to divide
their tough, capable efforts between the goals of the demo and their own survival.
We are alienating our comrades. Our movements are losing their creativity, anger,
and strength. In exchange for what?

Who are we in solidarity with anyhow?
We are resisting global hegemonic trade agreements and imperialist war because these
monoliths operate without consent from or accountability to the people they fuck
over. Make the connection: the US interrogation chambers at Abu Ghraib and
Guantanamo use sexual assault as a weapon of torture to further racist, neoliberal
imperialism. The prison industrial complex cultivates a rape culture in US prisons
to maintain control of inmates and punish anyone who doesn’t fit rigid gender
binaries. The long history of rape and lynching of African Americans in the US used
sexual assault and sexualized brutality to uphold white supremacy. Sexual assault is
one of the most intimate weapons of the white supremacist, capitalist patriarchy.
While experienced on the deepest personal level, the impacts of sexual assault go
far beyond any individual violations. Every time we disrespect consent or dismiss
the needs of a survivor, we are perpetuating and actively contributing to these
oppressions, targeting and silencing resistance against them.

Any fascist can fight the cops. When we are building our movements of resistance,
who we are standing in solidarity with matters. We propose that our movement stand
with survivors. What follows are some concrete suggestions of how to do that.

Suggested Elements of a Sexual Assault Response Structure:

Below is an outline of what we feel is a complete—and perhaps excessive—list of
elements that organizers could incorporate into a sexual assault prevention and
response structure at a mass mobilization. We don’t intend for this to be a
definitive guide to how or what should be included at every demo, but more a broad
menu of suggestions that organizers can choose from according to their particular
resources, abilities, and needs. We have tried to include justifications and
reflections based on personal experience as well as clear how-to’s for each of our
ideas. There is no single “correct” way to deal with issues of abuse in our
communities. What follows are our much debated conclusions; organizers should expect
to think about and justify their own decisions based on context, philosophy, and
available resources.

Policies for Activist Spaces: Consent and No Perpetrators Policies

Consent Policy
A consent policy is a well-publicized statement against sexualized violence in
activist spaces that explains and defines the importance of consent in physical,
sexual, and/or all interpersonal relationships.

This policy should be posted on the web, e-mailed to listserves, and put up as a
poster version in mass housing and demo convergence spaces.

Posting a consent policy serves several purposes:



It helps set the culture of the event by bringing sexual assault prevention to the
foreground and outlining clear expectations of relationships

It can educate about consent

It provides a clear basis for further action, like providing support to survivors,
mediation, or removing or banning perpetrators from spaces

No Perpetrators Policy & Enforcement
We recommend also making a statement along the lines of “perpetrators of sexual
violence, assault, and harassment who have not participated fully in a community
accountability process (as defined by the affected survivor(s) and community) are
not welcome in any protest organizational spaces.” This policy should be posted
along with the consent policy.

This statement can be enforced by various methods, like:



Contacting known perpetrators (for example, after survivors contact organizers to
tell them about someone who they know is coming), and demanding that they not come
to the event

Working with accountability groups, if there is one, to enforce the demand

Working with space security to remove banned people and anyone who refuses to
respect consent guidelines during the event

To encourage and respect those former perpetrators who have chosen to undergo a
community-based, survivor-centered accountability process, these guidelines should
not apply to those who have completed such a process and whose community and
survivor(s) feel like they have dealt with their consent issues.

We feel it’s important to state upfront that perpetrators who refuse to be
accountable for their actions are not welcome in activist spaces because:


This creates a culture that values survivor participation—both in the specific
instances where a survivor let’s you know ahead of time that some perpetrator’s
presence is preventing them from coming, and in the general sense that the space
will be made to feel a little bit safer, since it’s up front that the organizers
will have survivors’ backs

A clear policy might give survivors the encouragement needed to come forward and act
on their discomfort, where otherwise they may feel silenced

This provides a basis to enforce consent policies during the event

This provides a clear incentive for perpetrators to engage with accountability
processes within their community—perpetrators often ignore these processes because
they face no real consequences for doing so

On the Ground Support Structure
The real work of sexual assault survivor support at a mass demo is based on a small
crew (3-10 people) of volunteers who are willing to act as advocates and support
people to survivors. This crew, of varying experience and training, are there to
help survivors access resources and, perhaps most importantly, to listen. Below we
list resources and roles this crew can take on.

Peer Counseling and Support
This is the most important work that advocates can do. We can provide a safe, quiet
place and a clearly identified and easily accessible person who is willing to
listen. We can listen to a survivor’s experiences, validate their emotional
reactions, and assure the survivor that it was not their fault. We can give them
time to collect their thoughts, figure out what happened, and what they want to do
for next steps. We can let survivors know about all the resources they have access
to, and assure them that whatever they choose to do, we support it, and we will help
if we feel we can.

Patriarchal culture violates survivors of sexual assault in every step of its
aftermath. It begins by silencing those who want to put words to their experiences.
We can empower survivors and help dismantle patriarchy by simply listening. Listen
to the jumbled thoughts, the doubts, the anger, the fear. We can take it a step
further by reinforcing a survivor’s autonomy. Much of the trauma of sexualized
violence comes from someone stripping someone else of their agency. As support
people, we can remind survivors of their own power at every moment, by ensuring that
they are able to make all decisions about their own lives and healing process.

It is not for us to judge how “bad” an experience was, or what an appropriate
reaction is. Sexualized violence is about more than any physical wounds it may
leave. Just because patriarchal culture teaches us to define violence by visible
scars and bruises does not mean that our bodies or psyches will conform to that
definition. On top of that, trauma is cumulative. Living in patriarchal culture
means we all learn about and may experience gendered and sexual violence every day.
It is impossible to predict what straw will break the proverbial camel’s back.
Finally, trauma manifests in different ways, and some survivors are as likely to
laugh or go numb as to cry. Meet survivors where they are. Listen.

There are more resources on active listening in the “Practical Suggestions for Peer
Counseling and Support” section.

Local Resources: Rape Crisis Centers, Shelters, Hotlines
It’s worthwhile to investigate local survivor support resources and know what
services they provide. If organizers have limited resources to devote to support,
then the local hotline and shelter can offer what you cannot. They can also serve as
backup if any of your support structure falls through, like safe housing,
counseling, etc. Finally, rape crisis centers can give survivors access to legal and
law enforcement resources, including rape kits, if they choose to pursue them, while
still maintaining separation between police and activist spaces.

Contact local rape crisis centers, shelters, etc. to find out:


What services they provide and how to access them

How they deal with transgender folks and people from out of town, out of state, or
out of the country

Suggestions of which ER is the best to take survivors

Tell them about your support system

Consider publicizing the local hotline number to medics, legal, and activists at
large.

Safe housing
Alternative, safe housing is a useful and often-used resource organizers can offer
survivors. For many people, mass housing situations are scarier and more dangerous
then what they may face on the street. Giving them the option of alternative housing
would allow them to focus on their real goals for the demo, instead of worrying
about safety where they sleep.


Offer a smaller, quieter alternative to mass housing for those who request it

Offer safer space housing: queer safer space, or trans and women safer space, or
whatever best fits people’s needs and comfort levels

Additionally, organizers can provide a secret safe house for emergency housing
switches that may need to happen at any time day or night. This would be for any
person who has experienced a sexual assault or does not feel safe in their current
housing situation. Ideally, a safe house is safe because identification of the
person whose house it is and its location are kept as secret as possible to protect
the person who felt unsafe in different housing. The number and location may only be
known to those bottom-lining support because it is safer for the survivor and safer
for the host. The host is generously opening their home to strangers in crisis—if
possible, the host should have experience with sexual assault advocacy. They need
not be expected to engage in counseling.

Transportation
Someone on the support crew should have access to a car and a cell phone, and be
available 24/7 to transport a survivor and advocate to a rape crisis center, the ED,
a safe house, the clinic, pharmacy, etc.

Emergency Phone Number
A central phone number makes it easier for people to access the support team. This
can take the form of one of the advocate’s personal cell number being passed around
to other support people and clinic and convergence staff—in this case, be sure to
post the number at intake tables and announce the support team at every meetings,
large and small. Or, perhaps a pre-paid cell phone, that can be available to the
activist public, posted on flyers, texted, e-mailed, website, good old word of
mouth, etc.

Legal and Security
Identify legal resources available to survivors both within and outside the activist
community. Have a legal contact, exchange numbers. Find out local laws regarding
time to report an assault and timing of rape kits & DFSA kits (drug facilitated
sexual assault kits).

Pre-arrange how to remove an identified perpetrator if needed.

Printed Resources
Gather or prepare printed resources, like zines and pamphlets, on consent and
support to have available for everyone who is interested. These can be placed at the
convergence spaces, mass housing, the clinic, etc. A good resource for zines:
www.phillyspissed.net

Outreach
To let people know about the resources they can access:Post flyers explaining
available resources and how to access them at any and all relevant locations


During any and all meeting of activists, make the sexual assault support team known.


Include why it’s needed, what it can do, and how to access it

Make your role as a sexual assault support person known. People may remember your
face as connected with support

Work to connect sexual assault advocacy and crisis support in general to the medic
and wellness community

Coordinating Sexual Assault Response with Medical and Legal Support
It’s important to connect with the legal team and street medics at demos because
they have a lot of resources to offer survivors, and because as front-line support
people, they are likely to be approached by someone who has experienced sexualized
violence.

Medics, the Clinic, and Wellness Space
Medic response at mass demos varies from a few trained street medics showing up the
day of, to months-long coordination to create a tight network of medics in the
street and to secure spaces for clinics and a wellness center (for things like
counseling and bodywork). Street medics are on the front lines of protests,
responding to injuries, chemical weapons, and emotional trauma. Their visible and
caring role makes them likely to be approached by survivors who need support.

The clinic and especially the wellness space may be well equipped to deal with
emotional trauma, making them good bases for the support crew to work in. Because
these spaces are likely to be well advertised, it would be easy to direct survivors
there to find support.

In the past, many support volunteers were also medics and filled these dual roles at
protests. Because of this, it might make sense to incorporate survivor support into
the medic structure, if medic organizers have the ability to take on this
responsibility. Survivor support and emotional trauma care are important skills for
street medics to learn. Medics and support people will usually work closely
together.

Resources that medics might have on hand that they can offer a support crew and
survivors:


Safe and quiet space

Herbs

Acupuncture and acupressure

Massage

Reiki

Allopathic care

Resources that the support crew can offer medics:


Advocates to whom medics can direct survivors. These support volunteers should
identify themselves to clinic staff and at medic meetings

Handouts with basic info on available resources and how to be supportive

Workshops and trainings on survivor support and emotional trauma care

Legal Support Team
Legal teams at demos often include lawyers, on-the-street legal observers, jail
support with hugs and rides for those getting released, and a few dedicated behind
the scenes people who staff the legal hotline, figure out just what has happened to
all of our friends, and help comrades through long-term court cases.

Because state repression is often gendered and sexualized, legal observers may
witness, hear about, and document sexualized police violence. Gender variant and
queer activists may be particularly targeted. Verbal abuse, sexual assault, and
being forced into the "men" or "women" jail cells of a gender with which they don't
identify are all possible types of repression activists may experience. It’s
important that legal and jail support be reminded to affirm the choices of gender
variant folks to identify themselves to the cops as however they feel safest—and
that this decision does not affect the reality of their identity.

We recommend that the support crew outreach to the legal team and prepare to work
with them. Survivors may come on their own to the legal team needing support or
documentation of abuse, in which case the legal observers should know how to direct
the survivor to the advocates. They could also be provided a handout that explains
basic support (see example in appendix). The support crew might accompany a survivor
to speak with legal observers, or bring a survivor's request that they document
police repression. If possible, it would be good to have an advocate doing jail
support. If so, that person should try to be visible and identify themself to other
jail support.

Other Needs: Crisis Support During Actions
Once sexual assault crisis support is known and available, the support crew may be
called on to deal with crisis counseling and peer counseling in general. There is a
clear need for this resource at mass actions.

Advocates and Support Volunteers
You can structure the support crew however makes sense based on people’s different
levels of experience, training, and boundaries. Roles can be divided up amongst more
people or consolidated.

Bottomliner or main advocate
We recommend having only one or two people bottomline the support crew, with access
to all resources. Other support volunteers could go through the bottomlining
person/people to access these. This minimizes the number of people who know about
safe houses, assaults, etc. Security culture around assault is important! Sometimes
the easiest way is to simply minimize the number of people who know about it.

This could be problematic—giving any one or two people a lot of knowledge that other
people don’t have access to can set up a bad power dynamic. It could shift
responsibility to deal with assault from the community to one “expert.”

Decide as a group if you need specific bottomliners. Decide if this person’s role
should be made public, or kept within the group. We recommend that bottomliners be
people with more experience dealing with sexual assault and, more importantly,
people who have more emotional energy and time to devote to being available to deal
with it. Since assaults are fairly infrequent, not everyone needs to make SA
response their top priority at a demo, but at all times someone should.

The bottomliner’s roles may include:


Be visible and available; announce self at meetings, etc.

Support and active listening or counseling


Refer survivors to clinic and wellness resources

Refer to doctor, pharmacy, or whatever’s appropriate for pain, STI and pregnancy
concerns

Refer to long-term local counseling: 1-800-656-HOPE or http://rainn.org/get-help

Emergency housing coordination

Getting backup to oust perpetrators

Transportation

Accompaniment to hospital or rape crisis center

Answering the emergency phone number

Support and education/advice for other support volunteers

Selfcare

The bottomliner(s) would ideally be trained and experienced Rape Crisis Advocates or
similar experience.

Other support volunteers
Most of the work the support crew will do is simply listening. That role should be
spread out so people are available wherever survivors may be.

Basic support crew roles include:


Be visible and available


Announce self at meetings

Positioned at mass housing, convergence spaces, wellness center, and clinic

Maybe wear a symbol, color, or nametags that identify support crew

Support and active listening


Call the bottomliner for:


Medical needs: STIs, pregnancy concerns, pain

Legal needs: rape exam, filing charges

Housing needs: safe housing

The perpetrator is identified and needs to be removed

You feel overwhelmed or very concerned about the person’s mental health (especially:
suicidal threats, fear of repeated abuse)

Selfcare

Having a support crew with diverse gender & sexual identities, racial/ethnic,
language and cultural backgrounds would help make support more accessible to a
greater number of people.

Support people don’t necessarily need any prior experience or training as long as
they can get access to some educational materials (see appendix) and experienced
advocates with whom to share experiences.

Practical Suggestions for Peer Counseling and Support

Prepping for Peer Counseling

Materials:


Tissues: When people experience a disempowering event, it may stir up long-buried
and painful memories, unresolved issues from the past, current stressful concerns,
and generally many very painful and difficult emotional experiences. Tissues help.

Water

Tea brewed for occasion

Small snacks

Notebook & pen: This can help people to re-organize themselves and their priorities,
and help them feel less jumbled. Making a mind map, lists, or other visual aides to
sort things out may be helpful.

Whatever useful stuff: At mass mobilizations, most people do not have the comforts
of home—especially if they have been arrested and separated from their phone, car,
friends, and/or other personal items like their backpack containing everything they
need for their time away from home. People may also be separated from their support
network, if they have one, or concerned for members of their support network who may
be in jail or M.I.A.

Preparation:
Take care of yourself first. Make sure you've eaten. Pour yourself some water or tea
(cautiously, you could end up spending upwards of an hour with them and you don't
want to have to run to the bathroom in the middle of providing much needed support).
Use the bathroom. Make sure you are not stressed or overburdened with your own
issues. If you are, cope with them or put them aside as you see fit. Be
responsible—if you aren't able to provide someone with 100% support, don't do it.
Ask someone else to. Not attending to your own mental/emotional needs can cause
catastrophe for someone who expects you to be there for them. NEVER unload your
emotional baggage on someone who has come to you for help.

During a session

Listening is most important.

Silence is okay. Don't feel the need to fill in space by talking.

Don't draw conclusions. Only attempt to verify what the person is trying to tell you.

What are they most concerned about? For example, safety of themselves & their
friends, what to do next, how to get their stuff back if they were arrested,
injuries they may have sustained, how to get home, how to explain what happened to
family, friends, boss, teachers. Offer gentle suggestions, but think through what
you're going to say VERY carefully before you say it. Practical suggestions play a
very important role right now—you should be in touch with lawyers, people with
medical expertise, etc., because before mental/emotional needs can be met, physical
and more immediate needs must be dealt with.

Be prepared to talk with people who have long-term emotional, mental, physical,
social, and other issues to deal with, because disempowering experiences really
bring to light many other times in someone's life where they have felt disempowered.
People will come to you with a variety of concerns, which may not on face value seem
related to recent events.

Remember consent practices before you touch/hug/embrace or enter into anyone's
personal space. Give them the power to make ALL decisions, even "little" decisions
because they have probably experienced moments when they had no control over what
happened to them, or no prediction of what could happen next.

People often behave in ways that they normally wouldn't when under stress or in
unusually disempowering situations, so if someone brings that up with you, reassure
them that they acted that way for a reason, even if it wasn't okay. But let them
deal with it and acknowledge that they did something that hurt others. It is of
paramount importance that people are assured that all of their feelings and emotions
are valid; it is what they do with them that could hurt others.

Possible Timeline:


Month(s) before the demo


Send out “Call to Action” for survivor support people

Goal: 2-3 people to bottomline the Sexual Assault Response Working Group


Draft Sexual Assault Response policies

2-3 weeks before the demo


Set up the local response structure:


Contact local rape crisis centers, shelters, etc. Find out:

What services they provide and how to access them

How they deal with transgender folks and people from out of town, out of state or
out of the country

Suggestions of which ED is the best to take survivors

Tell them about your support system

Set up emergency safe housing

Coordinate with mass housing and/or convergence space organizers to set up a way to
oust perpetrators and deal with security issues

Figure out phone/hotline: Do you need to get a prepaid phone?

Figure out transportation: Does anyone on the support crew have a car? Can you
borrow one from someone else?

Identify legal resources available to survivors both within and outside the activist
community

Have a legal contact, exchange numbers

Pre-arrange how to remove an identified perpetrator if needed

Find out local laws regarding:


Time to report an assault

Timing of Rape kits & DFSA kits (drug facilitated sexual assault kits)

Begin organizing support crew

Send out a 2nd Call to Action


Goal: 5-10 rad support volunteers with diverse gender, race, language, and other
identities

Publicize Sexual Assault Response Policies far and wide (and incorporate into mass
housing, medical, and other activist space policies)


Include description of support structure that will be available

Gather resources for support crew, handouts for medics and legal, zines to distro,
etc.

1 week to go!


Establish support crew roles


Via e-mail or phone, share experience, training, who wants to do what, who
identifies with which genders, any boundaries or limits/special needs, who has what
special resources or skills

Decide on main advocates, transportation, and any other big roles

Write out clear responsibilities for every role

Educate and prepare support crew!


Since people are coming with different backgrounds with sexual assault and sexual
assault support, help fill in knowledge gaps with collective knowledge before,
during, and after the action

Send out info packet (example, see appendix: “Basic how-to support survivors of
sexual assault,” “active listening skills,” “coping skills for survivors,” and
“notes for those accused of abuse”)

Gather phone numbers and all crucial contact info (rape crisis hotline, local
hospital address or whatever, whatever else you may need to access) and distro it to
support peepz

Send a “What to do if a survivor of sexualized violence comes to you” handout to
medics and legal support via e-mail

At the Demo


Face to face meeting early in the action to meet each other, disseminate phone
numbers, and decide on any schedules or structures beforehand. This could include:


Go over all resources available and how to access each one

The central phone number and when to use it

Local rape crisis hotline and other local numbers

Coordinate shifts in activist spaces

Address the inevitable unexpected topic

Clinic or Wellness space


Try to have multiple genders rep’d as sexual assault advocates available in the
clinic at all times

Scout out good, private places to talk with survivors

Make sexual assault support resources and support people known to clinic staff. Make
sexual assault support one of the expected resources at a clinic just like medical,
herbal, etc.

Self-identify in clinic staff meetings, with name tags, and on any sign-up boards

Work with clinic staff to determine resources available in the clinic specific to
the anticipated needs of sexual assault survivors both physical and emotional. This
could include:


Safe and quiet space

Herbs

Acupuncture and acupressure

Massage

Reiki

Allopathic care

Spread the word


Flyers explaining available resources and how to access them at any and all relevant
locations

During any and all meeting of activists, make the sexual assault support team known

Include why it’s needed, what it can do, and how to access it.

Make your role as a sexual assault support person known. People may remember your
face as connected with support.

Work to connect sexual assault advocacy and crisis support in general to the medic
and wellness community.

Do good work!

After the demo, preferably face to face


Debrief

Selfcare ♥

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