SleepSafe Breakfast - Support White Ribbon Day

Join QVWC and Project 5.0 for the SleepSafe Breakfast on 21 November to support White Ribbon Day and the campaign to end violence against women.

White Ribbon Day logo

SleepSafe Breakfast - In support of White Ribbon Day, the international campaign to eliminate violence against women by promoting culture-change around the issue.

Helen Brown, UNIFEM representative and ABC journalist, will MC the event.

White Ribbon Day Ambassador Brendon Gale, CEO of the AFL Players Association will speak.

The SleepSafe Breakfast is organised by Project 5-O, a coalition of BPW Australia, Soroptimist International, Zonta International, National Council of Women, Federation of University Women Australia, with the support of QVWC.

SleepSafe aims to raise public awareness of the prevalance and impact of domestic violence within the community and to see an end to violence against women and children, allowing all a safe night's sleep.

Support the SleepSafe campaign by attending the breakfast or donating pyjamas for women and children which will be given to local women's refuges to provide some comfort during difficult times.

Details

SleepSafe Breakfast - in support of White Ribbon Day

When: Wednesday, 21 November 2007; 7.00am to 9.00am
Where: Park Hyatt, 1 Parliament Place, East Melbourne
Cost: $55/head or $525 per table of 10.

Corporate sponsor tables available upon request.

Spaces are limited. Reserve your place today by registering online at Business and Professional Women (click on 'Events').

Questions? Email the SleepSafe organisers at: sleepsafe@gmail.com

About White Ribbon Day

Photo of White Ribbon Day banner on the Centre

A White Ribbon Day banner calls for men to say no to violence against women.

White Ribbon Day was created by a handful of Canadian men in 1991 on the second anniversary of one man's massacre of fourteen women in Montreal. They began the White Ribbon Campaign to urge men to speak out against violence against women.

In 1999, the United Nations General Assembly declared November 25 the International Day for the Elimination of Violence Against Women (IDEVAW) and the White Ribbon has become the symbol for the day.

From 2000, the Commonwealth Government Office for Women ran awareness activities on the International Day, and, in 2003, the Australian branch of the United Nations Development Fund for Women, UNIFEM, began a partnership with men and men's organisations to make this a national campaign. Ten thousand white ribbons were distributed in 2003.

Today hundreds of thousands of white ribbons are worn by men and women across Australia - men at work; men and women in all Australian police forces; men in national and local sporting matches and organisations; men in the media; men and women in politics; men in the defence forces; men and women in capital cities and in rural and regional Australia.