Over the Kitchen Table
After years of being silenced through violent opposition, Norma Burton, one of the key founders of the first women’s shelter in Tulsa, OK, tells an untold story of the battered women's movement. In the late 1970s and early 1980’s LGBTQ, BIPOC, and formerly abused women across the US gathered in secret to create a grassroots movement that became today's National Coalition Against Domestic Violence, despite persecution and death threats. Norma recounts to her daughter, director Nisha Burton, how she and her collaborators alerted the police of rising cases of domestic violence and ultimately decided to take matters into their own hands by conducting support gatherings in their homes around the kitchen table. These meetings led to the founding of the first battered women’s shelter in Tulsa, OK in 1975. The years that followed were filled with harassment and verbal and physical attacks on Norma and fellow organizers, but today these courageous advocates continue to support the movement.
You May Also Like

Private Violence

TINA

You Will Be a Man

Scars Unseen

Maso and Miso Go Boating

Power and Control: Domes…

Woman, Life, Freedom: An…

The Police Tapes

Violently in Love

Behind the Shield: The P…
Z lásky nenávist

Chris Brown: A History o…

Home Truth

Pussy Riot: Rage Against…

Le deuxième sexe : Sur l…

What Happened, Miss Simo…

La casa viola

The Monsters in My Home

The Fire That Took Her

