Silver Moon (peace activist)
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9 July 1952
Silver Moon | |
|---|---|
| Born | Valerie Smith 9 July 1952 Adelaide, Australia |
| Alma mater | University of Adelaide |
| Occupations | Peace activist; feminist, musician |
Silver Moon (born 1952 as Valerie Smith) is an Australian peace activist, feminist, musician, and teacher who describes herself as an "anarchist feminist lesbian activist".[1]
Silver Moon was born on 9 July 1952 as Valerie Smith, at the Northern Community Hospital in Prospect in the northern suburbs of Adelaide, South Australia. She was the youngest of six children, having four brothers and one sister. Her mother, Audrey Mau, was a pianist and her father was a mechanic at South Australian Railways. She grew up in Blair Athol, also in the northern suburbs of Adelaide. She attended Blair Athol Primary School and Enfield High School. She was a Sunday school teacher until the age of 15, which made her aware of the inequality of male and female roles in her church.[1][2]
At home Moon's family had no books and, an avid reader, she was dependent on the local library. She was a rebel at high school, writing for the school newspaper and, according to her, was disliked by the teachers. She took part in protests against the Vietnam War and in an anti-apartheid demonstration at Norwood Oval in Adelaide against the visiting South Africa national rugby union team. With Australia supporting the U.S. in Vietnam, her youngest brother was conscripted to fight there.[1]
With her mother's musical influence, Moon played the guitar and percussion instruments and also wrote songs. She left home at 17 and moved into communal houses and squats. Soon after, she started to attend women's liberation meetings. She worked at the Adelaide Women's Liberation Centre, the Rape Crisis Centre, and the Women's Studies Resource Centre. Moon studied politics and philosophy at the University of Adelaide. She married in 1974 but divorced four years later, having not realised that she was a lesbian at the time she married. At 28, she came out as a lesbian at a conference on "Women, Patriarchy and the Future", held in Melbourne. She had an abortion after being raped by a former boyfriend.[1]