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Evening Standard
Evening Standard
National
Rebecca Black

Shoes of domestic abuse survivors displayed at Stormont

Alliance MLA Connie Egan visits the Mothers’ Union’s Souls of Our Shoes exhibition in the Long Gallery at Parliament Buildings (Peter Cheney/PA) -

Shoes belonging to survivors of domestic abuse have been displayed at Stormont in a call to end violence at home.

The Souls of Our Shoes exhibition, organised by the Mothers’ Union, featured the shoes of more than 50 domestic abuse survivors on display at Northern Ireland’s seat of government on Tuesday.

Laid across a table in the Long Gallery, they included high heels, as well as different types of trainers and leather brogues.

Stormont junior minister Joanne Bunting (left) and deputy First Minister Emma Little-Pengelly were among those who visited a poignant exhibition displaying shoes worn by the victims of domestic violence at Stormont on Tuesday. (Peter Cheney/PA)

Deputy First Minister Emma Little-Pengelly, Junior Minister Joanne Bunting, Justice Minister Naomi Long, Agriculture Minister Andrew Muir, and Health Minister Mike Nesbitt were among the Assembly members who viewed it.

The Mothers’ Union, a Church of Ireland organisation, which has more than 5,000 members across the island of Ireland, said it had been campaigning against domestic and gender-based violence for more than a decade.

Mothers’ Union’s All-Ireland president, Kay Clarke, said protecting women and girls from violence should unite everybody.

“We often say that Northern Ireland has endured enough pain, enough division, enough loss,” she said.

“So let this – protecting women and girls from violence – be something that unites us because this is not about politics. This is about humanity. Domestic and sexual violence intersect with health, housing, justice, education, and community development.”

Addressing those gathered in the Long Gallery she said: “When we invest in safety, we invest in the future of our families. When we believe survivors, we build trust. And when we take decisive action, we send a message that echoes far beyond these walls: ‘No woman or girl should ever have to live in fear – not here, not ever’.

“The Mothers’ Union will continue to stand with you, to work with you, and to pray for you – that you will have the courage to act decisively, the compassion to listen deeply, and the commitment to make Northern Ireland a place where every woman and girl can flourish, free from fear.

“Together, we can make that vision real.”

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