Stella, l’amie de Maimie

Stella, l’amie de Maimie is a social justice and a community-based organization established and run “by and for” sex workers in Montreal. Also known as "Chez Stella", this community-based resource offers information for all women in the sex industry; they could be street prostitutes, escorts, strippers, employees of massage parlors, porn actresses, erotic phone entertainers, which are women or identify themselves as such, like transvestites and transsexuals.

Presentation of the organization

“Stella, l’amie de Maimie” is the only community group in Montreal that works exclusively and specifically with sex workers. Since 1995 this “by and for” sex workers group has as its goal the improvement of life conditions and work conditions of all sex workers who identify as women when they work in the Montreal sex industry. Their programs also promote good health practices and

Chez Stella Logo

the respect for the human rights of sex workers. The organization encourages empowerment and solidarity by and amongst sex workers which means that all its actions favour the individual and collective responsibility of these sex workers[1] Stella serves all kinds of sex workers and maintains an ongoing presence in sex work venues, including streets, escort agencies, massage parlors and strip bars.

The organization initially started with a founding board of four employees, and a dedicated group of volunteers and sympathizers. There is no specific religious affiliation within this organization. Stella participants are active on a number of committees, coalitions, research groups and boards of directors. Stella representatives are often invited to give lectures at conferences highlighting issues related to sex work. The organization is also regularly invited to participate in artistic projects and events in Montreal. For example, in 2001, Stella took part in "Six personnages en quête d'auteur", a play directed by Wajdi Mouawad at the Théâtre de Quatre’sous.”[2]

Stella works at the municipal, provincial and national level to promote sex workers’ rights, but also at the international level where it has affiliated with sex worker rights groups all over the world to fight for the same cause—the decriminalization of sex work. As explained in the “Dear Client” guide, one of the most asked question is “Why do sex workers do sex work?” The answer given by the organization Stella is “Sex work is work: an activity that generates income. Sex workers work first and foremost for money”.[3]

History of the Organization

Stella was born in 1995 after the work of a consultative committee set up by the AIDS Study Center in collaboration with the AQTTS, (L’association Québécoise des travailleuses et travailleurs du sexe), some community-based organization representatives (Centre-ville et Centre-Sud de Montréal) and doctors in epidemiology. The sex workers involved in the committee’s work on HIV prevention suggested that the best way to reduce HIV is to improve the life conditions and work conditions of sex workers.

To that end, Stella opened its doors in April 1995 to specifically support women, travesties, and transsexuals working in the sex industry including prostitutes, escorts, porn actress, erotic dancers, etc. Stella set up a participative structure where women current or former sex workers would have a major input at every level of the organization - as volunteers, as members of the administration council or just a member of the working team. Stella acknowledges that their knowledge and experience are invaluable for developing actions and its tools that best suit the specific needs of all sex workers.[4]

Objectives

According to their website, the main goals of Stella are:

Stella favors empowerment and solidarity by and amongst sex workers, since the organization’s worldview is that all sex workers internationally are committed to the idea that each of them has a place in society, and human rights worth defending.[5]

Current activities

Stella is an ongoing organization that works in different levels of the society to promote some new understanding of the sex industry for sex workers and for the general public. It goes from helping sex workers to fight hepatitis or HIV, to publishing magazines, doing workshop for students or sex workers, working with the government for the decriminalization of the sex industry in Montreal and internationally to helping sex workers to get some work experience within a social justice organization.

The current activities are divided in two different sections: (1) Information and (2) Outreach. The following offers only a summary of each. For more details about the extensive activities of Stella visit their website. Chez Stella

1. Information

Stella has a number of activities that are focused on welcoming, supporting and informing the sex workers. All of these are available through a number of community-based organizations situated in the hot spots for street prostitution in Montreal. Services include:

Stella also provides sex workers with support through the judicial process, social services and health services.[6]

2. Outreach

Stella supports a number of outreach programs that go out into the environment where sex workers live and work. For example:

Goals of Outreach

  1. To train volunteers (the majority being sex workers) about the individual and collective responsibility of sex workers;
  2. To mobilize sex workers for collective action efforts (actions, Forum XXX, International AIDS Conferences, etc.);
  3. To research and to analyze sex worker activities especially HIV/AIDS prevention efforts (this program is in collaboration with university and community partners);
  4. To circulate study results;
  5. To create workshops to education outreach workers, social workers and anyone in the general public who works with sex workers about sex workers' realities ;[7]

Bad Tricks List

Another brilliant and useful activity done by this social justice organization is the “Bad Tricks and Assaulters Lists”. It is a list given by sex workers to share the knowledge of dangerous people that might be in certain districts. This list is very useful for the sex workers and is published in the monthly bulletin and in the bi-yearly magazine called ConStellation.[8]

Alt text
Constellation Magazine published by Chez Stella

Publications

Stella prepares a number of publications of interest to sex workers including:

Stella also manages a website with all resources available electronically. All publications are bilingual and the Hepatitis C and the clients' guide are trilingual (French, English and Inuktitut).[9]

As an example of its usage here is a part of the latest ConStellation’s editorial magazine. “By taking the initiative to produce a ConStellation that addresses the 7 major sectors of the sex industry through interviews with women who work in the pornography, erotic massage, street prostitution, domination, webcam, erotic dancing and the world of escorts, the Stella team has killed two birds with one stone. In addition to giving us a chance to share our knowledge about business and providing us with the opportunity to learn from each other, this ConStellation also presents a faithful portrait of the sex industry, with all that this implies, in North America today.”[10] This proves an example of the use and the importance of these publications; to inform the general public and the sex workers from the sex industry about good tips, and share their experience of this sometimes challenging job.

Public Outreach

The last part of Stella's work for the improvement of the sex workers' lives is more focused on the sensitizing of the general public and the interveners from the health care system and the social services as much as the policemen and policewomen to the problems and the realities and the preoccupations that the sex workers may have. For example, this sensitizing could be done through meetings with students or interested groups that want to have more information, by holding an information desk in major conferences or forums or to have a public conference or many more public activities. It could also be by the writing of activity reports or community media mass articles.

This social justice organization also does a lot of information work of sensitizing to the shop owners, the people living in hot areas to participate actively in the different conversation tables of the districts and the group of organizations by themes.[11]

All of these services are offered by employee and volunteer teams composed mostly by either sex-workers or ex sex-workers.

Current Organizational Features

As explained in the introduction, Stella started with only four employers and many volunteers; today on average twelve women work full-time for Stella and the membership continues to grow. There are many volunteers and sympathizers helping to write articles, draw the pictures for the publication, some also provide names for the List of assaults and lots of the volunteers work on the streets (outreach) to help other sex workers.

The main team is formed of a president, a vice president, a treasurer, person-resource, administrators, outreach coordinator, outreach workers, clerk-receptionist, general coordinator, project officer, speakers and accounting.

Funding for Stella activities comes from donations and fundraising efforts with project support from provincial, municipal and private bodies.

Organization Website

Chez Stella, l'amie de Maimie

References

  1. Stella, l’amie de Maimie. 2009. Stella, l’amie de Maimie, official website. http://www.chezstella.org/. (accessed February 13th).
  2. Stella, l’amie de Maimie. 2009. Stella, l’amie de Maimie, official website.http://www.chezstella.org/. (accessed February 13th).
  3. Stella, l’amie de Maimie. 2004. Sex Work, Dear Client, Manual intended for clients of sex workers. Montréal.
  4. Stella, l’amie de Maimie. 2009. Stella, l’amie de Maimie, official website.http://www.chezstella.org/. (accessed February 13th).
  5. Website. http://www.chezstella.org/. (accessed February 13th).
  6. Stella, l’amie de Maimie. 2009. Stella, l’amie de Maimie, official website.http://www.chezstella.org/. (accessed February 13th).
  7. Stella, l’amie de Maimie. 2009. Stella, l’amie de Maimie, official website.http://www.chezstella.org/. (accessed February 13th).
  8. Stella, l’amie de Maimie. 2009. Stella, l’amie de Maimie, official website. http://www.chezstella.org/. (accessed February 13th).
  9. Stella, l’amie de Maimie. 2009. Stella, l’amie de Maimie, official website.http://www.chezstella.org/. (accessed February 13th).
  10. Stella, l’amie de Maimie. 2009. Editorial. Working condition special ConStellation, april10th. (Available online: http://www.chezstella.org/stella/?q=en/constellation2009 (accessed February 20th)).
  11. Tremblay, Francine. 2001. L’individu dans la modernité—Georges Herbert Mead, Charles Taylor and Alain Touraine. MA Thesis, Concordia University. (Available online : http://spectrum.library.concordia.ca/1521/1/MQ64034.pdf (accessed February 27th)).

External links

  1. Global Alliance Against Trafficking in Women
  2. Network of Sex Work Projects
  3. Sex workers present on blip.tv
  4. Laura Agustín : Border Thinking on Migration, Trafficking and Commercial Sex
  5. Paulo Longo Research Initiative
  6. Liste de discussion internationale TDS francophones
  7. Sex Trade Workers Industrial Union 690 (Industrial Workers of the World)
  8. Sex Worker Media Librar
  9. International Sex Work Foundation for Art, Culture and Education

Bibliography

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