Indiana Area Senior High School

Me Too: Sexual Assault Awareness Month

By AMARA MOORE

April is recognized as Sexual Assualt Awareness Month (SAAM) an important month to acknowledge victims who’ve had the unpleasantry to experience such a trauma.

Since the beginning of time, sexual assault has been a thing, whether you choose to acknowledge it or not. It’s very important to be aware that not everyone has reported or come out about it due to fear of slander and ridicule. 63% of completed rapes and 65% of attempted rapes have NOT been reported. Only an average of 34.8% of rapes/sexual assaults have been reported with only about 6% of those assailants being charged and getting jail time. For centuries, the world has been run by men, leaving women to fend for and fight for themselves. With men running the world, they have put in place ideologies that benefit them and put women at odds. Women only got voting rights in 1919, and that was just the white ones. Black and colored women didn’t even get that right til 1965. Women weren’t allowed to work for the government until 1923, weren’t allowed to own property until 1848 (again, just the white ones), and couldn’t join the army til 1948. So for as long as we can remember, we’ve been pushed aside and withheld from our rights to just about anything.

SAAM was observed nationally in 2001. Movements for social change became dominant and noticed in the 1940s and 50s. This movement mostly consisted of black and colored women, which included Rosa Parks, advocating for gender violence, which advocate and professor Kimberle Crenshaw, would later call “intersectionality”. This brought about more survivors speaking up and heightened awareness. The following years and decades mobilized survivors and advocates to call for legislation and funding that would support the survivors. An example of this would be the Violence Against Women Act of 1993, which provided $1.6 billion towards the investigation and prosecution of violent crimes against women. Even before SAAM, advocates had been holding marches and protests related to sexual violence during the month of April, sometimes being a week-long “Sexual Assualt Awareness Week”.

In 2000, the National Sexual Violence Resource Center and the Sharing Project had polled sexual violence coalitions. Both asked organizations what their preferred color, symbol, and month for sexual assualt awareness activities and events. They came to the conclusion and agreement of a teal ribbon to be the symbol. In 2009, President Obama was the first president to recognize April as Sexual Assualt Awareness Month.

Many survivors have suffered due to being ridiculed by people accusing them of lying when they speak up about what happened to them. The fact of the matter is that only 2.5% of people falsely accuse other people of sexually assaulting them. About 81% of women and 43% of men have experienced sexual harassment or assault. Women make up an estimate of 91% of survivors are women. 1 in 3 women and 1 in 4 men are victims of this heinous crime.

In 2006, Tarana Burke, a New York City women’s rights advocate, began to use the phrase “Me Too” to raise awareness for women survivors. Eleven years later, in 2017, a famous actress, Alyssa Milano, tweeted about her assailant Harvey Weinstein, which grew the “Me Too” movement to a global level. Since then, survivors have adopted this phrase and used it for awareness, hashtags, and protests, and have done so much more.

You May Also Like...

Athena Club reboots at IHS

By Gabi Isenberg After being taken off the club list this year, Athena Club is being revived at IHS. New English 10 teacher, Mrs. Deanne Magolis has dedicated time and effort to restarting the women’s leadership organization for the school, which will meet once a month on Wednesdays during tenth period.    Previously advised by Mrs. Juart, Athena Club is a community service organization based largely around women. IHS’s Athena Club is a branch of Athena International, a larger group of members who live by the eight principles of ‘enlightened leadership’: live authentically, learn constantly, build relationships, foster collaboration, act courageously, advocate fiercely, give back, and celebrate. Mrs. Magolis, a new addition to the IHS faculty, is advising the club this year. At Lincoln Memorial University, she was a member of the university’s Athena International organization. She expresses, “My goal is to lead lessons for our members on the Eight

Read More »

Green Team brings awareness to mental health in IHS

By Ella Mosco IHS’ Green Team is comprised of a select group of individuals who dedicate their time to take on leadership roles in creating and implementing activities to bring awareness to mental health in IHS.  Green Team’s initiative is to spread mental health awareness and end the stigma that follows it. Members of the team work to plan activities to support and educate students and make them feel less alone. Green Team is a smaller group of individuals who are involved in The Green Bandana initiative. This is a larger organization where students wear a green bandana and vow to help students in need and give them someone to talk to or direct them to their counselor.  Miss Cassidy Black is the faculty advisor for Green Team, who accounts for many responsibilities such as helping with the logistics of planning and facilitating school communication. The Green Team also works

Read More »

IHS welcomes new attendance officer Mrs. Anderson

By Emma Buterbaugh IHS students are giving a warm welcome to Mrs. Brittany Anderson, the newest attendance officer. She comes to IHS from Eisenhower and Horace Mann Elementary. She worked there until this year and moved to the senior high when this job opened. The IHS community is very excited to learn more about her.  Mrs. Anderson was raised here in Indiana and graduated from IHS in 2012.  She plans to have a positive impact on our school and hopes to create the same kind of atmosphere that she was exposed to. Mrs. Anderson comments, “School attendance is so important, so I hope to help create a positive environment and be a friendly face for IHS students in the attendance office.” She currently enjoys our IHS community sharing, “I love it here at IHS. The students and staff have both been so welcoming.”  Creating a positive and welcoming environment has

Read More »

Raising money, awareness, and school spirit: IHS Leadership Seminar 2024

By Gabi Isenberg IHS Leadership is back this year, planning influential events for the community and IHS students alike. MiniTHON, a teacher luncheon, and fun tenth period activities are just a sample of the efforts Leadership has made to bring a variety of opportunities to the IHS community. Leadership Seminar is a group formed by members of the senior class, all of whom hold leadership positions in organizations and clubs throughout the school. The 2024-2025 seminar class is composed of 27 students from the graduating class of 2025. The organization supplies students with beneficial opportunities. Senior and Leadership member Tim Birch expresses, “Leadership is a great environment that builds my leadership skills and will allow me to connect and collaborate with other leaders…[it] also helps generate ideas, as there are many other leaders working together.” These ideas are useful when forming committees to focus on particular events that Leadership plans

Read More »

Mrs. Magolis joins IHS this school year

By Hayden Yankuskie Deanne Magolis, more formally known as Mrs. Magolis, taught at Brookville Area School District for 3 years, then Homer Center School District for 17 years, before joining the IHS community at the beginning of the 24-25 school year. She is an English 10 teacher.  Mrs. Magolis taught in Brookeville as an elementary teacher for grades five and six, then at Homer Center to teach Literature and English for grades seven and nine. She taught Media Communications for grades 9-12 as well. In addition, she taught marketing and journalism. Mrs. Magolis has lived in Indiana, Pennsylvania, for the last 20  years. Before that, she lived in Pittsburgh as well as Steubenville, Ohio. Mrs. Magolis attended Lincoln Memorial University in Harrogate, Tennessee, on a full scholarship for volleyball. Her position was a middle hitter and she played all four years she attended the school. During her time there, she

Read More »

New English teacher joins IHS: Miss Kukula

By Samantha Aljoe Miss Amy Kukula is a new addition at Indiana Senior High School. She is the new 9th grade English teacher. Miss Kukula went to the Cook Honor College at IUP, where she majored in English education and dance.  Miss Kukula brings many new perspectives to IHS. In Miss Kukula’s classes, she has a prize bag and whoever’s name is picked either gets to sit in a comfy seat or get a Jolly Rancher. Miss Kukula said she chose to do that because when she was a student teaching at Marion Center, that teacher used tickets for prizes and Miss Kukula took that system to her own class.  Miss Kukula commented on her teaching career at Indiana so far. “Teaching so far has been awesome. Indiana is a great school. I really like the different classes I get to teach and the other teachers I get to collaborate

Read More »