Synopsis
In 1974 a small group of women, armed with nothing but brooms, mops and washing up gloves, broke into two abandoned houses in Glebe called Elsie and Minnie, cleaned them up, changed the locks, and declared themselves a safe place for women. Firebombed, shot at, beaten up, Elsie: We Will not be Beaten, tells the remarkable story of these feminist pioneers as they created the first refuge for women fleeing domestic violence in Australia. Prior to Elsie women who fled violent husbands risked separation from their children, stigma at the hands of police, homelessness or destitution.
Elsie made history by giving them a way out.
Story
The women who founded Elsie had no money, no training in counselling nor domestic violence prevention (concepts which did not yet exist) no means to defend themselves against violent husbands (who turned up with guns and fire-bombs), and no organisational or institutional support. Despite these difficult circumstances they created a 24hr volunteer roster system and managed to feed, house, and protect hundreds of women and their children. Elsie was run entirely on donated food and volunteer labour for over a year before the government finally offered support. Once government funding was secured more refuges opened throughout Australia and today there are over 800 refuges and domestic violence prevention is a core aspect of government policy.
Elise was more than a refuge it was a life changing experience, a place where women lived with each other, formed friendships and relationships, argued over the representation of First Nations and migrant communities, shared domestic tasks and childcare, created all girl punk bands and theatre groups, hosted parties and dances, organised self-defence squads, fell in love and became powerful advocates for the rights of women.
Elsie transformed the political landscape making domestic violence an issue in Australia for the very first time. Today domestic violence is the leading preventable cause of death and illness for women aged 18 to 44 (Australia’s National Research Organisation for Women’s Safety) and anger at the rising numbers of women murdered by their intimate partners has sparked a series of nationwide rallies. This documentary will uncover a little-known story of bravery and activism from the past and connect this with a rising movement for change today.
This documentary will follow three key narrative arcs:
1. The Occupation, the birth of Elsie and how collective action created an unprecedented sanctuary for women.
2. The Reckoning, the conversations within Elsie, as First Nations, working-class and queer women birthed deeper dialogues around intersectionality.
3. The Legacy, the institutionalisation of the refuge model and how activists were forced to invent new ways to response to domestic violence.
The documentary will also follow several personal narrative arcs of women whose lives were changed forever by their time at Elsie.
Elsie: We Will Not be Beaten will include archival footage, documentation of women’s punk performances and bands, contemporary reenactments and interviews with participants, survivors and experts. It will be energetic and raw, drawing its aesthetic from feminist 16mm film footage, hand drawn posters and 70s and 80s underground counter-culture.
Production Stage
- Development
- Production
- Post-production
- Completed
- Outreach
DURATION: 60 MINUTES
Issue area
HUMAN RIGHTS & SOCIAL JUSTICE
CONTACT FILM TEAM