<p>Irish we are learning together, and I value your views as a current student at ND. This is a wonderful opportunity for us to find out more, so from your link I went to the V-Day website.</p>
<p>Irish you just questioned the link between violence to women and talking about vaginas.
So this is what I found, and perhaps ALL of us, including me will learn more about VM. Thank you Irish, for posting the link which got me to this:</p>
<p><a href="http://www.vday.org/contents/vday/history%5B/url%5D">http://www.vday.org/contents/vday/history</a></p>
<p>History
V-Day was born in 1998 as an outgrowth of Eve Ensler's Obie-Award winning play, "The Vagina Monologues." As Eve performed the piece in small towns and large cities all around the world, she saw and heard first hand the destructive personal, social, political and economic consequences violence against women has for many nations.</p>
<p>Hundreds of women told her their stories of rape, incest, domestic battery and genital mutilation. It was clear that something widespread and dramatic needed to be done to stop the violence. A group of women in New York joined Eve and founded V-Day . . . a catalyst, a movement, a performance.</p>
<p>V-Days mission is simple. It demands that the violence must end. It proclaims Valentines Day as V-Day until the violence stops. When all women live in safety, no longer fearing violence or the threat of violence, then V-Day will be known as Victory Over Violence Day.</p>