In the Public Interest by Child Abuse Survivors and their Advocates in their Pursuit of Justice, Recognition, Recovery and Redress.
<< First < Previous Current Page "2143" Next > Last >>
Article Category: 2008 February
Description: When I was in primary school, there were two campuses of St Alipius in Ballarat.
Article originally prepared on : 24 February 2016
When I was in primary school, there were two campuses of St Alipius in Ballarat.
Boys attended with girls at one campus until grade two and then they went to the St Alipius Christian Brothers School in the next block for the higher grades.
At some point, a decision was made to close the Christian Brothers school and, when I was in grade six, the boys returned to us.
They were, in hindsight, mostly broken boys. I remember a lot of physical fighting and outbursts. We (the girls) thought that must have been how boys were. We had no idea.
The personal stories told at the Royal Commission in Ballarat in 2015 had local people's heads spinning.
People felt helpless.
They were saying they wanted to do something but didn't know what.
Some ribbons had started to appear on the gates at St Patricks College.
Two of us arranged to meet and tie ribbons onto the fence of the former Christian Brothers school to show support for our ex-classmates who had attended there.
What colour? Silver? White?
"No let's make them colourful – loud, there's been too much silence"
Loud Fence has always been about showing support for survivors and victims.
It has never been about protest or us and them.
The ribbons give survivors hope and courage.
The ribbons show families of victims they are not alone.
A ribbon on a fence does not necessarily mean abuse happened there, it merely means that person or organisation cares.
The movement has grown.
There are now ribbons on fences, gates and letterboxes all over the world.
We now have "ribbon bombers" who put ribbons up at places they feel need to show some support or just need to have a conversation.
We now have survivors who are re-visiting places they were abused to tie a ribbon as it gives them strength.
Ribbons are part of the healing process.
We have ribbons being taken down.
There has been too much silence.
We need to talk about child sexual assault.
We need to talk to children about child sexual assault.
It has been hidden away in our town for decades.
The ribbons help open up that conversation.
I understand people are afraid. They want to protect the innocence of children.
Obviously, it needs to be done properly.
Young children can be told the ribbons are to remind big people to listen to young children. Older children a bit more…
Ballarat has a dark history.
Ballarat can continue to keep the remnants of it and stay silent or it can choose, as a community, to move forward.
Ballarat could show the world how we chose not to be silent anymore.
Schools need to lead the way and do what they do best – educate.
We need programs in ALL schools regarding sexual assault so children can receive age appropriate information.
We need leaders in the community to get on board – city councillors, school principals, police officers, politicians.
We need people who aren't afraid.
We need loud people.
No more silence.
If you wish to keep this article alive in the Internet Archive simply click the link below.
Click here to add this page to the Internet Archive
<< First < Previous Current Page "2143" Next > Last >>
Select from these TFYQA archives
Contact us if you have data you want to preserve.
Tell others, share this page on : X | BlueSky | Mastodon.Social | Strangeminds.Social | Facebook
Find us on X.com || New ID on Facebook || BlueSky || Mastodon.Social || Strangeminds.Social
trauma informed human rights justice failed institutions UN Convention on Human Rights Rights of the Child and a Bill of Rights for Australia future evidence resilience not providing or representing a secular Australia autodidact
Hegemony: The authority, dominance, and influence of one group, nation, or society over another group, nation, or society; typically through cultural, economic, or political means.
.
If you found this information to be of assistance please don't forget to donate so that we can extend these resources to more survivors. These pages are focused on preserving survivor relevant information. Information is not provided as legal or professional advice; it is provided as general information only and requires that you validate any information via your own legal or other professional service providers.
You can directly support my work at here