Zonta Club of Charlevoix Area takes donations from community members to build 16 Days display

Zonta Club of Charlevoix AreaThe Zonta Club of Charlevoix Area members from District 15 are raising awareness about the issue of domestic violence with their Zonta Shoe Tree.

The Shoe Tree, currently on display in a prominent Charlevoix, Michigan location through 10 December, features 183 pair of shoes. Each pair represents one of the 183 victims of domestic violence or assault in the Charlevoix community in 2017.

The Zonta Shoe Tree serves as a public reminder that while each of the 183 victims put their shoes on and walk through their day just like everyone else, they live with violence.

Residents generously donated 183 pair of shoes and Charlevoix businesses and the local high school served as drop-off locations.

An area Girl Scout Troop joined Zonta members in painting the shoes orange, marched with members in the Holiday Parade and assisted in decorating the Shoe Tree.

By inviting the local community to donate shoes and help build the shoe tree, Zonta members and community members actively participated in an open discussion about the issue of domestic violence.

Zonta Club of Kathmandu launches social media campaign with local celebrities

ZC of KathmanduMembers of the Zonta Club of Kathmandu, District 25, have started an awareness campaign on social media alongside local celebrities as part of the Zonta Says NO campaign.

The club has partnered with celebrities who have large numbers of social media followers and who will post their pledge to #EndChildMarriage online for their followers to see. Thirty-two celebrities have joined the club in their efforts and two have already scheduled posts on their social media accounts.

Members of the Zonta Club of Kathmandu hope to reach a diverse audience with this social media campaign.

Members created a Facebook profile frame with the pledge so anyone can use the frame and pledge that way and special stickers were also created. The #EndChildMarriage stickers are given to drivers to encourage them to take the pledge and advertise their commitment on their car window.

Zonta Club of Fort Smith sets up library display for 16 Days

Fort Smith ZSN actionIn recognition of the 16 Days of Activism Against Gender-Based Violence and Zonta’s campaign to end child marriage, the Zonta Club of Fort Smith, District 23, created a display for the Fort Smith Public Library.

The display contains the club’s Zonta Says NO to Violence Against Women banner and detailed information about the prevalence of child marriage.

The display in the foyer of the library will receive the attention of library patrons throughout the month of November.

Zonta Club of Lulea raises awareness with local library display

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To raise awareness of violence against women, the Zonta Club of Lulea, District 21, collaborated with their local library, the City Library of Pitea. In the center of the library, the club set up a display to  showcase books and movies focused on violence against women.

Club members said they think facts are important, but if you really want to reach people you have to appeal to their emotions. Books and movies do that. This is why the Zontians chose to collaborate with the library on the display.

With an exhibition in full view from the entrance of the library, they want to encourage the visitors to read and watch stories about survivors of violence against women. This is also in line with the theme chosen by UN Women this year, #HearMeToo.

A presentation was also given to the staff about how gender-based violence impacts women all over the world. Because of this, they are now ready to answer questions from the public about the exhibition and violence against women.

In the News: Zonta Club of Kankakee organizes empowerment and solidarity walk

The Zonta Club of Kankakee is spreading awareness about domestic violence by inviting survivors and sympathizers to walk in solidarity with those who have endured abuse.

Empowerment: Solidarity Walk with Domestic Violence Victims will take place on October 27. Participants have the option of walking individually, with a team or even virtually.

Club members hope the event will give people a chance to reflect on domestic violence in their community.

Click here to read more.

Zonta Club of Rockhampton Inc advertises Zonta Says NO during local event

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During Beef Australia 2018, Australia’s triennial National Beef Industry event attracting over 100,000 national and international visitors, the Zonta Club of Rockhampton Inc, District 22, mounted a display at the local regional airport, raising awareness for the Zonta Says NO to Violence Against Women campaign.

The display prominently provides awareness about the campaign, as well as information about local support services for those affected by domestic and family violence.

The display will run for the whole month of May, which also coincides with the local Domestic and Family Violence Prevention Month, which is marked every May in Queensland Australia.

Zonta Club of Trondheim brings Zonta Says No to community

The Zonta Club of Trondheim organized a Zonta Says No to Violence Against Women campaign together with 24 other organizations, including the municipality of Trondheim, NGOs and labor unions.

About 1,000 people visited 20 multicultural arrangements during the 16 Days of Activism Against Gender-Based Violence.

There were 16 days of exhibitions, seminars, movies, discussions, dances and various artistic performances engaging the local community for the sake of understanding and stopping violence against women.

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2017 Zonta Says NO recap

Zonta clubs across the world participated in advocacy and awareness efforts from 25 November to 10 December as part of the Zonta Says NO to Violence Against Women and 16 Days of Activism Against Gendered-Violence campaigns.

Watch select highlights here and read stories from other clubs at www.zontasaysno.com/zontiansinaction/

Read a recap of the 16 Days of Activism campaign from the President’s Corner Blog: http://ow.ly/kfL930hcMRe

In the News: Zonta Club of Lebanon plants orange pinwheels on courthouse lawn

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Orange pinwheels decorate the lawn in front of the Boone County Courthouse, representing every person who has died as a result of domestic violence since 2014.

About 29 pinwheels were placed on the lawn by the Zonta Club of Lebanon in the hopes of raising awareness for the number of cases of domestic violence in Indiana each year.

A sign stands among the pinwheels displaying a number for a national hotline for domestic violence victims.

Read more here.

In the news: Triumph High School Z Club marches for domestic violence awareness

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Triumph High School senior Madison Amann checks out a silhouette cutout of a victim who died at the hands of an abuser before marching Monday at the State Capitol in Cheyenne. Students from the school’s Z Club marched with the silhouettes to the Laramie County Library in recognition of domestic violence awareness. (Blaine McCartney/Wyoming Tribune Eagle)

 

From WyomingNews.com:

A group of students from Cheyenne’s Triumph High marched in silence Monday morning from the State Capitol to the Laramie County Library.

Each carried a silhouette with them – more than three dozen in all – each representing a victim of domestic violence in Wyoming.

Their stories differed from one person to the next, but they all had the specter of domestic violence in common. There was Sharon Johnson, who was 43 when her husband ran her over with his car, leaving their two children without a mother.

There was Robin Munis, age 40, who was singing on stage at Old Chicago in Cheyenne when her estranged husband shot and killed her with a sniper rifle.

And there was Crystal Town, 29, whose husband was sent to prison for 75 years to life last year for shooting her in front of their 10-year-old daughter.

“We grieve for the family that lost the loved one. But beyond that, you grieve for the opportunity lost,” said Gov. Matt Mead, who signed a proclamation Monday recognizing 16 days of activism against gender violence in Wyoming from Nov. 25 to Dec. 10.

Those dates are not coincidental: Nov. 25 is the International Day to Eliminate Violence Against Women, while Dec. 10 is International Human Rights Day. But since the Triumph students knew they would be out of school by the 25th, they opted to hold their march two days earlier to publicly honor victims like Town.

“Consider Crystal, who and what she could’ve become, what she could’ve contributed,” Mead said, turning to the students. “We all have a role to play, but the most important role lies on your shoulders. It is you all, your leadership, that is going to provide the answer that says, ‘In Wyoming … there’s no instance where domestic violence is acceptable.'”

Monday’s marchers were mostly members of Triumph’s Z Club, a youth spinoff of Zonta International, an Illinois-based service organization that seeks to advance the status of women across the globe. And like the silhouettes they held, many of Monday’s marchers said they were similarly affected by domestic violence.

“This is close to my heart because I was abused by my father, and so was my mother,” said Triumph senior Madison Amann. “So it carries a lot of significance personally to me, and it brings awareness and advocacy to other people.”

Another senior, Jessica Kling, said she joined the Z Club after watching her father abuse one of her brothers.

“There was one case where he put his tooth through his lip and continued to hit him in the back and throw him through things,” Kling said. “That’s the main reason I wanted to join Z Club, because it’s not right for people to have to go through those things.”

Kling said that, too often, domestic violence is swept under the rug, with victims unwilling or unable to confront it or tell their stories. She said that imposed silence makes it doubly important for advocates to provide a voice for victims.

“It doesn’t make headlines like it should,” Kling said. “This is showing people that it really happens; it’s not just some story.”

Jolynn Murphy, a co-adviser for the Triumph Z Club, read off some of the state’s domestic violence statistics, noting that 66 women, seven men, four minor boys and one girl have died since 1985 as a result of domestic violence in Wyoming.

“Domestic violence doesn’t just affect victims and perpetrators; it affects the family and friends who are left behind,” Murphy said. “The problem will continue until we as a society and a community stand up with one resounding voice and say, ‘No more!'”

Cheyenne City Councilman Dicky Shanor also took part in Monday’s march. Having worked as a domestic violence prosecutor for Laramie County, Shanor questioned why there hasn’t been more awareness directed toward the issue in recent years.

“It’s very prevalent still – hundreds and hundreds of files funnel through the district attorney’s office in our county every year,” Shanor said. “I just want to say thank you to all of you for doing this, for raising awareness around this issue.”

Murphy noted that several of the silhouettes used in Monday’s march will remain on display through Dec. 10. They can be seen at the Laramie County Library, 2200 Pioneer Ave., as well as at the Cheyenne Municipal Building at 2101 O’Neil Ave., the Joseph C. O’Mahoney Federal Building at 2120 Capitol Ave., and Grace United Methodist Church, 2950 Spruce Drive.

Local musician Ty Warner concluded Monday’s march with a song he wrote in honor of Munis, whom he shared a stage with the night she was killed in July 2007.

“A shot rings out, and a soul is dashed; a pool of life, and a song is past,” Warner sang. “Tried to reason why, but reason won’t return. And it happens in the blink of an eye.”