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Archives for January 2011

Street harassment syndrome: why men need to step up before it’s too late

January 19, 2011 By Contributor

Street harassment is thought by some people to be nothing more than harmless banter between the sexes.  Others see street harassment as the front lines in a battle between the genders.  I view street harassment as a more far reaching issue.  I believe street harassment can be described as a cultural disease that attacks the basic civility of society.

On the surface, street harassment shows itself in the form of inappropriate and threatening behavior by men towards women on the street or in other public areas. This learned behavior is infectious with certain urban areas such as New York City and Washington DC experiencing street harassment in epidemic proportions.

Beneath the surface, this disease, which I call Street Harassment Syndrome (SHS), is ripping the civil fabric of society. While SHS may have the most immediate effect on the young girls and women who are harassed, its damage doesn’t stop there.  SHS causes a degenerative cycle in the manner in which people treat each other.  Both men and women become accustomed and conditioned to treat each other with rudeness and indifference as opposed to politeness and compassion.

The less obvious, but wide spread symptoms of SHS can be seen in large cities where street harassment is the norm.  Some of these symptoms are (in no particular order):

  • The majority of women are afraid of men they encounter on the street.
  • Some men exhibit highly aggressive behavior towards women on the street.
  • The majority of women purposely ignore men they see on the street.
  • The majority of men become accustomed to being ignored by women on the street.
  • Some men view the majority of women as “bitches”.
  • Some women view the majority of men as “assholes”.
  • Some women change their routines and style of dress to avoid the attention of men on the street.
  • Both men and women become accustomed to “not getting involved”.
  • Some women develop angry reactionary responses to males.
  • Some men develop angry reactionary responses to females.
  • Men and women engage in a destructive cycle of finger pointing and blame.
  • Some women develop generally lower feelings of well-being.
  • Some men become passive and intimidated of more verbally aggressive men.
  • The majority of women learn to be silent and passive to verbal abuse.
  • The majority of men see “calling out” to women to be acceptable behavior.
  • Some men learn that outwardly aggressive behavior is an effective method to dominate both women and men.

The above examples are just some of the negative side effects of SHS.  The majority of these symptoms can be summarized as lowered feelings of safety, well-being, and civil behavior in the general population.

An incident of harassment is the wound that allows the entry of SHS into the culture.  Just like a contagious infection, the more incidents that occur, the faster the disease is able to spread throughout the culture.  What stops the inflection is a strong response from all members of society that both refutes and repels the behavior as it occurs.  Outspoken social disapproval from both men and women is needed in order to contain the spread of Street Harassment Syndrome and to ultimately remove it from society.

– Erik Kondo

Erik is the founder of the self defense nonprofit Not-Me!

This post is part of the weekly blog series by male allies. We need men involved in the work to end the social acceptability of street harassment and to stop the practice, period. If you’d like to contribute to this weekly series, please contact me.

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Filed Under: male perspective Tagged With: erik kondo, not-me, self defense, street harassment, street harassment disease

“I want to add my voice to those women who have experienced street harassment”

January 18, 2011 By Contributor

I have been yelled at and honked at multiple times from men driving past in cars. I have never had a very serious or scary experience, but it happens often enough to make me really annoyed and very, very angry. What troubles me most is deciding on an appropriate way to react to this very rude and obnoxious behaviour.

There has recently been some discussion on this subject in the media in New Zealand and I want to add my voice to those women who have experienced street harassment.

– Anonymous

Location: Auckland, New Zealand

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: Ackland, New Zealand, sexual harassment, street harassment

Street harassment snapshot: January 16, 2011

January 16, 2011 By HKearl

Story Submissions Recap:

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

  • Stop Street Harassment Blog: 3 stories from people in Birmingham (UK), Switzerland, and New York City

New stories on:

  • HollaBack Berlin
  • HollaBack DC!
  • HollaBack Israel
  • HollaBack NYC

Street Harassment in the News, on the Blogs:

Image from The City Fix

  • The Times of India, “26 eve-teasers arrested in Kanpur“

  • ABC News, “Construction Workers Harass Woman: What Would You Do?“
  • The Times of India, “Cops help travellers reach home safely“
  • The Star, “Female cabbies offer safe passage“
  • Ottawa Citizen, “Ottawa woman describes ‘shocking’ daylight attack by mystery assailant”
  • The Nation, “Calendars exposing ‘sexual harassers’ launched“
  • The City Fix, “Separate But Equal: A Winning Policy for Women in Transit?“
  • NZ Herald, “Are Kiwi males vulgar? A Hollywood star thinks so“
  • SF Gate, “Mary, Melodie and the Mission district: women brutalized on our sidewalks“
  • Monsters and Critics, “Egyptian film urges women to act against sexual harassment“
  • Just Femme, “Street Harassment Warrior, Holly Kearl“
  • The Cheeseblog, “Spiders and Street Harassment“
  • Becca Caddy, “Emily May the hollaback girl“

Events:`

  • Jan. 23: BLANK_NOISE Delhi Meet Up http://on.fb.me/dZkUut
  • Jan. 23: Anti-Street Harassment Planning Meeting, In Other Words, 14 NE Killingsworth, Portland, OR, 4 p.m.
  • Feb. 1: Stop Street Harassment Book Talk, Northern Illinois University, 7 p.m.
  • Feb. 12: HollaBack Baltimore Launch Party, Metro Gallery, 1700 N. Charles Street, 8 p.m.

Announcements:

New:

  • ABookishBeemer Call to #Louisville #KY #feminist/s: writing #streetharassment piece & I’d like women to share their stories! For LouisvilleKY.com (DM @ABookishBeemer)
  • bibliofeminista Eastern Connecticut feminists! I’m launching a new Hollaback site to end street harassment! Come help/share stories hollabackct.tumblr.com
  • hollabackBLN Sendet Eure Geschichte, Erlebnisse, Erfahrungen an berlin@ihollaback.org! #hollabackBLN #Berlin #ihollaback

On-going:

  • If you’re in India,  check out Blank Noise’s information for 2011 and how you can get involved with efforts there to address eve-teasing
  • Did you miss the Dec. 11th Webinar about writing street harassment op-eds with journalist Elizabeth Mendez Berry? Here’s the recording if so!
  • 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!

10 Tweets from the Week:

  • JessiDG #wecanallagreethat a compliment that makes you feel bad is not a compliment. #streetharassment
  • ZennerBeaner If I get street harassment again, I’m going to snap. Men need to stop being pigs & treat women w/ respect.
  • lashcampaign article on assault in current issue of @CosmopolitanUK includes advice from founder @vicky_simister, woo!
  • HollaBackBmore was harassed while putting up flyers for the Hollaback Bmore! launch event! I think the site will be a hit!
  • HollaBackCzech Stay tuned everybody. The site’s not active yet but the collective voices of the women of CZ will be hollaing soon!
  • HollabackMCR Hurray, for @UMSUnion womens officer saying she’ll help with promoting @HollabackMCR. Students get web 2.0 ending #streetharassment
  • iHollaback In Mumbai, only 28% of the people on the street are women at any given time bc of safety. HollabackMUMBAI is gonna fix that
  • FeministInti A disgrace: #Coke promotes #streetharassment culture in #Argentina. #Piropos = #catcalls. #feminism #hollaback http://plixi.com/p/69360680
  • kzmuda Meet the Feminista Barista fighting street harassment in Atlanta @hollabackatl @ihollaback http://ow.ly/3ByW2 #GLOBALhollaback
  • wlp1 Study finds women portrayed negatively in newspaper cartoons in #Egypt where #streetharassment is a serious problem http://bit.ly/ho5Ao6#vaw
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Filed Under: Events, hollaback, News stories, Stories, street harassment, weekly round up Tagged With: catcalls, eve teasing, hollaback, street harassment

“No one else stepped up to the plate. I had to do something.”

January 14, 2011 By HKearl

ABC News did a very interesting experiment regarding street harassment and bystanders. They had three actors portray construction workers and had them harass an actress portraying a regular woman. Even as the men escalated, most people nearby did nothing. One woman bystander was too hesitant to confront the men, but suggested to the woman targeted to just ignore them and walk away.

But, across the time they were play-acting harassment, there were THREE good male bystanders who stepped up to the plate.

ABC News

Bystander #1 (you can see this exchange in the video clip):

“You don’t treat people that way. It’s wrong,” one man said to the construction workers.

As he stood next to our actress, he offered to apologize on behalf of our construction workers.

“Are you apologizing for men in general?” our actress asked.

“If I have to,” the man said.

Bystander #2:

“You are disrespecting this woman here. If you have a problem with her, you’re going to have a problem with me. Anyone who wants to be tough just stand up,” the man said.

“She’s flirting,” one of our actors said.

“She ain’t flirting,” the man shot back. “She’s over here and you guys are bothering her. Leave.”

When we [ABC] caught up with this man he told us, “I don’t know her. I don’t know them. I was pretty annoyed the way they were treating her. You know, three guys, a female … she’s very distressed. No one else stepped up to the plate. I had to do something.”

Bystander #3:

“Why don’t you get your lunch and take a hike” said one man.

He happened to be a construction manager who told us [ABC] that he sees a lot of what he called “shenanigans.”

“One, two, three of you picking on her?” he asked. “What are you guys doing? What is this?”

He told our construction workers that one day they might have a daughter and asked them if they would want somebody else to treat her the way they were treating our actress.

“I’m sure she has a father that wouldn’t appreciate that,” he said

“I don’t have a daughter and until then I’m going to have some fun,” one of our fake construction worker replied.

We noticed the man standing by the side of our actress, not allowing the construction workers to get any closer.

As the abuse continued from our workers, he decided the best thing to do would be to walk our actress away from the scene. When we caught up with him, he told us, “I saw one guy grabbing for her. If it went any further, I would probably have to lay him out,” he said.

At the end of the article, ABC said, “In the course of the day, many people witnessed our construction workers verbal assault on our actress. But we wondered; what would happen if our construction workers traded in their hardhats and boots for suits and ties? – Find out tonight at 9 p.m. EST”

Go ABC for addressing street harassment! I’m also interested to see what will happen when the harassers are wearing suits and ties since that ALSO happens despite the stereotype that it’s only construction workers or “blue collar” workers.

I know it can be challenging to be a bystander and the three men who “stepped up to the plate” are a great example for all of us. Here’s more info on being a good bystander as well as suggestions for what you can say or do if you’re the one being harassed.

[Update 1/15: You can watch the full episode online]

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Filed Under: News stories Tagged With: abc news, bystander, sexual harassment, street harassment

Men speaking out

January 13, 2011 By HKearl

With the exciting launch of the weekly series of blog posts by male allies yesterday, I thought I’d continue to show how good men can – and are – stepping up to address this issue. Here are two important, recent videos of men speaking out against street harassment and gender violence.

The first is Tony Porter, co-founder of A Call to Men, speaking at TED. The link takes you to a CNN page with text as well as the video.

 

The second is SpokenSoul215, performing a spoken word piece about street harassment at The Harvest in Dec. (Sorry, I haven’t seen a transcript for this yet).

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Filed Under: Resources Tagged With: a call to men, gender violence, street harassment, TED, thirsty, tony porter

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