#WeAreBrave
SPEAK OUT. SPEAK LOUD. SPEAK TOGETHER.
Welcome to a safe, carefully moderated world of testimonials from survivors of sexual assault and rape. Join our community by sharing your story or showing your support. This platform is meant to heal and not re-traumatize. Please remember to practice self-care if reading these stories is triggering to you.
The #WeAreBrave Story Platform has made BraveMissWorld.com the #1 Google search result worldwide for survivors seeking to share their stories. Yet it was born by accident. When Miss World Linor Abargil decided to step forward and speak publicly about her rape in 2008, she launched the website LinorSpeaksOut. Her mailbox was quickly flooded with emails from survivors wanting to share their stories with someone who would believe them and offer words of support. Linor met with many of the women and men who wrote to her, and included their stories in her film.
When the documentary Brave Miss World was completed and launched in 2014, LinorSpeaksOut was merged into BraveMissWorld.com, which became the online hub for survivors wanting to share their stories. With generous grants from The Artemis Rising Foundation, The Fledgling Fund, The Francis Family Foundation, and The Roy A. Hunt Foundation among others, the filmmakers and a small team of volunteers have curated this one-of-a-kind collection of over 2,500 testimonials, each carefully moderated to screen out any remarks that are disrespectful of survivors. We are committed to making sure that everyone submitting and reading stories on our site feels safe.
Our goal is to change the conversation around assault and rape. Women’s voices are finally being heard. Until now, we have not demanded that the culture be changed. We are saying no to the deafening silence that has surrounded rape and assault. We encourage members of our community to share their stories, because we believe that healing begins with speaking out and receiving support. Each story on our site receives a supportive comment from a trained advocate, as well as comments from our #WeAreBrave community. Every story is incredibly different and unique, but they all share the tremendous strength and resilience of survivors.
We know our platform works, because of the feedback from those using our site whose lives have changed in significant ways as a result of watching the film and/or sharing their story with others. Every day, new viewers and visitors discover and explore #WeAreBrave and many write to thank us for creating and maintaining this important space. For all those sharing their unique personal experiences and brave accounts of the lasting emotional impact of rape and assault, you are not alone.
Our work needs you. Your continuing support has enabled us to upgrade this site and add the ability to submit audio and visual testimonials. Please DONATE to help us make sure this resource continues to remain available to all those who need it. All donations are 100% tax deductible through our 501c3 fiscal sponsor, Los Angeles Filmforum.
Contact us here: producers@BraveMissWorld.com
Watch the Emmy-nominated Brave Miss World on…
Netflix: https://www.netflix.com/title/80222025
iTunes: http://apple.co/1Og611n
Amazon: http://amzn.com/B0194BJ5MO
Vimeo: https://vimeo.com/ondemand/bravemissworld
The First Time
Fear
They Blamed it on the Tequila
My Story
I Was Just A Baby
חיה בשני עולמות מקבילים
Family Secrets
Still Carry the Anger
And It Continues
Rape Victim / Rapist in Hollywood
Rape
Raped By Family
Tormented
לדבר, להלחם, לנצח
The Statistics that Changed Me
#IStandWithHer
BC Oilfield Ruined My Life
There is hope
Raped by a work colleague
Something I’ve Never Shared
My/our German “Weinstein” Case
I No Longer Want To Live
I am not a rape victim
היי
I don’t know if I was raped
I wish I remembered
Drugged
Multiple Rape
Breaking the silence
They Laughed
Just wanted to be loved
Touched
Once When I Was 6, Once When...
I called him my friend
Smoke Together
More Than a Survivor
The Day I Was Raped and Abandoned
A Meek Young Girl
Are you sure?
Remember as a victim you have done...
Chiropractor
I Trusted You
April 19th
Who I Once Called My Father
Stranger, Friend, Lawyer, and Youth Leader
Need Support
Attempted Rape
She wanted me to prove I loved...
It never goes away
היי לינור
My Boyfriend Raped Me
I want to Call it what it...
my story
Surpris à la Maison
The Night My Life Changed
Father, Brother, Brother
The Monster With The Pretty Smile
You’re a Rapist
My story growing up with a secret
Stranger, Friend, Lawyer, and Youth Leader
Rape on a Foreign Exchange Trip
He raped me. I hugged him goodbye...
Supporting Sisters
My experience as an intern in highschool
Childhood Friend Date Rape
Abuse of Men and By My Mother
Taken advantage of
הטראומה הכי קשה בחיי
My experience of societal views on victims...
“Me too” On Facebook
We met at the bar
Drugged and Raped at Age 14
Stranger Rape
Sexual Coercion
Raped at the Air Force Academy
Agressée deux fois, mais toujours debout.
A Big Man
Everyone Else Likes You, Too
Not just me
I didn’t break up with him back...
I Said No
Never Got Over It
SURVIVOR OF RAPE
Scars
יש חיים אחרי אונס
Men Like Brett Kavanaugh Make It Hard...
Second Night of College
Panic Attack
My Girlfriend of Two Years
Nashville Sweetheart
Raped After School
Lost in Europe
Mental Breakdown
Workplace Sexual Harassment
Mi Esposa
Rape in my locked home
Mi Historia
Ms
Started As a Child
Braver

Remember November
It is not my fault
I Didn’t See It In Time
Incest
My First Two Times
Gang Rape
Rape
Rape of My Partner
Childhood rape
Not safe in my own skin
Childhood Rape
Spoke out and was blamed
I don’t know anymore
My teacher and my step-brother
Because of You
En Enero de 2010
Rape
Myself
Red Flags
Sexual Assault
Not normal
Still Going
Seis Años
Broken vase
Football Player
Raped in the Air Force
I was 13
ללינור היקרה
Ya perdoné pero nunca olvido
Grandpa
Too naïve
Someone I Dated
The Friendship I Always Never Wanted
My story and this amazing documentary film
Taking Back My Life
3 Days After Arriving at College
לפני 14 שנים
Summer 2019
עדיין מציק
Ms.
Growing Past Just Surviving
Husband raped? Well people don’t call it...
Just little girls
Shitty nights
My/our German “Weinstein” Case
It’s OK
Rape
The Aftermath
You are going to show me how...
It’s Been Eight Years
Sexual Assault
Third time’s the charm
Breaking the Trust
Raped
A Girl Who Cried Wolf
In NYC
17
Drunken rape
I Am a Survivor…
Sexual Abuse
Twice a pattern?
Drugged raped and failed by justice
Sleepraping
Believe it or Not, It happened to...
J’avais 13 ans
Raped Husband
3 Generations
Sexually Assaulted as a Child
Lasting Effects
37 Years Ago
Do you believe me?
Gang Rape
So drunk I can’t remember
Feelings After I was Raped 20 plus...
Childhood abuse and acquaintance rape
Through the Window
Por Fin Puedo Decirlo
Rapist Turned Murderer
The Life I Live
Multiple Times
Ritual Sexual Abuse
Forgiving The Rapist
A familiar fight
הטרידו אותי
He Loved Me
Lifetime of Abuse
…
They will never know what they did...
My Side
Sexually assulted by coworker
Never Forget
Fear
Feelings After I was Raped 20 plus...
How Could It Have Happened
“I should do this more often”
I Trusted Him
My Story
Unethical or illegal?
De Los 6 a Los 12
Family
Miss
my story
The Terrible 4
A respectable collegue
My story
School Rape
Abusée par un voisin de mes grands...
Gang rape
I know when I see a rapist...
Memories Are Back
Some of my story
Miss
Assaulted
Raped By 6 Policemen
My Boyfriend Raped Me
Feeling weak
Being Raped
raped as a lone solidier in israeli...
Why Me Over and Over?
לא יוצאים מזה…
I wanted to get high
Dear Coward
Molested by my biological father
Scared Like Crazy
2 Years Ago
Time Stood Still
Feeling Lost
Childhood Abuse
HS Reunion
Stranger
Alcohol Convinced Me It Was My Fault,...
Pretty Girls
Domestic Abuse
Abused since I was young
Innocence Taken
First College Party
Everyone loves him
I Am Beautiful Now
Date Rape
A Picture
Raped by Brother
Rape Survivor
Assaulted By Family Member
Raped because of who I loved
So Now What?
No Justice
Erase and Rewind
A young mother
Raped by a so called friend
Do NOT Trust Strangers
f*ck you
Too naïve
Male dancer
They thought it was fun
Rape
Finding My Voice
Date Rape
Just Words
My Ongoing Journey
Abused by another child
Raped by Him
I Blame Myself
A Business Partner
Devil In Disguise
was raped and I don’t remember it
Raped Three Times
This Is Me, my fight song
Army
Disappointed
Childhood Friend Date Rape
A Silent Fighter
The secret
Drunken Rape
My Story
Sex doll
Ready to Share
Black and Blue
More Than Once
Rape
Realization of Rape
I Was Only 7
Sexual Assault
Molested By My Step Brother
Rape By Unknown
It never stops changing you
More Witness than I Care to Live...
Raped 14 times in 1 year
Amusement Park
Molested, Tortured, Rape, Survivor
Victim of Abuse
Rock It!

The Cliche
The Unforgetable Party
Why me?
My Story
Too naïve
Survivor
Use and Throw
My consent is just that…mine
Different face, but the same monster
Feelings After I was Raped 20 plus...
אוףףףף
My Family My Love
Feeling Lost
Trapped In a Fantasy World
You Must Acknowledge
Online Dangers
An older, popular boy
Rape Shaming
The Boys Club Continues
My Best Friend & His Friend Raped...
Multiples Agressions Sexuelles
Indigo
I returned to fine art in 1990 when I took at class in indigo dyeing at San Francisco State University. I was lucky that the instructor, Yoshiko Wada, and another student from her class, were in the East Bay so that we could carpool together. We would talk textiles on our weekly journey across the Bay Bridge to the Campus. The other student was an accomplished Quilter named Linda MacDonald. Linda lived in Willits near the famous Mendocino Art Center, but traveled to Berkeley to attend this class once a week.
The Indigo vat was made in a 32-gallon garbage can and had to be kept covered between dyeing sessions. Indigo is a unique rich blue dye that develops with an oxidization process when exposed to air. Dipping the fabric several times, and allowing the natural fiber to oxidize before dipping it again, creates darker shades of blue. The dye in the vat is created from a mixture of indigo pigment, various chemicals and a reducing agent to remove oxygen from the dye. It is a rich green color while in the vat, which shows up on the fabric before it is fully exposed to the air. The smell emitted from the dye is unusual, a musky odor in my mind. I like to think that it smells like the color blue. The vat needs to be carefully stirred and maintained between dyeing sessions. There is a “bloom” on the top of the vat created by oxidized indigo, making a bubbly and shiny ball of material reminiscent of a flower. The “bloom” gets moved to the side before entry of the pre-wetted fabric. The process reminds me of baking bread or making yogurt where the steps need to be carefully followed to achieve the desired results. In the process of bread and yogurt making, there are living cultures involved in order to create the product, and with the creation and dyeing process of indigo, it has that same feeling of being alive.
In order to create interesting patterns, my classmates and I would use resist techniques on the fabric like pastes, stitching and clamping. Simple household items like clothespins could be used to create patterns by folding and then placing the pins at intervals along the fold lines. Beautiful and surprising results were achieved using these methods.
Image of Indigo dye on fabric during the oxidization process.
My dream of being a professional artist, all started in early childhood, and the first memories of my creations go back to Nursery School. I loved playing with all kinds of materials, like paint, clay, and crayons, just to name a few examples.
Mel (Melanie), painting at Jack and Jill Nursery School, Walnut Creek, California, 1960.
In 1974, a neighbor in Marin where I was living at the time and studying art at College of Marin told me about an Art School in Mexico. I ended up sending off slides of my work with an application to the Instituto Allende, and was delighted to hear that I was accepted. I began my journey to study there in San Miguel de Allende by flying to Mexico City in January of 1975. A bus ride completed that journey.
When I first arrived, I moved in with a family who had two small children, including a newborn. It seemed like a safe living situation for a 19-year-old woman, but that shortly proved to not be true when the husband started coming on to me. I ended up finding my own place on the other side of town. It was a spacious abode with a wall that was shared with a weaving factory next door. There were 2 adjoined bedrooms, a bathroom, a large living/kitchen area and a small concrete patio out the back door. There was no hot water, refrigerator or a telephone. When I needed hot water for dishes, I would boil some on the stove. For showers, I had to build a fire in a box below a water tank outside to get hot water. I felt much more secure living there and walking a further distance to the Instituto on the other side of town than living with the husband who had made me feel so unsafe. There was the Central Plaza, which was called the “Jardin” that was in the middle of town, and I would pass through it on my walk quite frequently. This was the site of fireworks and festivals, like the celebration of Cinco de Mayo. The streets were cobblestone and many charming shops and galleries were located downtown. The School itself was on a beautiful campus with large ornate doors in front that were closed when school was not in session.
Photo of the closed front doors of the Instituto Allende
I had heard about you and what you had done to other women before you appeared in my main living space one sunny spring afternoon pointing a gun at me.
You had a bandana wrapped around your face and tied behind your head.
I had heard you first, in the bathroom.
Dressed in a long polyester dress with colorful psychedelic patterns.
I wasn’t wearing any underwear or shoes.
I walked through the 2 bedrooms and turned left when I saw you standing there.
I screamed and shouted, “help me,” thinking that workers at the Weaving Factory would hear me and come rescue me.
Nobody came.
You said to me “Coyote” which I later learned meant to be quiet or to shut up.
You grabbed my shoulders and dragged me out the unlocked back door onto the concrete patio.
The tops of my feet got scraped.
I gave up.
I knew you were going to rape me.
I just wanted you to finish as quickly as possible.
You took off your belt and put down your gun.
Somehow I managed to pick up your gun and threw it over the wall embedded with glass on the top, into the alleyway. The same wall you had climbed over to get into my place through the unlocked back door.
Towards the end of this ordeal, I heard a knock on my door.
You left, climbing back over the wall.
I answered the door. My friend Rhonda had come by to visit me.
I told her what had happened and we walked to the Police Station nearby.
I had your belt with me. The one you left behind.
I went to the front counter, telling the officers behind the counter what had happened to me. They were laughing and playing cards at the time.
I showed them your belt.
They told me to bring you in if I saw you again.
I left with Rhonda and took a bath at the where place she lived. We didn’t talk about what happened.
We moved in together shortly after that.
I sent a telegram to my father and stepmother about what had happened to me.
Nobody came to help me.
Rhonda helped me when I got hepatitis A and could no longer go to school.
I was on my own when it came to figuring out how to return to the Bay Area.
I moved in with my father and stepmother.
They didn’t talk to me about what happened to me.
They sent me to a doctor who diagnosed me with type 1 diabetes. He showed me how to give myself insulin injections. He told me to practice by injecting oranges with empty syringes.
My mother told me years later that “You were never the same again” after what you did to me.
I survived. I gave up art for 15 years before realizing that I wanted to go back to art school. In those years, I became so disturbed that I had panic attacks, deep depression and needed to move in with my mother at age 30. I started therapy after becoming self destructive in my 20’s.
Depression also called “the blues” has been my long time companion. It has taken me a lifetime to heal. My iPhone predicts the words, depression, PTSD and C-PTSD for my text messages.
After my Indigo dyeing class at San Francisco State, I enrolled in the Textiles Fine Art program at California College of Arts and Crafts (now known as California College of the Arts) in Oakland. I was married at the time and had become pregnant with our daughter Emily right before classes started in September. Emily was born on May 13, 1991. By the Fall of 1992, I was a single mom and an art student. An inheritance from my mother who died in 1995, allowed me to graduate and to buy my first home.
I continued to work with indigo dyeing and created a large textile piece about my experience in Mexico.
After many years of therapy and other healing modalities, I recently started painting on canvas. Part of that process has been a Soul Retrieval session to bring back my 4 year old self who loved to paint. I am feeling uplifted and encouraged after many years of recurring periods of severe emotional pain. Stay tuned for more details about my new work.
One of my final pieces was a textile called “Out of the Blues.”