Writer, activist, educator, grandma, sailor, abuse survivor, researcher, #MeToo #ChurchToo also tweets @voiceofsurvivor. Views my own.

Joined March 2011
293 Photos and videos
Peace doesn't come at any price Because if you are disturbed so badly that all you ever feel is sad and peace becomes something you’ve never had That’s the time to think twice about what you’re doing and who is this battle going to ruin? What if I could win this war by losing it?
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Jane Chevous πŸ’™πŸ’œβ›΅ retweeted
10 years ago my wife, the mum of our kids & the MP for Batley&Spen was killed by a far right extremist. At anniversaries I try to be optimistic about the future. But not this time. In the ten years since she was killed we have gone backwards & I fear our democracy is now at risk
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Jane Chevous πŸ’™πŸ’œβ›΅ retweeted
🚨BREAKING: Filton 4 sentenced as terrorists Amnesty opposes the use of terrorism powers in this case. It is completely disproportionate to punish protesters for criminal damage as if they were terrorists, a sentence which stays with you for life. The defendants in today’s case were sentenced as terrorists because prosecutors want to make an example of them. Today's decision shows how direct action protesters could be treated in the future. The use of terrorism laws against direct action protesters must end. Together we must continue calling out the abuse of power and fighting for our right to protest. Read our position: Criminal Damage, Direct Action, Terrorism: Misuse of counter-terrorism powers in the UK: amn.st/6015B87ZCx
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Jane Chevous πŸ’™πŸ’œβ›΅ retweeted
Iconic feminist graffitti (UK), 1979, photographed by Jill Posener, British photographer and activist #womensart #PhotographerWeek πŸ“·
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I'm also wondering whether the issue is the challenge of having these conversations on social media, or the challenge of recognising humanity of perpetrators, or something else? Both the above are certainly very challenging.
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Currently I'm campaigning for the church to treat victim-survivors with more humanity, & I find it difficult to do that without recognising for me the humanity of my abusers. I find that a very conflicted & painful place to be, but also hugely important.
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I just have questions really no answers but I am grateful for the conversation.
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RT @Taj_Ali1: I don’t want to hear any bullshit about β€œlegitimate concerns” and β€œworking class revolt” It’s working-class Black and brown…
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Jane Chevous πŸ’™πŸ’œβ›΅ retweeted
Call you old fashioned? Alright, old-fashioned, @PatrickChristys, let us go through the decades you prefer. The 1960s: Ian Brady and Myra Hindley tortured and murdered five children, buried them on Saddleworth Moor, and recorded their screams on tape. The 1970s: Peter Sutcliffe murdered 13 women with hammers and screwdrivers across Yorkshire. Dennis Nilsen began strangling young men in his London flat, dismembering them, boiling their skulls on his stove, and flushing the remains down the drains. The 1980s: Michael Ryan shot 16 people dead in Hungerford. Fred and Rose West were raping, torturing, and dismembering women and girls and burying them under their house in Gloucester. Their own daughter among them. The 1990s: Two 10-year-old boys abducted a toddler from a shopping centre in Liverpool, tortured him, and bludgeoned him to death with bricks and an iron bar. Thomas Hamilton walked into a primary school in Dunblane and shot 16 five-year-olds and their teacher. Harold Shipman was murdering his patients by the hundred. The 2000s: James Watt and his family enslaved a man for a decade, tortured him with baseball bats, air pistols, boiling water, and pit bull attacks, then decapitated him and dumped his body in a lake. Mathew Hardman, 17, murdered a 90-year-old woman, cut out her heart, placed it on a silver platter, and drank her blood. The 2010s: Derrick Bird shot 12 people dead across Cumbria. Thomas Mair shot and stabbed an MP in the street while shouting "Britain first". The 2020s: Jemma Mitchell decapitated her friend, stored the body for two weeks, and drove 200 miles to dump it. Those are the decades you prefer. And for each decade there are 20 other equally horrific incidents. And here is the thing, old fashioned Patrick. According to the Crime Survey for England and Wales, violence, burglary, and car crime have fallen by close to 90% since the mid-1990s. The ONS confirms that violent crime is two-thirds lower now than in the 1990s. The country you live in today is measurably, statistically, dramatically safer than the one you are nostalgic for. That's not an opinion, it's a fact. And I am not even touching Glasgow and its past knife crime epidemic. So, which decade was better, Patrick? Tell us.
Call me old fashioned but I preferred our country before Somalians started trying to behead people in the street.
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I had the privilege to meet Erin once. A true heroine, & like all leaders of change, a force to be reckoned with! We owe her so much.
November 1971. Chiswick, West London. Erin Pizzey is 32 years old. She is not a lawyer. Not a politician. Not a doctor. She is a woman who talked Hounslow Council into lending her a cold, rundown building on Belmont Road β€” a former community hall β€” for almost nothing. Her original plan was modest. A warm room. A cup of tea. Somewhere for mothers with young children to simply get out of the house. Then the door opened. A woman stood in the entrance. She was covered, head to foot, in bruises. She was holding two small children. She was shaking. She didn't want tea. She needed somewhere to hide. Erin let her in. She didn't turn her away. She didn't tell her to call the police. Because Erin had already called the police. They told her the same thing they told every woman in Britain at the time: they could not enter a private home over a "domestic dispute." That was the law. The home was private. What happened inside it was a family matter. When Erin contacted a female civil servant to report what she was seeing, the response was astonishing. The woman told her flatly: "There wasn't a problem of battered wives until you made one." Erin put down the phone. Then she went back to her residents and made sure they were fed. Within weeks, 40 mothers and children were sleeping in four tiny rooms. No funding. No staff. No legal authority. She didn't stop. By 1973, word had spread through quiet whisper networks β€” one woman telling another, "There is a place. Go to Chiswick. She won't turn you away." That same year, Erin hosted the first National Women's Aid Conference in the UK. Women from across Britain arrived, and they all recognized the same thing at once: what she had built needed to exist everywhere. In 1974, the council set a maximum of 36 residents. At peak times, 150 women and children were living inside those walls β€” sleeping on floors, on chairs, in hallways. The building smelled of cooking, fear, and something else entirely: relief. Erin was taken to court for overcrowding. She appealed all the way to the House of Lords. She kept the doors open the entire time. That same year, she wrote a book. Scream Quietly or the Neighbours Will Hear. It was the first published account of domestic violence in British history. It used real stories from real women inside the shelter. Overnight, a problem that had no official name was on front pages from London to New York. The movement spread. Refuges opened across the UK. Then Australia. Then Canada. Then the United States. The pattern she created in four small rooms in West London β€” no blueprint, no permission, no funding β€” had been replicated in hundreds of shelters across the Western world. MP Jack Ashley stood up in Parliament and said: "It was she who first identified the problem, who first recognised the seriousness of the situation and who first did something practical." She was ranked 14th in a poll of the 100 women who shook the world. She was awarded the Italian Peace Prize. She received a CBE. The charity she founded β€” Chiswick Women's Aid, which became Refuge β€” grew into the largest domestic violence charity in the United Kingdom, with over 460 employees and an annual income of more than Β£33 million. Erin Pizzey passed away on October 4, 2025, aged 86. She never stopped. It all began with one woman, one borrowed building, and an absolute refusal to say no. Forty women and children showed up with nowhere to go. She made room. Share this if you believe one ordinary person, refusing to look away, can build a shelter that holds the whole world. Follow us Lost in Yesterday
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Once again I'm coming towards the end of a process in relation to my abuse & grappling with the difficulties that brings. Mixed feelings about the outcomes. Having to accept limitations. Exhaustion from the battle. Triggers. Fear of what fills the space this has filled for 7yrs🧡
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Endings are a really vulnerable time for survivors. Often things don't end well in abuse, or disclosure, or reporting - very rarely justice. Therapy is often cut short due to funding. Then we've put so much effort in the mission to get this far, life's purpose can get lost too,
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& people who have been supportive move on, assuming the worst is over. But the next challenge is just starting, rebuilding a new life after abuse & reporting, & accepting what did or didn't happen. If you know survivors who've reached an end, reach out to them. Endings are hard.
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Jane Chevous πŸ’™πŸ’œβ›΅ retweeted
"They Call Us The Wrong Kind of Jew” Miriam Margolyes, Michael Rosen & Alexei Sayle DON’T HOLD BACK doubledown.news/watch/2026/j…
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"Women and girls are seasoned to be prostituted... Girls are trained to see themselves as sex objects and to see men’s sexual attention as positive. " This was my experience, & many I met in the organisers P.R.O.S. in the 80s. nordicmodelnow.org/2023/08/0…
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Jane Chevous πŸ’™πŸ’œβ›΅ retweeted
This is exactly why we created Make Yourself Heard. Too often, survivors are expected to carry experiences like these in silence. M.Y.H exists to create space for those voices to be heard, to challenge the systems that failed them, and to remind others facing similar experiences that they are not alone. Importantly, making yourself heard comes in many forms. Whether you choose to speak publicly, share anonymously, create art, write, campaign, or simply tell your story to one trusted person, your voice matters. Thank you to Ava for trusting us with her story. Every voice shared has the power to inform, connect and drive change.
At 12 years old, Ava was groomed and raped by a 16-year-old boy. Despite securing a conviction, she was left navigating the lasting impact of trauma, safeguarding failures and a justice system that didn't always feel just. An anonymous survivor story shared with M.Y.H.
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Jane Chevous πŸ’™πŸ’œβ›΅ retweeted
Having lived through the consequences of a case being dropped when it should have gone to trial, I know just how important this pilot could be. It's encouraging to hear this commitment from @elliereeves, and I hope victims across the country will soon benefit from the same safeguard.
I want to see a national roll out of the Victims’ Right to Review pilot by the end of the summer. Because of this pilot, cases that would have been dropped are continuing, ensuring victims of rape are heard, treated with fairness and dignity.
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Jane Chevous πŸ’™πŸ’œβ›΅ retweeted
Marjane Satrapi (1969-2026), the French-Iranian author and illustrator behind the popular graphic novel series and film β€œPersopolis,” RIP πŸ™
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