From quiet beginnings just a few weeks ago, "The Rapist is You!" -- the creation of four performance artists from a Chilean feminist group -- has turned into a mighty global roar against sexual violence.

Some 10,000 women took part in the performance, according to Santiago officials
Some 10,000 women took part in the performance, according to Santiago officials AFP / Martin BERNETTI

The women from the group called "LasTesis" said they never imagined their protest anthem, and its powerful message against macho violence, would be so quickly and energetically echoed around the world.

First performed in the port city of Valparaiso on November 20, in the space of a few weeks it has been replicated hundreds of times around the world, and videos of flashmob performances have gone viral.

"The Rapist is You!" was first performed in the Chilean port city of Valparaiso on November 20, 2019, and has since been replicated hundreds of times around the world
"The Rapist is You!" was first performed in the Chilean port city of Valparaiso on November 20, 2019, and has since been replicated hundreds of times around the world AFP / Martin BERNETTI

Around 10,000 women of all ages from around Santiago, dressed in black and wearing red scarves and blindfolds, converged on the city's national stadium Wednesday evening for the biggest such performance yet after a call-out on social media.

Women take part in a choreographed performance against gender violence outside Chile's national stadium in Santiago
Women take part in a choreographed performance against gender violence outside Chile's national stadium in Santiago AFP / Martin BERNETTI

"The fault is not with me, nor where I was, nor how I was dressed... The rapist is you!" the women sang, stomping their feet and waving their arms in a choreographed routine being rapidly adopted around the world.

"Patriarchy is a judge who punishes us for being born and our punishment is violence that you don't see," went the rhythmic chant.

"The Rapist is You!" is the  creation of four performance artists from a Chilean feminist group called LasTesis
"The Rapist is You!" is the creation of four performance artists from a Chilean feminist group called LasTesis AFP / Martin BERNETTI

Similar performances have been staged by women as far away as Paris, Barcelona and Mexico City.

For LasTesis, the performances have become a lightning rod for women's anger over sexual violence
For LasTesis, the performances have become a lightning rod for women's anger over sexual violence AFP / Martin BERNETTI

Initially planned as a small part of a bigger artistic event about rape, LasTesis said they decided to release the performance early after complaints of police abuse of women emerged during a crackdown on recent social protests in Chile.

"The song came out of a call from various artists in Valparaiso to generate protests in the streets," the group said in an op-ed in Chilean weekly magazine The Clinic.

Women in Chile's capital gather to sing a song against gender violence. The song, which has gone viral, originated in the country in the midst of the ongoing social crisis
Women in Chile's capital gather to sing a song against gender violence. The song, which has gone viral, originated in the country in the midst of the ongoing social crisis AFPTV / Alexandre Plaza

"It seems that worldwide we perceive the same feelings about our bodies and our life experiences and this has transformed into a great song," said the group, composed of actresses Sibila Sotomayor and Dafne Valdes, designer Paula Cometa and wardrobe artist Read Caceres, all aged 31.

The four women make up what they define as "an interdisciplinary collective of women who, through performance, address gender issues from a feminist perspective."

One of their first works was based on the work of American feminist author Silvia Federici and they also plan on adapting the work of Argentine writer Rita Segato and other Latin American artists.

On Wednesday, as the women went through their pulsating routine outside the national stadium -- a secret detention center during Augusto Pinochet's military dictatorship -- many felt moved to blurt out their own stories of abuse.

"You could hear shouts in the middle, outside of the performance itself, of women alluding to their own experience, and that was very powerful," Jacqueline Saintard, a 66-year-old economist in the crowd, told AFP.

Some 10,000 women took part, according to City Hall.

"This is a truth that is repressed all over the world," said Carmen, a 60-year-old biologist who took part, who did not want to give her full name.

"Women are mistreated everywhere, and there is a law of silence among the majority of men in the world."

For LasTesis, the performances have become a lightning rod for women's anger over sexual violence.