Weekend Times


The Times

Business News

Australia’s first women’s shelters were acts of radical grassroots feminism

  • Written by Emma McNicol, Research Fellow at Monash Sustainable Development Institute, Monash University
A small, brown terrace house with two pillars and a screen door

50 years ago, there wasn’t a single women’s shelter in Australia.

Then feminists squatted two terraces in Sydney, opening “Elsie”, Australia’s first domestic and family violence refuge.

Commissioned by Elsie co-founder Anne Summers, I’ve recorded oral histories with the women who built and sustained Australia’s refuge movement.

Australia’s refuge movement is a story of courageous grassroots feminist activism.

Read more: The Whitlam government gave us no-fault divorce, women's refuges and childcare. Australia needs another feminist revolution[1]

Choose to act

In the 1970s in Australia, there was nowhere for women experiencing male violence at home to go.

One night almost exactly 50 years ago, around 40 women’s liberation activists changed that, claiming squatters’ rights over two derelict Glebe terraces. They broke a window, changed the locks and turned on the gas and water, opening “Elsie”, Australia’s first women’s refuge.

A gorup of women and toddlers crowd around a kitchen table in the 1970s.
The Elsie Refuge was the first domestic violence shelter in Australia. Australian Information Service/National Library of Australia[2]

As Elsie worker Ludo McFerran explained, Elsie’s mission was a “space for women, run by women”, which the residents would control. Elsie did not offer “charity”, the founders aimed at “change”, and therefore refuges would one day become obsolete.

Cooma, Kamilaroi woman Mary Ronyane, who today manages Wilcannia Safe House, proposed that Elsie was created because, when together women draw from their strength, they can “make a choice”. They chose to act.

McFerran described the refuge work as “highly vulnerable”. At the beginning, the work was entirely voluntary, and refuge work never proved a lucrative career.

The activists sacrificed all their time, energy, health and often their safety. In the “wild west”, as McFerran described it, perpetrators would “regularly turn up, threaten to burn the house down and kill everyone inside.”

There was no legal protection for residents or workers, so when perpetrators failed to return children after visits, workers would “go and try find them” and where possible “grab the kids back and make a run for it.”

Desperately trying to cover the operating costs, some of the workers started dealing marijuana to pay for necessities. Sydney’s artists and intellectuals started seeking out “Elsie Pot”.

With an intention to secure funding, the activists started encouraging various government ministers to come and see the conditions Elsie’s residents were enduring. Founder Christina Gibbeson told me how she kidnapped Doug Everingham, the minister for health at the time. She forced her way into a car carrying Everingham and instructed his driver to take them to Elsie. She mused:

“I would’ve gone to jail for it today, I suppose.”

Ceding power and privilege

Australia’s early refuges operated collectively. Everyone was obliged to scrub bathrooms and care for resident children. Decisions took time and often went to a vote. Former resident and worker, Bundjalung woman Christine Robinson, believes “at Elsie, we all had a say and a voice.”

The founders recognised residents’ insights and skills that came with their life experience. In 1980, six years after Marrickville refuge opened, the refuge’s residents informed staff that it was time for them to leave and let them take the reins, and they did.

The activists wanted liberation for all women, not just those who looked like them. Women’s Halfway House worker Di Otto noted that they viewed the refuge “as a site in which they could make contact with women outside of [their] circles […] and work towards a collective and inclusive liberation.”

A group of women on the couch in the 1970s, talking and holding books Refuges were often places where women found their political voices. Australian Information Service/National Library of Australia[3]

Vivien Johnson shared:

[…] [us] middle class white women were consistently confronted by our class prejudices [and] with the racism we held towards the women with whom we claimed to be equal with.

Christine Robinson believes Australia’s refuge movement “valued diversity.” She explained that Elsie’s staff all learned how to sit with, and learn from, fellow feminists calling out their racism.

Robinson explained at Elsie, she and fellow Aboriginal leaders had a platform to culturally educate their non-First Nations colleagues, whom she described as a “captive audience”, “trying” to get it right.

Space for activism

Elsie’s founders sought to cultivate an environment in which residents could build confidence and reclaim control over their lives. In 1975, Bobbie Townsend, a working-class woman, arrived at Elsie with two children.

A small, brown terrace house with two pillars and a screen door The original Elsie Refuge, before it relocated, as taken in 2018. Sardaka/Wikimedia Commons, CC BY-SA[4][5]

Townsend believes the late night discussions at Elsie’s dinner table “saved her”, and shared:

[…] for 26 years nobody had asked me what I thought about anything […] The first time someone asked me in a collective meeting what I thought, I didn’t know what to say […] Elsie was about taking control.

Robinson, like Townsend, also a resident turned staff member, reflected that “Elsie gave women power to make decisions for themselves.”

Today, there is nothing quite like Elsie

The founders all described an atmosphere of hope. Under Whitlam, things were possible.

McFerran explained that today, tendering practices have forced out community-run refuges. Run by Christian, centralised institutions, few refuges observe the grassroots collectivist principles that animated the movement’s early years.

While Elsie still opens its doors to victim-survivors today, it is run by St Vincent de Paul.

Authors: Emma McNicol, Research Fellow at Monash Sustainable Development Institute, Monash University

Read more https://theconversation.com/squatting-kidnapping-and-collaboration-australias-first-womens-shelters-were-acts-of-radical-grassroots-feminism-225895

The Weekend Times Magazine

Alcohol and your brain: study finds even moderate drinking is damaging

It’s a well-known fact that drinking too much alcohol can have a serious impact on your health, including damaging your liver. But how much is too much? For conditions such...

First Time Down Under: What to Do in Melbourne

Image Source Melbourne is often the first stop for travelers arriving in Australia, and it makes an excellent introduction to life Down Under. Known for its welcoming atmosphere, creative energy, and...

Make Your Holiday Merry with Christmas Inflatables

The holiday season is all about bringing joy and festivity to your home or event. One of the most fun and visually captivating ways to do this is by incorporating...

Australia’s top economists oppose the next increases in compulsory super: new poll

The five consecutive consecutive hikes in compulsory super contributions due to start next July should be deferred or abandoned in the view of the overwhelming majority of the leading Australian...

The Most Popular Tattoo Placements (and Why)

Choosing where to place your tattoo is almost as important as choosing the artwork itself. Placement affects how a tattoo looks, how it heals, how visible it is in day-to-day...

Could You Furnish and Equip a Whole House with IKEA Products?

IKEA has long been known as the global giant of affordable, ready-to-assemble furniture. From minimalist Scandinavian sofas to clever kitchen gadgets, the Swedish retailer has built its reputation on making...

Why Removalists Melbourne Are the Smartest Choice for an Easy and Organised Move

Relocating from one home or office to another can feel overwhelming, especially when you’re trying to balance packing, sorting, transporting, and managing deadlines all at once. Choosing experienced removalists Melbourne is...

The Importance of Quality Paint Protection for Brisbane Drivers

Shielding Your Vehicle with the Right Protection Every car owner appreciates that fresh showroom finish—the gleam of the paintwork, the smoothness of brand new panels. But once you drive out of...

CHECK.CHECK.CHECK. The new ‘Slip, Slop, Slap,’ for a night out campaign

CHECK.CHECK.CHECK. The new ‘Slip, Slop, Slap,’ for a night out launched by the Night Time Industries Association A new campaign Check. Check. Check. encouraging punters to do their...

hacklink hack forum hacklink film izle hacklink testpadişahbetgalabetNon GAMSTOP Casinosbeste online casinonon GamStop casinos UKNon GamStop Sitesjojobetonline casinos australiaonline casinosonline casino australiacasinos not on GamStopzlybrarypadişahbet günceljojobetjojobetbetgarantijojobetjojobetbetpark