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Archives for 2011

Creeper Log

September 5, 2011 By Contributor

I just moved back to the NY area to look for work. Before moving I had a horrible feeling in my stomach. I knew I would be encountering more people in the city, and since I would encounter more people, I might also encounter more harassment. That horrible, sick feeling in my stomach wasn’t wrong.

I wrote down the harassment experienced in my first few days working in the city again:

Creeper Log Day #1

I was very distracted since it was my first day back in the city and at a new job. I did catch a few creeps staring hard at my sister and I. They would stare at us from a distance, then would turn as we walked by, to stare at our backsides.

Creeper Log Day #2

Man in blue dress shirt/black slacks makes kissing sounds at my sister and I as we pass him.

Man in casual clothes asks ‘Want a candy bar, Miss?’ and holds out what I guess is candy. I shake my head ‘no’ as I’m hurrying down the subway stairs. He smacks me on the arm a few times with the candy bar. He does the exact same thing to my sister who is a few paces behind me.

Man in business suit yells in my ear (in a creepy tone) “Beautiful!” as I pass him heading through the subway.

Day 2 Notes: Sister and I wondered if the candy bar man would have hit or even have bothered another man due to only respecting men/only wanting interaction with women. We only saw it happening to the women in front of and behind us.

I contemplated grabbing the candy bar hitting my arm and chucking it down the stairs. Didn’t because there were people behind me hurrying.

The man in the suit surprised me out of my skin when he made the comment while hurrying past. Scaring the shit out of me and creeping me out doesn’t make me feel beautiful or complimented. 🙁 It’s sad he had to take a nice word and apply it to such a terrible experience.

I wish I hadn’t been stunned by each action. I was so shocked, I couldn’t really react before they got away.

Creeper Log Day #3

Nothing I was aware of.
(Still had to be vigilant)

– J

Location: NYC – Financial District

 

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Filed Under: Stories, street harassment

Snapshot of street harassment stories, news, tweets: September 4, 2011

September 4, 2011 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.

Street Harassment Stories:

Share your story! You can read new street harassment stories on the Web from the past week at:

Stop Street Harassment Blog

How Many Women Find Street Harassment Flattering?

Hollaback

Hollaback Buenos Aires

Hollaback Chandigarh

Hollaback Croatia

Holla Back DC!

Hollaback France

Hollaback Israel

Hollaback London

Hollaback Mexico DF

Hollaback NYC

Hollaback Ottawa

Hollaback Queretaro

Hollaback Wellington

Hollaback West Yorkshire

In the News, on the Blogs:

* Al-Masry Al-Youm, “Cyber campaigns launched to fight sexual harassment during Eid“

* The Daily News Egypt, “Online campaigns call for ‘safe Eid‘”

* The Current Conscience, “Men Will Never Truly Understand A Day In The Life of Women. But Shouldn’t We Try?“

* Indian Express, “UP girl resists harassment, set ablaze“

* The Express Tribune, “Burning question: The penalty for ‘eve teasing‘”

* Feministing, “‘You’re a fucking slut,’ and other things you should not say to a stranger on the subway“

* Feminist Teacher, “Guest Post: Feminism: Much More Than Women’s Rights“

* RVA News, “Hollaback! Richmond: local chapter of a national organization aims to end harassment“

* Esoterica, “No, boys, it’s not a compliment“

* Valerie Aurora, “Sady Doyle on the connection between mansplaining and street harassment“

Announcements:

New:

* Safe Slope just launched —  it’s a Brooklyn-based group providing services and resources to help empower and protect the communities of South Slope/Greenwood Heights/Windsor Terrace/Park Slope. The group formed in response to the multiple assaults and attempted assaults that have impacted our community since March 2011.

Reminders:

* From Holla Back DC!: CASTING CALL! Help us put a face to street harassment. Check it out bit.ly/phMba5

* Sign Mend the Gap’s petition to address subway harassment in Delhi, India

* Are you in Egypt? Use HarassMap to report your street harassers

* Have an iPhone? Download the Hollaback iPhone app that lets you report street harassers

20 Tweets from the Week:

1. groovesndaheart Right, so earlier I saw 2 guys actually catcall two mannequiens in Gap window on Hollywood and Highland earlier. I’ve officially seen it all

2. Rita_Banerji Eve-Teasing is the term used for street sexual harassment and violence in India. It trivializes the issue

3. BlakeVonD “Yo ma! Yo legs look like some parentheses. Really sir? ” Lawd, these street sexual harassment laws can’t come fast enough!

4. CorpseInPlastic It really pisses me off that I live in a culture in which I can’t go out to check the mail without getting hollered at. #streetharassment

5. BrittLeeParsons Went for a run and inmates inside the Lancaster County jail yelled at me….#streetharassment

6. estystein Can this be printed on a tote bag that I could carry every day? simple+to the point @hkearl @debzalebz: Street harassment is not flattering.

7. alissami I saw a car today whose license plate said “HEYBABE” — street harassment? Or just weird?

8. thetrudz I encounter less street harassment when I have my camera. That thing truly intimidates ppl and sometimes that’s great. Lmao.

9. andreagrimes No, creepers of the world, I do not need a ride when I am ALREADY RIDING MY BIKE #streetharassment

10. LucyKnisley Attn men who catcall me on my scooter while we’re stopped in traffic: <taps ear of helmet, shakes head> I wish I actually couldn’t hear you.

11. yarachehayed www.adventuresofsalwa is the official website of @SalwaendSH campaign where you can post blog and report sexual harassment

12. meredithnudo When I said I wanted exercise, I didn’t mean having to take a longer route home because #streetharassment rendered the original unbearable.

13. ShereenGaber I should be able to walk around freely without worrying that someone will hassle me. #endSH #Egypt

14. harassmap Take a pic, draw, make a video, write, or distribute flyers, say NO 2 sexual harassment in eid! bit.ly/nyQ8be #endSH

15. ItsKatie73 Walking around DC yesterday was an education in street harassment. Got “hey gorgeous” followed by “bitch” when I didn’t engage

16. tanyasnarks @grbuffington @hkearl Some dude harassed me on the st. today– with his two young grandsons in tow! ARRRGHHHH!!!

17. grbuffington Worth saying AGAIN: People who yell from cars and harass pedestrians are among the lowest forms of humanity. #streetharassment

18. noorakbar YWC radio spots on street harassment were broadcast on Hamsada Radio on Takhar today. If you know a media outlet… fb.me/ISttayUY

19. sallyzohney We r back even worse to street harassment in #cairo. Men going mental and its sick #EndSH. Elra7ma ya bashar. Control ur hormones 3an keda

20. curiouscliche It might not be illegal now, but street harassment should be criminalized IMHO, and I think certain forms of online harassment are analogous

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Filed Under: Events, News stories, Stories, street harassment, weekly round up

“I was forced to literally run away”

September 3, 2011 By Contributor

I’ve been in Ghana this summer doing research through interviews and have encountered street harassment every single day multiple times a day since I arrived. Yesterday, I went to meet up with one of the subjects in my study for the first time and I was immediately made uncomfortable after he continued to comment about how hot I am and even mentioned sex during the interview. It made me feel so uncomfortable that I cut the interview short and left to catch a taxi back to my hotel.

As I am searching for a taxi, a truck full of men pulls up next to me and the men tell me that there are no more taxis coming and I must come with them. I roll my eyes and immediately start to walk away until they start driving towards me. I was forced to literally run away from them until they were no longer in sight.

– Anonymous

Location: Accra, Ghana

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

“Catcalled” while taking a cat to the vet

September 2, 2011 By Contributor

Had to take my cat to the vet. While walking up the street holding him in his carrier, some construction workers made comments, “Pussy”, and “Meow!” It was intimidating and degrading.

– Anonymous

Location: San Francisco, CA

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

Men Will Never Truly Understand A Day In The Life of Women. But Shouldn’t We Try?

August 31, 2011 By Contributor

This excerpt from an important post by male ally Yashar Ali is cross posted with permission. Please read the full post on his site.

The other day, my friend Dina was talking about her experiences of being catcalled—street harassment is a more accurate term—while walking around the streets of New York.

This wasn’t the first time I’ve heard about the epidemic of street harassment. Many of my women friends have remarked about experiencing and dealing with this kind of harassment and how unsafe it makes them feel.

For Dina, one particular instance of harassment on the streets of New York was cemented in her memory. She was walking alone, during the day, on the Lower East Side of Manhattan, when she heard a man taunt her, “Hey baby, you’re lookin’ good…”

“Don’t call me baby,” she responded.

He looked her up and down and said, “…fucking dyke.”

For the record, Dina is straight—not that it would have been okay if she weren’t.

This wasn’t the first, nor will it be the last time Dina faces street harassment. She has been harassed in public places, and on a number of occasions, followed by men. Many studies indicate that almost 100 percent of women will face some sort of street harassment at one point in their lives.

Most men don’t even realize street harassment exists as a very real, serious problem. Yet, many women see this kind of harassment as part of daily life. For the few men who are aware of it, they assume the extent of street harassment is something akin to harmless, or at worst, annoying flirting, which still problematic if that attention is unwelcome.

The reality of street harassment is far worse than what most men think or believe. In cities large and small, women have to contend with comments that range from the mildly offensive to the disgusting. Beyond being verbally harassed, many women are followed and some women are even forced to deal with the same harasser on a daily basis. And for some women, this “harmless” harassment leads to assault.

But I realized, as Dina was telling me her story, that I have never actually been witness to the kind of street harassment my women friends tell me about. If a woman is walking down the street with me, other men generally won’t engage in any kind of harassing behavior towards her because street harassment, like all forms of harassment, is about attacking the vulnerable.

And despite what some readers of this column may think about my gender, I will never know what it feels like for a woman to walk down the street alone. How am I to fully relate to the pain, fear, and humiliation of street harassment when I have never witnessed its full form and lack the the personal experience of being harassed on the street?

Street harassment is simply one issue that plagues women in their everyday life. They are constantly barraged with discriminatory obstacles that we don’t even see as obstacles.

My passion and main concern with respect to combating sexism has been about revealing hidden forms of sexism; my fight lies in overturning the idea that women and girls are subject to a certain biological destiny, and revealing what we think to be biological destiny as actually the problematic ways in which we condition girls and women in our society. This conditioning creates a lens through which women see the world and approach their life—a conditioning that itself is discriminatory.

….

We don’t know what it’s like to have our intuition dismissed, especially when we sense danger and feel unsafe. How would we know? We men are perceptive and women are just overreacting.

This is why the sexism we have to combat in this country is the kind we don’t even notice. It’s the sexism that we wave off as, “That’s the way things are.” It’s the kind of sexism we haven’t even started to address in our society at large. And because we refuse to dig deeper to learn about the everyday struggles of women, we persist with behavior that simultaneously hurts women and drives the issue of gender discrimination deeper into a hidden underworld.

My friend Mike gets very frustrated with my writing about women because he doesn’t see a need for it. He sees the way men and women relate to each other in the world as a competition, instead of as an opportunity for us to help and defend each other.

Just the other day, he asked me, “Why don’t you defend men?”

Without the support and care of women, without their consideration of our aspirations and how we feel, we wouldn’t be who we are. Our daughters, wives, co-workers, mothers, sisters, girlfriends, need to understand that a day in their life doesn’t have to be lived alone.

Having consciousness about the daily struggles of women is something that I am still learning how to do. Like so many men, I have been conditioned by our society to think that women are here to support my needs, instead of learning that we are here to support each other.

Last weekend, I had an experience that reminded me to think about the struggles of women. After leaving a dinner meeting, I walked to a bank of elevators that led to the parking structure where my car was parked. When the elevator doors opened, I was greeted by a woman who was headed to the same parking garage. Given the situation—it was late at night with no one around—I told her, “I’ll take the next one.”

I’m not a saint. I still have so much to learn. But at that moment, I, as a man, made the conscious decision to calculate how riding elevator late at night with a strange man would make this woman feel. And by putting myself in her shoes (as much as I could), I adjusted my behavior accordingly.

This woman knew nothing about my intentions and nothing about me. Did I want her to spend the next thirty seconds wondering what was going to happen to her at 11pm at night? Nope. I wonder if she would have asked me to take the next elevator. I know she has probably been conditioned to think, like so many women, that asking a man to take the next elevator would be rude and presumptuous.

That night, I did what most women do for men on an everyday basis: I considered her needs. I thought about how the situation would make her feel—not because I wanted to avoid a reaction, but because I wanted to support her. It’s just not something men do as easily for women.

Hopefully, my decision was a respite for her.

But I know it was a brief one.

Because the next morning, she’ll have to start the process all over again: living in a country— and a world—that may respect her on the surface, but finds a way, every minute, every hour, to make her feel like she’s different from me.

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Filed Under: male perspective, Stories, street harassment Tagged With: street harassment, Yashar Ali

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