The oldest battered women's shelter in New England,
established in 1975, is setting precedent and making many feminists
nervous in the process. 
Transition House not only launched a "gender-neutral" search for
a new executive director but also appointed a man as its interim
director. Transition House explains that it simply wants to hire the
best person for the job, and interviewing men doubles the chance of
success.
Feminists of my ilk, who judge individuals on merit rather than
gender, are applauding. (Admittedly, a muttered "it's about time!"
may also be heard.)
Feminists who believe that gender must be a deciding factor in
who addresses domestic violence and how it should be addressed, are
appalled. They view the very prospect of hiring a male director as
violating the "mission" of the shelter movement: to assist battered
women and children.
In short, the "women-only feminists" believe males should be
precluded from major employment and entry at shelters. Indeed,
women's shelters often deny entry to male children over
12-years-old. (The legality of doing so at tax-funded shelters is
dubious, to say the least.)
Why should even male teenagers be excluded? In a protest letter
to the Transition House Board, the feminist organization About Women
explained that the shelter must be a space where "women could
feel safe from male intrusion and could openly unburden themselves
of the experiences of male violence they had undergone without fear
of censure, criticism or inhibition by male presence."
One interpretation of the foregoing statement makes sense. Some
female domestic violence victims have been so brutalized by the men
in their lives that a mere male presence may well terrify them. For
that category of domestic violence victim, a women-only shelter may
be the most compassionate and effective option.
(Men-only shelters for similarly devastated male victims would be
equally valid.)
Nevertheless, it is difficult to understand why a male executive
director who may have no direct interaction with battered women is
so objectionable. To understand this response, it is necessary to
enter the realm of ideology.
The argument for a women-only space is rooted in a belief that
domestic violence results from the general societal oppression of
women as a class by men as a class.
The
"Power and Control Wheel" that is used by every domestic
violence organization I know of embodies this belief. The wheel
explains the origins of domestic violence through a pie chart; one
of the pie segments is labeled "Male Privilege".
In short, women-only feminists argue that women are battered not
merely by an individual male abuser but by the entire male gender
and, so, they must be protected from both.
This is similar to claiming that a white person who has been
beaten by a black needs to be in a black-free environment because
they have been battered not merely by a specific black person but by
an entire race.
To carry the analogy one step farther, it is similar to demanding
that blacks should not be employed or allowed on the premises of a
whites-only shelter…even if those premises are tax-funded and, so,
prohibited from discrimination.
The ideological argument for women-only shelters -- as opposed to
the practical argument that, sometimes, such shelters just make
sense -- is class guilt. The guilty class is "male." Class guilt
does not allow an individual male to demonstrate his innocence
because, simply by being a member of a class, he is guilty by
definition.
The concept of class guilt never ceases to anger me. As a victim
of domestic violence, I know the fist that legally blinded my right
eye was wielded by a specific man, not by a class. And I refuse to
dilute his responsibility by extending it to men who've done me no
harm.
It angers me as well because I'm the sort of domestic violence
victim who needed exposure to non-abusive men, not isolation from
all male presence, in order to heal. I needed to realize that decent
caring men still existed and that I could interact with them in a
positive way. In other words, a specific man was my problem; men as
a whole were part of the solution.
As I mentioned, there are domestic violence victims who do not
share my reaction.
It would be amazing if hundreds of thousands of people -- from
different cultures, lifestyles and backgrounds -- responded to a
complex experience in exactly the same manner. Just as there is no
one explanation for domestic violence, neither is there a
one-size-fits-all remedy.
But the ideological women-only argument for domestic violence
shelters is inflexible. It denies to female victims the healing
presence of benevolent men with whom they can re-establish trust.
It denies the very possibility of male and female victims
occupying the same shelter and, so, coming to an understanding of
their differences and shared realities. Such mingling of the sexes
is common in other forms of therapy and rehabilitation but it is
akin to heresy to even suggest the prospect for domestic violence.
In short, women-only zealots dismiss the feminist goal of
'diversity' and insist instead upon only one explanation for
domestic violence and only one organizational principle for
shelters.
Women-only zealots are hurting victims. They are harming those
battered women who would benefit from learning how to regain their
trust and respect for male. They are harming the significant
percentage of domestic violence victims who are male themselves.
Estimates vary on the prevalence of male domestic violence
victims. Professor Martin Fiebert of California State University at
Long Beach
prepared a summary of hundreds of studies and reports which
indicates that men and women are victimized at much the same rate. A
recent BOJ study found that men constituted 27 percent of domestic
violence victims between 1998 and 2002.
Whichever figure is correct, a significant percentage of domestic
violence victims are refused admission to most shelters in North
America based solely upon their gender.
The anti-male prejudice in domestic violence must cease.
The deadline for Transition House's job search is August 30,
which means there may be a new executive director as you read this
column. Whether it is a 'he' or 'she' is secondary. What matters
most is that the individual will have been judged upon his or her
merits and no longer upon genitalia.
Wendy McElroy© 2005

Wendy McElroy is the editor of ifeminists.com and a research
fellow for The Independent Institute in Oakland, Calif. She is the
author and editor of many books and articles, including the new
book, "Liberty for Women: Freedom and Feminism in the 21st Century"
(Ivan R. Dee/Independent Institute, 2002). She lives with her
husband in Canada.