This week’s “Foot Soldiers” featured 19-year-old Grace Brown, a freshman at the School of Visual Arts in New York City. Inspired by a friend’s story and her skill with a camera, Grace started Project Unbreakable, a Tumblr designed to help give power back to survivors of sexual assault through the words of their attackers. I’ll let her explain — both in my interview with her, and in the short film embedded below.
Can you tell me specifically what prompted you to start Project Unbreakable?
Grace Brown: After hearing so many stories in the past couple years, I was out with a friend in October and she decided to tell me that she had once been abused. And it was the last straw for me. I woke up the next morning and I had the idea for the project in my head.
Why did you call it “Project Unbreakable”?
I originally wanted to do something regarding strength. I was talking to my sister back and forth, and she came up with “unshakeable.” I went into the thesaurus, “unbreakable” came up, and I just decided to go with “unbreakable.”
So you create the Tumblr, and you begin. Is what is has become now what you had in mind from the beginning?
GB: I didn’t plan on accepting anyone wanting to submit; I planned on it just being a photography project. But then, a couple weeks in, people were asking to submit their own images because they live too far away. I said, “Absolutely.”
How is the photography (on Project Unbreakable) particularly helpful in helping survivors?
In the beginning, I didn’t even realize that it would be healing. Originally, I just wanted to show the numbers and be able to say, “Look at how many people this has affected.” I realized later on that it was really powerful for people to take back these words, and I think in seeing them in a photograph, it solidifies it. Someone in the press described as (them) having the last word.
Do you feel that’s accurate?
GB: Yeah.
Why, then, use the words of the attackers? Why not have it be sign with a giant “(expletive) you!” on it? What has been the feedback from your participants on this?
GB: I don’t think anger is the key in healing. As for the feedback, I’ve gotten really positive feedback from people who have participated. I think they realize that it’s important for them to let it go. When a survivor tells their story, they often don’t say what was spoken to them, and it sits there like a stone in your stomach. They need to let that go.
What do you have in mind for the future of the site? How do you see it evolving?
GB: I hope to either become an organization, or be under another organization’s umbrella. And I’d like to publish a book as well.
Are there any photos that you’ve rejected?
GB: No; as long as they fit the guidelines as much as possible, that’s fine. I don’t accept stories, there’s another website (for that). Anyone who sends a poem or a story, I send them over to Survivor Stories.









