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Archives for December 2010

Street Harassment Snapshot: December 12, 2010

December 12, 2010 By HKearl

Read stories, news articles, blog posts, and tweets about street harassment from the past week and find relevant announcements and upcoming street harassment events.

Story Submissions Recap:

I accept street harassment submissions from anywhere in the world. Share your story!

  • Stop Street Harassment Blog: 5 new stories from people in Virginia, California, Florida, and two from Vancouver
  • HollaBack DC!: 2 new stories
  • HollaBack Israel: 6 new stories
  • HollaBack LDN: 1 new story
  • HollaBack NYC: 6 new stories

Street Harassment in the News, on the Blogs:

  • Guardian, “Sisters who stand up to sexism, I salute you“
  • AJC, “Georgia Tech student helps create street harassment app“
  • UPI.com, “Women are in the driver’s seat in New Delhi’s bus system“
  • The Korea Times, “4 in 10 salaried workers harassed during commute“
  • The Express Tribune, “Saying no to violence: Every woman should stand up for herself, says Wyatt“
  • Guardian, “Strippers and vicar unite to fight cleanup campaign“
  • The Good Men Project Magazine, “When do we choose to interfere?“
  • Huffington Post, “Nicola Briggs Is My Kinda Gal“
  • Rachel Simmons, “Fiona’s Poem: Cat-Call“
  • And Far Away, “objecDEFY”
  • AAUW, “On Sexual Harassment“
  • Chai Kadai: celebrating the art of dialogue, “Are you safe?“

Upcoming Events:

  • Dec. 14, 2010: Stop Street Harassment book giveaway and chat about street harassment during AAUW’s Cocktails and Convos at Nage, Washington, DC, 5 – 7 p.m. EST

Announcements:

New:

  • Did you miss the Dec. 11th Webinar about writing street harassment op-eds with journalist Elizabeth Mendez Berry? Here’s the recording if so!
  • Consider buying the book Stop Street Harassment for a holiday gift.
  • Are you in the Washington, DC – area? If you are, please take an online survey for HollaBack DC!
  • Take a survey about your cab use-age for a researcher’s project

On-going:

  • Are you a college student or work on a campus? Take SAFER’s Winter Break Challenge and help improve campus sexual assault policies across the nation
  • Are you in Egypt? Use HarassMap to report your street harassers
  • Have an iPhone? Download a new iPhone app that lets you report street harassers!

Ten Tweets from the Week:

  • shotlowr: FB provided me with a #streetharassment advertisement! LOL How do they know me soo well? #shakeshead #StreetHarassersaresexlesstoads :0)
  • 01_gav Somehow, “Nice legs, darling,” is far less scary than typical street harassment when it’s coming from a middle-aged cockney.
  • iHollaback The gross man. A poem on street harassment by Bif Naked: http://bit.ly/hjuCXO via @accostherwilde
  • annfriedman Street harassment invoice: http://bit.ly/eIQpgl
  • juliacsmith Beautiful meditation on what it means to say #goodmorning from @emilymaynot of Hollaback — working to end street harassment #TEDx636
  • ArabObserver ObjecDEFY – act on street harassment andfaraway.net/blog/2010/12/0…
  • cvharquail Using basic dynamic of street harassment to design cars: “Mercedes-Benz Researchers Study the Wolf Whistle” http://bit.ly/iepnNG
  • Aditee_8: Catcall count is up to 3 as I walk down speedway to the lab. I hate ppl
  • WALE_Lover: I Hate Boys that catcall . . .
  • LadyD224 Rape culture doesn’t only deal w rape, but w entitlement that makes it ok for men to harass women ab their bodies on the street. #feminism
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Filed Under: Events, hollaback, News stories, Stories, weekly round up Tagged With: catcalls, sexual harassment, street harassment

“Once again I was being singled out for being of the same race”

December 12, 2010 By Contributor

Why is it that when I have a period when I don’t get harassed and don’t think about street harassment that it happens again?

I was walking home from work on the Key Bridge this evening, and was in my own zone, and I hear a voice yell “‘Scuse me…’scuse me!” and out of the corner of my eye I see it’s coming from a red SUV sitting in Key Bridge traffic that was at a standstill. Though I couldn’t see this guy’s face, I could tell by his voice he was a “brotha” and that once again I was being singled out for happening to be of the same race.

We were heading in opposite directions (I was walking towards Virginia and he was driving into DC) and I knew with my street harassment sixth sense he didn’t have anything important to say. I ignored him.

Then he starts asking, “Girl, are you cold? You cold, girl?” I continue towards my destination and continue to tune him out. I didn’t turn my head to look at him, and though I wasn’t afraid to confront him, I was not in the mood to say shit to him. I was tired, worn out and wanted to get home. I just kept walking. His response to my ignoring him was to laugh. What the hell did he think I was going to do, climb over the partition that separates the pedestrians from the drivers and talk to him?! Give me a break!

As I said, I was singled out by this guy because we’re both black. There were plenty of other people walking one way or another on that bridge. He said nothing to the two white women I’d passed in front of, one lugging rolling luggage and another cheerfully talking on her phone to her mother about her holiday plans. He didn’t say shit to a middle-aged couple walking in the opposite direction. He didn’t say anything to the men or the numerous cyclists. Nope, just me, all because we are the same race and I was solo and guys like him think single black women are prey. He’s bored while stuck in traffic and used me, a solo black woman, for a quick laugh.

From my many dealings with same-race harassment (some posted here, others not) it’s the same thing. If I say “I don’t know you!” or “Just because we’re the same race doesn’t mean you have permission to talk to me,” I get called “white-worshipper!”, “stuck up,” or told I think I’m “white.” If I tell them to go fuck themselves I get told “you’re ugly anyway.” I could’ve taken his photo like I normally do with harassers, but my phone takes useless photos at night. If I try to calmly educate them on why harassment’s not cool and specifically why they need to let single black women be, they act dense. “Why can’t I holla at a sista?” BECAUSE THIS SISTA DOESN’T WANT TO BE HOLLA’D AT!!!!! All said, I am tired of these men, not interested in standing out in the cold to dispatch yet another harasser, tired of the randomness of it all, and just wanted to get home.

Though this incident was minor compared to others, the reason why I’m so angry is because it’s yet another instance of me being harassed to add to my collection of harassment stories, and I’m sick of it.

– Tired of Being Harassed

Location: Key Bridge, Arlington, VA

Share your street harassment story today and help raise awareness about the problem. Find suggestions for what YOU can do about this human rights issue.

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Filed Under: Stories, street harassment Tagged With: racial harassment, same race harassment, street harassment

“Stop looking so good, you fucking bitch.”

December 11, 2010 By Contributor

Last week, I was walking to the bus stop in downtown Vancouver. I had just returned from a job interview and was dressed up. A couple of older men stumbled out of one of the bars on the street and walked towards me. One of them walked up to me and said, “Stop looking so good, you fucking bitch.”

They both laughed and kept walking. I just shook my head and kept walking.

– Margaret

Location: Vancouver, BC

Share your street harassment story today and help raise awareness about the problem. Find suggestions for what YOU can do about this human rights issue.

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Filed Under: Stories, street harassment Tagged With: sexist, sexual harassment, street harassment

“We can all be human rights defenders”

December 10, 2010 By HKearl

Happy Human Rights Day!


I really like the Human Rights Day speech from the United Nations High Commissioner Navi Pillay. In her speech, she notes that there are many famous people who have made a difference in promoting human rights…

“But these inspirational figures could not have done what they did without the help of many others whose names we don’t know. Efforts to end slavery spanned 1,000 years, and still continue with adults and children being trafficked for sex and indentured labour. After a mammoth struggle that lasted more than 150 years, women have won the right to vote almost everywhere, but still lack many other fundamental rights.

We owe the progress we have made to the enormous efforts of hundreds of thousands of largely unsung heroes, known collectively as human rights defenders.

Human rights defenders come from all walks of life, ranging from princesses and politicians, to professionals such as journalists, teachers and doctors, to people with little or no formal education. There are no special qualifications. All it takes is commitment, and courage.

We can all be human rights defenders, and – given how much we owe to others for the rights many of us now take for granted – we all should be human rights defenders. At the very least, we should do our utmost to support those who do defend human rights. Every year, thousands of human rights defenders are harassed, abused, unjustly jailed and murdered. That is why Human Rights Day 2010 is dedicated to Human Rights Defenders and their courageous battle to stop discrimination of all sorts. We need to stand up for their rights as much as they stand up for ours.” (emphasis mine)

With 2010 Nobel Peace Prize winner Liu Xiaobo in jail in China and his wife and family members and friends banned from attending the ceremony today, it could not be clearer why it’s important to help the defenders of human rights when too often their opponents jail them – and in other cases murder them.

I also want to pick up on the part of the speech that I made bold: “There are no special qualifications. All it takes is commitment, and courage. We can all be human rights defenders, and – given how much we owe to others for the rights many of us now take for granted – we all should be human rights defenders.”

I feel choked up thinking about the many human rights defenders I know. I started to list them but I deleted my list because it is so long and I’d also hate to miss acknowledging someone. In one way or another, most people I know are doing something human rights-related and all of my role models are too (and that’s why they’re my role models).  They inspire me and keep me from losing faith in humanity.

Each person who shares their stories on this blog and does anything else to speak out against, raise awareness of, and work to end street harassment is a human rights defender. After all, it should be everyone’s human right to be safe and un-harassed in public spaces and to have equal access to them! So thank you for everything you are doing to make public places safe and welcoming for everyone. You inspire me to do as much as I can to make the world a better, more humane place.

If you need ideas for how you can do more to defend the human right of safe access to public spaces, check out my new blog page Do Something! which lists lots of ideas, many of them from other human rights defenders. And feel free to share other ideas in the comments section.

As Pillay said, making a difference only takes commitment and courage. Human rights are worth that effort.

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Filed Under: street harassment Tagged With: human rights day, street harassment, UN high commissioner

No 10-year-old should be violated like this

December 10, 2010 By Contributor

This happened 6 years ago, but I haven’t forgotten it and just discovered this website so I thought I would share my story.

When I was ten years old, my fifth grade class (FIFTH GRADE) went to a play. When we were leaving the play we were standing around waiting for our bus near some adults. I didn’t see who it was, but I knew it was an adult because of the size of their hand, but someone grabbed my bottom, squeezed it, and then spanked it, hard enough for it to hurt for a while after.

At the time I was so surprised by it, but having experienced the things I’ve experienced now at 16 (having my butt rubbed, a man take a picture down my shirt, a guy shout, “I remember you from last night,” and too many more to list.  These are just the ones that have happened in the past week).

Every time I go out in public there are men leering at me, and whenever I go out without my parents they say what they are really thinking or follow me. It’s such an unpleasant experience.

It really helps to read other people’s stories. I am so amazed by the courage that so many women have shown in the face of these things, and although I haven’t had the guts to do anything about it, I hope that I will someday soon.I usually just ignore the comments/stares and walk away, or in the opposite direction depending on the severity of it. I don’t know what else to do!

– LB

Location: Northern California

Share your street harassment story today and help raise awareness about the problem. Find suggestions for what YOU can do about this human rights issue.

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Filed Under: Stories, street harassment Tagged With: groping, sexual assault, sexual harassment, street harassment

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