21.10.06

I REPEAT

I DID NOT ASK FOR IT. YOU HAVE NEVER 'ASKED FOR IT'. WE WANT 1000 TESTIMONIALS TO SAY IT LOUD ENOUGH SO THAT THE WORLD CAN HEAR IT.
THE BLANK NOISE PROJECT NEEDS YOU TO MAKE THIS HAPPEN.
I REPEAT. THERE IS NO SUCH THING AS ASKING FOR IT.

(To send in testimonials of clothing please email us at blurtblanknoise@gmail.com and we will get back to you. ) Come along! Participate and be our Action Hero!

About the project: Did you ask for it?
Blank Noise wants you to discard your clothes worn at the time you were eve teased (sexually harassed) on the streets. This collective building of an installation of clothes seeks, primarily, to erase the assumption that you 'asked for it' because of what you were wearing. That you are to blame and only 'provocatively dressed', and therefore 'immodest' women are eve-teased.
We hope to gather clothes across different cities as testimonials of eve teasing and install them on the streets. We hope women will stop blaming themselves, your body, your clothes. What Blank Noise hopes to do is bring together 1000 clothes, install them on the streets, in public spaces and collectively question the notion of 'modesty' and defy the assumption that we ' ask for it.'
Over the last couple of months our volunteers, both male and female, have been collecting garments from people they know, home, family, colleagues, friends. You could volunteer too and work towards making this happen. Thankyou


18.10.06

Good press is good press. Bad press is really bad

I enjoyed watching Rang De Basanti. It was entertaining, had a kind of spirit to it that touched many people.
Link
A couple of months later DNA reported that the Blank Noise Project ‘started’ as an off shoot of Rang De Basanti?

Anyways…the Blank Noise Team laughed it off…it was not hurting us anyway.


What got to all of us here was a report by IANS about the Blank Noise Project’s Night Action Plan. Chinmayee, Knownturf and Hemangini defend it.

We are grateful to be supported by the press in so many ways. The project has reached people beyond the blogosphere, thereby widening our base of participants who go on to become the Blank Noise Action Heroes.

1. Blank Noise is also focusing on how to say instead of making everything a slogan. What is the message? What is the strategy we are adopting to communicate?

2. Blank Noise has worked through performance, thereby creating an experiential realm. For us, a headcount of 5000 is not as important as the ability to build an experience, depending on the strategy adopted. A night ‘march’ is different from a Night Action Plan, Blank Noise is currently engaged in the latter.

Blank Noise Project is not as much about action reaction but about probing, delving, experiencing, empowering and translating.

Thankyou!

The Blank Noise Team

15.10.06

Some More Noise: Blank Noise Project. Delhi








('panga nahin lene ka' is hindi for 'don't you mess with me')


Some More Noise was a sound and performance intervention that took place in the South Extension subway. 30 Blank Noise Action Heroes showed up and built the event.

The Action Heroes ( women) confronted the public by simply standing in the subway and maintaining eye contact with passersby. An intimate situation would result in the action hero giving a letter to the stranger. The letter bore a testimonial of street sexual harassment starting as ' Dear Stranger'. The letters were both in Hindi and English.

( these letters are various people's blog posts from the Blank Noise Blogathon conducted earlier in the year.)

Male action heroes stood outside the subway distributing pamphlets

A sound piece enclosed the space and filled it with noise.

The event was supported by Khoj, as a part of their public art residency programme. Thanks to all at Khoj, Pooja Sood, Aastha Chauhan, Manoj, Hemant, Rohini Devasher, Arun and Ramesh.

14.10.06

Delhi: Some more Noise


image1+2 are of the participants a couple of minutes before the public intervention in Delhi's South Extension Subway.

30 Action Heroes met an hour before the event to discuss the plan of action.

There was a new set of action heroes this time- The Blank Noise Action Heroes Team included students from Lady Sriram College, and members from the youth team of Action India.

Action Heroes: Abishek Baxi, Abigail Crisman, Amit Kendurkar, Anna, Annie Zaidi, Atreyee Majumdar, Geetanjali, Ekta Muktiar, Naveena, Priyanka Varma Sonu, Samvedna, Sujata Sarkar, Rahul Bhattacharya, Yuvraj....

Video Documentation by Astha Chauhan. Photos taken by Ambar Sharma.

Video documentation coming up.

6.10.06

Intervention in Delhi - Oct 8!

Let's meet up this Sunday in Connaught Place. Meet at Barista, N-Block CP (Outer Circle) at 4:30 PM.

Pallika and CP are just screaming for intervention!!! Email that you are coming so we know how many people to wait for!

Email is: bnpdelhi@googlegroups.com

Bangalore intervention

It was on August 6th, so follow the link pasted up above and leave us your thoughts!

29.9.06

Night Action in Vasant Vihar!




1] Sparse attendance was, er, an under-statement. However, thinking back to the evening, I realise that sparse attendance was not the problem, given our agenda - of putting up posters and stencilling. Vasant Vihar the Priya complex esp, is a place where most women do feel safe. There isn't much groping etc. But even within safe areas, there are pockets of discomfort. For instance, there are benches and sort-of squares/round platforms (?) where young people sit. Girls will sit there in groups or with male friends but never alone.

My thought - do we want to tackle this sort of discomfort, as opposed to active eve-teasing/harassment, at this stage?

2] Once outside the complex, the roads were completely deserted, from a feminine perspective. We did not attract that much unwanted attention because we were three women accompanied by four men. But there was no other woman out on the roads at that time, though this is a residential area, more or less, and it was only 10 pm. We did talk to people who came up to ask what we were upto. (Since there was a BBC radio guy there, with a mike in his hand, that led to a different kind of conversation.

Abigail adds: having someone from BBC with a microphone led to a somewhat different interaction--but it was interesting as during these actions we often do not engage with the public. A few men on the street were interviewed regarding their views on eve-teasing, whether they thought the way we were approaching the problem was correct, etc.

One of the men said that in his 23 years he has never eve-teased a girl. When asked how he would react the next time a woman was teased in front of him, if he would speak up, he said he could--but what can one person say or do? He can speak up but it won't change the fact that everyone else is still taking part in it or still silently watching. He also mentioned cases of violence against those who spoke out against harassment when it happened with the women in their family.

Another man was of the opinion that men will not eve-tease in a public place, that the presence of the public will stop them. But "agar by chance" it happens all the woman has to do is say something and they will come to her aid.

The comments made I thought were generally positive, even if they tended to be of the nature, "I've heard it happens" or "occasionally it happens...").




Back to Annie:
3] Good moment - a car full of drunk young men slowed down near us while we were stencilling near a bus-stop. One young chap got down to talk to me. I read out some of the testimonials we were painting on the roads. He asked to be allowed to spray-paint (and did a good job). His friends in the car were acting dismissing and tittering. He turned around and told them "It happened to my sister too." That, rather effectively, shut them up.



4] Unpleasant moment - one of the stops where we put posters turned out to be a sort of hangout place for another bunch of teenaged boys - this is where they hid their cache of booze, we think. They were already somewhat drunk, perhaps, or perhaps were annoyed with us for being in their way... they passed some comments, after reading the poster. Like, "Oh, so you are not allowed to touch, to look, to whistle... make sure you don't whistle, yaar, but what you should do is go up to the girl, tell her to make friendship; that's what you should do." This was not, strictly speaking,a wrong thing to say, but was said with a smirk and with deliberate sarcasm.
How is one to deal with responses like that? Should we deal with them at all?




5] I think we need to work out different strategies for different areas of action. We need to think of doing more than just putting up posters or stencils or testimonials at night. Maybe build up an idea (and material) bank. Anybody who has new ideas could mail Jasmeen and let's see if something workable works out.



These are: Annie Zaidi and Abigail Crisman's thoughts, Melissa Zuroff's photos.
Email us at:blurtblanknoise@gmail.com


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NIGHT ACTION!

(Please note: this is the new plan)
Time: 9 pm, Friday, 29th Sept.
Meeting at: Barista, Priya complex, Vasant Vihar.

This time we tackle Vasant Vihar, some parts of which should be fairly crowded on a Friday night, but curiously, the 'safe' zone ends immediately outside Priya theatre complex. The plan is to meet at this complex and then take a walk round to another market nearby, and back to the Priya complex, with posters, stencils, paint, Blank Noise etc.

(If you're media we'd appreciate that you call us, talk to participants and understand where we're coming from rather than show up, misunderstand, factually distort and misrepresent. But hey, you already know that!)

Hope to see you all there!

20.9.06

Night Action Plan. 2


Calling Action Heroes

Blank Noise Project, Delhi calls you to engage in our 'Night Action Plan 2'

Where: Lajpat Nagar Market

Date: Friday, Sept 29th


Time: 9 pm


criteria: wear something you always wanted to but could not.

Walk includes some talk. food. drink and 'action'

warning: (Action might require people to sprint, hide, run)

We will arrange for taxis to get home. Blank Noise will be grateful if people lend their cars for public service.

( Last Friday's Night Action Plan was between Dilli Haat and Sarojini Nagar Market.
Over the course of 2 months we propose to have testimonials of street sexual harassment all over Delhi with a new location every week.)

18.9.06

T SHIRTS FOR AUTOS!


DEDICATED TO ALL THE LADIES IN INDIA WHO HAVE TRAVELLED BY AUTOS AND HAVE HAD AUTO WALLAS ADJUSTING THEIR REARVIEW MIRRORS. GIVE IT BACK LADIES! KYA DEKH RAHE HO?


BLANK NOISE T SHIRTS ARE AVAILIABLE IN SMALL, MEDIUM, + LARGE. THEY ARE BOTH SLEEVELESS AND WITH SLEEVE. MAIL US AND WE WILL HAVE IT SENT TO YOU. THANKYOU!
The ts maybe dedicated to women in india but are for any/every woman. ( In future, the t will also be in SOME regional languages- kannada, telegu, tamil...respond and you will hear from us)

Buy a set of 3 for Rs. 300 and gift it to your friends!

Each Shirt costs Rs. 160/

To buy a t shirt email us at blurtblanknoise@gmail.com and we will get back to you. Thankyou!

T'S were created at a public art residency in KHOJ, Delhi.