Over the past year, the international sex worker community has mourned the loss
of thousands of our comrades, with an estimated 2,000 killed in the United
States alone. Over the last year, serial killers have been reported in places
like Ipswich, Atlantic City, Edmonton, Guatemala and Russia, and many cases
remain unsolved. A few days ago in British Columbia, Robert "Willie" Pickton was
sentenced to life in prison for the deaths of six women - he has admitted to
killing forty-nine sex workers in total before feeding them to his pigs. Gary
Ridgway, the Green River killer of the 1980s, picked prostitutes as victims
"because they are easy to pick up without being noticed. . . . I thought I could
kill as many of them as I wanted without being caught." We are seen as nameless,
faceless, storyless, useless, and utterly without rights. In Philadelphia, the
serial rape and assault at gunpoint of sex worker Dominique Grindraw was written
off by Judge Deni as "theft of services," amounting to
state-sponsorship of violence against sex workers.
But we will not be silenced, nor will we accept what amounts to genocide against
our kind - SEX WORKERS' RIGHTS ARE HUMAN RIGHTS! By participating in one of
tomorrow's events, you are helping the world to see that our struggle is not in
vain, and that the sex workers killed in 2007 may be gone, but they are not
forgotten. We will not rest until the streets, cities, and countrysides are safe
for everyone, everywhere, every worker.
Ten Things You Can Do to Participate:
1. Do something of personal meaning alone at home; take a ritual bath, or simply
think about those who have died, light a candle, make a wish, have a cry, call a
friend and discuss the topic, etc.
2. Write a short personal quote or a statement about violence against sex
workers and send to the SWOP web site for them to post.
3. Send a donation to a nonprofit group that helps sex workers stay safer.
4. Organize a public memorial event in your town. If not, choose a place, and
time, where you can gather. Make an email letter and/or flyer and get it around
with news of the event. Invite people to bring writings, stories, readings,
thoughts, related news items, poems, performances, etc. Make a circle at the
event. Take turns sharing. This will make for a wonderful memorial and be great
for consciousness raising and outreach as well.
5. Organize a panel discussion about violence towards sex workers. You can ask a
church or other community space if you can do it there.
6. Send news of this event to any and all press you know, so the word gets out
that there are people who care about murdered sex workers, and who are concerned
with the safety of sex workers out there today.
7. Attend one of the events.
8. If you know any sex workers, send them some information about self-defense.
9. Send a personal email letter to people telling them how you feel about
violence against sex workers and the women who were murdered by serial killer
Gary Ridgway. Or email this letter around.
10. Read Daisy Anarchy's poem, to yourself or to friends, or at one of the
public events. Or email it around.
Ronnie,
Naughtylady
of thousands of our comrades, with an estimated 2,000 killed in the United
States alone. Over the last year, serial killers have been reported in places
like Ipswich, Atlantic City, Edmonton, Guatemala and Russia, and many cases
remain unsolved. A few days ago in British Columbia, Robert "Willie" Pickton was
sentenced to life in prison for the deaths of six women - he has admitted to
killing forty-nine sex workers in total before feeding them to his pigs. Gary
Ridgway, the Green River killer of the 1980s, picked prostitutes as victims
"because they are easy to pick up without being noticed. . . . I thought I could
kill as many of them as I wanted without being caught." We are seen as nameless,
faceless, storyless, useless, and utterly without rights. In Philadelphia, the
serial rape and assault at gunpoint of sex worker Dominique Grindraw was written
off by Judge Deni as "theft of services," amounting to
state-sponsorship of violence against sex workers.
But we will not be silenced, nor will we accept what amounts to genocide against
our kind - SEX WORKERS' RIGHTS ARE HUMAN RIGHTS! By participating in one of
tomorrow's events, you are helping the world to see that our struggle is not in
vain, and that the sex workers killed in 2007 may be gone, but they are not
forgotten. We will not rest until the streets, cities, and countrysides are safe
for everyone, everywhere, every worker.
Ten Things You Can Do to Participate:
1. Do something of personal meaning alone at home; take a ritual bath, or simply
think about those who have died, light a candle, make a wish, have a cry, call a
friend and discuss the topic, etc.
2. Write a short personal quote or a statement about violence against sex
workers and send to the SWOP web site for them to post.
3. Send a donation to a nonprofit group that helps sex workers stay safer.
4. Organize a public memorial event in your town. If not, choose a place, and
time, where you can gather. Make an email letter and/or flyer and get it around
with news of the event. Invite people to bring writings, stories, readings,
thoughts, related news items, poems, performances, etc. Make a circle at the
event. Take turns sharing. This will make for a wonderful memorial and be great
for consciousness raising and outreach as well.
5. Organize a panel discussion about violence towards sex workers. You can ask a
church or other community space if you can do it there.
6. Send news of this event to any and all press you know, so the word gets out
that there are people who care about murdered sex workers, and who are concerned
with the safety of sex workers out there today.
7. Attend one of the events.
8. If you know any sex workers, send them some information about self-defense.
9. Send a personal email letter to people telling them how you feel about
violence against sex workers and the women who were murdered by serial killer
Gary Ridgway. Or email this letter around.
10. Read Daisy Anarchy's poem, to yourself or to friends, or at one of the
public events. Or email it around.
Ronnie,
Naughtylady