Wednesday, April 24, 2024

Gabrielle Union Writes Opinion Piece on Nate Parker Rape Allegations

Actors Nate Parker (L) and Gabrielle Union attend the Creative Coalition Spotlight Initiative Awards Gala Dinner at Cisero's Bar on January 23, 2016 in Park City, Utah.
Actors Nate Parker (L) and Gabrielle Union attend the Creative Coalition Spotlight Initiative Awards Gala Dinner at Cisero’s Bar on January 23, 2016 in Park City, Utah.

The controversy surrounding “The Birth of a Nation” star and director Nate Parker continues to escalate. Now, actress Gabrielle Union has written an op-ad piece for the Los Angeles Times about the subject.

Union who was raped in real life plays the role of an unnamed slave in the film who is sexually assaulted in the film. She’s also the first cast member to speak on the issue.

The actress says in her opinion piece that  learning about Parker’s 2001 rape trial left her “in a state of stomach-churning confusion.”

*Twenty-four years ago I was raped at gunpoint in the cold, dark backroom of the Payless shoe store where I was then working. Two years ago I signed on to a brilliant script called “The Birth of a Nation,” to play a woman who was raped. One month ago I was sent a story about Nate Parker, the very talented writer, director and star of this film. Seventeen years ago Nate Parker was accused and acquitted of sexual assault. Four years ago the woman who accused him committed suicide.

Different roads circling one brutal, permeating stain on our society. A stain that is finely etched into my own history. Rape is a wound that throbs long after it heals. And for some of us the throbbing gets too loud. Post traumatic stress syndrome is very real and chips away at the soul and sanity of so many of us who have survived sexual violence.

Since Nate Parker’s story was revealed to me, I have found myself in a state of stomach-churning confusion. I took this role because I related to the experience. I also wanted to give a voice to my character, who remains silent throughout the film. In her silence, she represents countless black women who have been and continue to be violated. Women without a voice, without power. Women in general. But black women in particular. I knew I could walk out of our movie and speak to the audience about what it feels like to be a survivor.

My compassion for victims of sexual violence is something that I cannot control. It spills out of me like an instinct rather than a choice. It pushes me to speak when I want to run away from the platform. When I am scared. Confused. Ashamed. I remember this part of myself and must reach out to anyone who will listen — other survivors, or even potential perpetrators.

Read the rest of Gabrielle Union’s FULL article at LA Times.

 

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