Earlier this year a disgusting and degrading ‘initiation ceremony’ at Sydney University’s St John’s College left a teenage girl in hospital, fighting for her life.
But Weekend media has reported that:
Eight months on, nothing has changed.
Every second Friday, the student committee has decreed that all male St John’s student not speak to any female students – who are known as ”Jets”: the term is an acronym for ”Just Excuse The Slag”.
Freshers are still being forced into initiation rituals, including the consumption of toxic drinks. And some senior students are showing a cavalier disregard for the fallout from the poisoned girl’s near-death, and have even printed T-shirts that celebrate the incident.
Enough is enough: That’s the message to the students of St John’s from the Catholic Archbishop of Sydney, Cardinal George Pell today. ”Turmoil and bitter division have continued at the college for months, even after two independent reviews. Community life must be stabilised and a measure of peace restored,” Cardinal Pell said.
Freelance Journalist Zoe Arnold was part of the inaugural year of women students at St Johns in 2001 and she shared her memories of College life with Mamamia:
“I don’t exactly remember the moment I realised life at St John’s College wasn’t for me. Maybe it was after witnessing the spectacle of flaming “man-ginas”, where brutish young Johnians would set alight their pubic hair in front of a bellowing, chanting crowd as some kind of test of their manhood. Maybe it was after watching the beautiful, heritage listed library being drowned in beer and then used as a slip ‘n’ slide as another drunken night in house got underway.
I hadn’t been exposed to bastardisation rituals before going to College, and thankfully, I haven’t been exposed to them since.
As a naïve 17 year old, I packed my bags and left home without looking back – excited to be accepted to St John’s in their first year of taking women students. I was also accepted into the only other co-ed College on campus, but took my chances on this unknown venture – knowing it would be tough, perhaps – but also a chance to be part of history.