The
 World Council of Churches (WCC) is working to revive “Thursdays in 
Black,” a campaign against sexual and gender-based violence. The 
emphasis is pertinent to the theme of the WCC’s upcoming assembly: “God 
of Life, Lead Us to Justice and Peace.”
On Oct. 31, during the assembly in Busan, Republic of Korea (South 
Korea), participants will be encouraged to wear black and through this 
simple gesture, to be part of a global movement urging an end to 
violence against women.
Thursdays in Black was started by the WCC in the 1980s as a form of 
peaceful protest against rape and violence--especially taking place 
during wars and conflicts. The campaign focuses on ways through which 
individuals may challenge attitudes that cause rape and violence.
“Thursdays in Black,” according to Fulata Mbano-Moyo, WCC program 
executive for Women in Church and Society, is a “united global 
expression of the desire for safe communities where we can all walk 
safely without fear of being raped, shot at, beaten up, verbally abused,
 and discriminated against due to one’s gender or sexual orientation.
“Through this campaign we want to accompany our sisters, who bear the
 scars of violence, invisible and visible, in Syria, Palestine and 
Israel, Egypt, the Democratic Republic of Congo, Pakistan, and the whole
 world, where women’s bodies remain a battlefield, whether in armed 
conflict or so-called ‘peaceful’ situations,” adds Mbano-Moyo.
“Through this campaign we are demanding a world free of rape and violence!”
The Thursdays in Black campaign is significant for the women and 
men’s pre-assembly events in Busan, where issues related to violence 
against women will be in focus, instigating varied reflections from 
theological, ethical, legal, spiritual, social, and political 
perspectives. The pre-assembly programs take place on Oct. 28-29.
Thursdays in Black has influenced several church and ecumenical 
initiatives in the 1970s and 1980s, including the Ecumenical Decade of 
Churches in Solidarity with Women. The campaign was further strengthened
 by the “Women in Black” campaign born out of women-to-women solidarity 
visits to Serbia and Croatia during the Balkan war in the 1990s. Through
 this initiative, Serbian women called people to join them in speaking 
against the use of rape as a weapon of war.
Thursday in Black also has a link with Mothers of the Plaza de Mayo, a
 movement of mothers who protested against the policy of having 
dissidents "disappeared"--a term used to describe people killed during 
the political violence in Argentina between the 1970s and 1980s. These 
mothers walked around Plazo de Mayo in Buenos Aires every Thursday to 
register their protest.
The Thursdays in Black campaign is currently observed in South Africa
 by the Diakonia Council of Churches and the Christian AIDS Bureau of 
Southern Africa, ecumenical partners of the WCC’s project Ecumenical HIV
 and AIDS Initiative in Africa and the International Network of 
Religious Leaders Living with or Personally Affected by HIV or AIDS.
The WCC will continue to work with its partner organizations to 
revive the Thursdays in Black campaign. Partners include CABSA, We Will 
Speak Out Coalition, Lutheran World Federation, Fellowship of the Least 
Coin, United Methodist Women, and the World YWCA, among others.
Find out more about the WCC program on Women in Church and Society at www.oikoumene.org/en/what-we-do/women-in-church-and-society.
Source: 10/25/2013 Newsline

 
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