REVEAL | RESISTANCE | RESILIENCE
An empowerment gathering for CIS WOMEN, TRANS WOMEN, TWO-SPIRIT + GENDER NON-CONFORMING PEOPLE.
CVAG is collaborating with the Comox Valley Transition Society to host two private workshops in a safe environment for learning + sharing + making with:
- All Ages + Professionals (any gender) | 12 – 3PM | Monday, July 15 | with Foundry Peer Support Worker
- Adults | Caregivers | Parents + their Youth (16+) | 5 – 8PM | Monday, July 15
Registered participants will learn together about the culture of oppression and violence that leads to sexual assault.
There is no cost to participate | art making materials are supplied.
Light hospitality will be available.
For registration and additional information, please contact CVTS’s Sexual Assault Service Coordinator Destanee Harrison (she/her): 250-650-5488 | SAS@cvts.ca
EMPOWERMENT WORKSHOPS
“Together, we will look at intersecting levels of oppression, connect through art, and break the isolation of stigma. Empowered people create necessary change.” – Destanee Harrison (she/her)
Facilitator: Destanee Harrison
Co-facilitator: Stasia Hasumi
Filmmaker: Claire Sanford
Fibre Artist: Deb Dumka
Teaching about the Pyramid of Sexual Violence – The facilitators will offer key information about actions that can be taken in response to the culture of oppression and for responding to experiences of violence.
Screening of Violet Gave Willingly – presented by filmmaker Clair Sanford, this short film immerses viewers in the colourful and tactile studio and inner life of textile artist Deborah Dumka. Through an unflinchingly intimate mother-daughter conversation, the film lays bare the continuum and legacy of gender-based discrimination, sexism, and sexual violence. As these women struggle to give voice to their experiences, power radiates from speaking uncomfortable truths.
Art-making has the potential for transformative integration of our experiences.
Artist Deb Dumka will guide participants in a gentle felting project that can be brought to completion during the time together.
This day of workshops is a legacy of CVAG’s upholding one another convergent program that began in September 2023. This program included videos, cultural teachings, exhibitions, and community engagement activities at CVAG.
RESOURCES
Why Sexual Violence Occurs – Association of Alberta Sexual Assault Services
Support Services for Gender-Based Violence – WAGE Canada
Youth Support Services for Gender-Based Violence – WAGE Canada
Research on Gender-Based Violence – WAGE Canada
National Action Plan to End Gender-Based Violence – WAGE Canada
Safe Passage – Native Women’s Association of Canada
Comox Valley Transition Society
DESTANEE HARRISON | BIOGRPAHY
I was raised here in the Comox Valley and moved away for almost a decade after high school. Returning in the last few years to support survivors of violence and abuse through support work and counselling. I received most of my education through Camosun College and Vancouver Island University. I am currently developing a new Sexual Assault Response Coordination Program at the Comox Valley Transition Society. This program supports anyone who has experienced or been affected by sexual violence, including a 24/7 crisis response to sexual assault. Previously, I worked on the North Island, counselling survivors of abuse, trauma, and sexual violence in rural and remote communities. I have also previously worked in multiple gender-based violence organizations as an advocate, victim service worker, crisis worker, and homeless prevention worker.
Facilitating a conversation around gender-based and sexualized violence is essential to end the silence and stigma for survivors. We know that one in three women have experienced sexual violence in their lifetime. That number is much higher for indigenous women, trans women, women of colour, and women with disabilities. Our systems have historically oppressed survivors of sexual violence and dismissed survivor’s experiences. Together, we will look at intersecting levels of oppression, connect through art, and break the isolation of stigma. Empowered people create necessary change.
STASIA HASUMI | BIOGRAPHY
I have been doing front line anti-violence work with CVTS for the last 12 years. I am a social worker, an unapologetic feminist and a lover of community, politics, and holding space for difficult conversations.
My role at CVTS is Community Programs Manager. I aim to build relationships with other community service providers while supporting and building on community events which spread awareness about gender-based violence. I oversee community programs including the Sexual Assault Services program and community groups including Girls, Grandparents Raising Grandchildren, and a Men’s group.
CLAIRE SANFORD | BIOGRAPHY
Claire Sanford is a Canadian filmmaker, cinematographer and video artist working as a two- and three- dimensional documentary storyteller. Her practice focuses on sensorial stories exploring the natural world, human identity, and how they overlap. Originally from Texada Island on the west coast of Canada, Claire grew up immersed in nature and became versed in the quiet art of observation. She earned her BFA in Film Production from the School for the Contemporary Arts at Simon Fraser University, Vancouver (2009). Her work has been exhibited at film festivals and galleries internationally, most recently her intimate documentary Violet Gave Willingly which was featured at IDFA, DOC NYC and Hot Docs 2022. She is a fellow of filmmaking initiatives including the Hot Docs Accelerator program (2014), the RIDM Talent Lab (2014), the Points North Fellowship (2016) and the Redford Centre Grant Program for Environmental Storytelling (2016). She is currently creating documentary and virtual reality work that explores and distorts anthropocentric visions of the natural world in partnership with the Canada Council for the Arts, the Conseil des arts et des lettres du Québec and the National Film Board of Canada.
DEB DUMKA | BIOGRAPHY
Deborah Dumka was born in Northern British Columbia and has lived three quarters of her life in rural communities across Canada, for the most part on the shores of an ocean. She draws on the physical and emotional landscape of rural life to make functional textile work examining our important connections with nature.
Her contemporary landscape-based textile work is created using the sustainable materials and ancient techniques of traditional wet felting. Her work celebrates natural materials and the process of transformation that leaves the mark of the hands on objects, and asks the viewer to examine the importance of our experiences in nature as they imprint marks, impressions and memories.
From a personal perspective, her work delves into the universal themes of the deep connections we have to nature, how our surroundings contribute to our sense of wellbeing and how we belong in the world. She is drawn to the intersections: of land and water, of physical and emotional experience, and of craft creation and scientific exploration.
Her interactive functional floor carpets integrate digital technology, conductive materials and components of wearable electronics to construct immersive interactive experiences of nature using image, texture and sound.
Deborah holds a degree in Electrical Engineering from MUN (1978) and a diploma from the Textile Studies Program of the Anna Templeton Centre (1994), St. John’s NL. She advocates for the Canadian Craft Community by serving on the board of the Craft Council of British Columbia and as a past president the Canadian Crafts Federation.
She works from her home studio on Texada Island in the Strait of Georgia.
Her work has been shown in solo and group shows in Canada and Korea.