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Archives for March 2012

ProChange distributed 2000 cards in Dortmond, Germany

March 25, 2012 By Contributor

Editor’s Note: This guest blog post is reprinted from the ProChange Facebook page about the action they took for International Anti-Street Harassment Week 2012:

[I used Google translate….see the original German text below)
The 18 March to 24 March 2012 was the International Week Against Street Harassment. Worldwide there were events and actions. ProChange joined in and participated in it.

We distributed 2000 “Red Card” against sexism, “Pink Card” against homophobia, and “Purple Card” Courage for the day. At night we shared our special coasters in pubs, bar, from clubs in Dortmund, Germany. Summary, detailed report and pictures will be published soon.

Our commitment does not end with the end of the campaign week. Sexist boundary violations and sexual violence are so long on our agenda until they no longer belong to our social system, and no one is more discriminated against and degraded or have experienced even violence.

ProChange stands for change. Without you, without you, without you, there will be no change and no change!

A movement moves only by those who follow her. No one follows, there is no change. No matter how old, no matter what profession, no matter what school, no matter what gender. We want change for all.

_____________________________________________________

Vom 18. März bis 24. März 2012 war die internationale Woche gegen Street Harassment. Weltweit fanden vielfälige Veranstaltungen und Aktionen statt. ProChange schloß sich an und beteiligte sich daran. Wir verteilten 2000 “Rote Karten” gegen Sexismus, “Pinke Karte” gegen Homophobie und “Lila Karte” für Courage tagsüber. Abends legten wir in Dortmund unsere Spezialbierdeckel in Kneipen, Bar, Clubs aus. Fazit, ausführlicher Bericht und Bilder werden in Kürze noch veröffentlicht.

Unser Engagement endet natürlich nicht mit dem Ende der Aktionswoche. Sexistische Grenzverletzungen und sexualisierte Gewalt stehen so lange auf unserer Agenda, bis sie nicht mehr zu unserem Gesellschaftssystem gehören, bis niemand mehr diskrimiert und herabgewürdigt wird oder sogar Gewalt erfahren muß.

ProChange steht für den Wandel.

Ohne Dich, ohne Sie, ohne Euch, wird es keinen Wandel und keine Veränderung geben!

Eine Bewegung bewegt sich erst durch die, die ihr folgen. Folgt niemand, gibt es keinen Wandel. Egal, wie alt, egal, welcher Beruf, egal, welche Schule, egal, welches Geschlecht. Wir wollen den Wandel für alle.

Wie?

Fan auf unseren Seiten werden, posten, Inhalte teilen und kommentieren. Freunde und Bekannte dazu einladen.

Darüber sprechen im Freundeskreis, in der Schule, in der Firma usw.

Karten und Bierdeckel verteilen

Geschichten veröffentlichen: Fast jede Frau, jedes Mädchen hat wohl schon Belästigungen, Übergriffe erlebt. Manchmal ist man wütend, manchmal hilflos. Wir wollen das Schweigen brechen. Deshalb machen wir unsere Geschichten öffentlich und schreiben sie auf. Wir schreiben, was uns passiert ist und schweigen nicht mehr.

Mitarbeit direkt: Fleißige Hände, die ab und an oder auch regelmäßig unsere Arbeit unterstützen. Einfach anfragen.

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Filed Under: anti-street harassment week Tagged With: anti-street harassment week, germany, homophobia, Prochange, red card, sexism, street harassment

Chalk Walk: Women in Brussels reclaim the places where they were harassed

March 25, 2012 By Contributor

Editor’s Note: This guest blog post is reprinted from the Hollaback Brussels Facebook page about the “Chalk Walk” they took on March 24, 2012, for International Anti-Street Harassment Week:

Morning. Saturday. 10.30 am. The sun’s slowly coming up over the rooftops. The streets of Brussels are greeting us. All 4 of us are on ‘our way’. Anxious.

We meet up at ‘Ribaucourt, Molenbeek’. The place where Angelika was harassed. The streets still look quite empty, as if Brussels hasn’t fully woken up yet.

We arrive cheerfully to the ‘spot’, we organise, make our DIY ‘banners’, excited. Time to start. This is Angelika’s moment. With colorful chalk she starts to write on the sidewalk. People pass by glancing quickly, trying to read what she’s writing. ‘I was harassed here. I Hollaback. I reclaim the street.’ she writes strongly.

When it’s over we hug and congratulate Angelika and with our banner she goes and stands at the top of her chalk-text, reclaiming this street, this sidewalk!

Next stop: Lemonnier. The place where Anna was harassed. The tram takes us there and Anna retells parts of her story. She shows us where she went and stood trying to get away from her harasser, there, in the middle of that four-lane boulevard.

The ritual is the same. She starts to write, getting into the moment. People pass. Try to read. When it’s over we hug her firmly and congratulate her. She proudly and beautifully reclaims this spot.

And so we continue. To the Metro/Subway ‘De Brouckere’. The place where Ingrid was harassed. She walks with us and shows us where her story happened. On the staircase leading to the subway platform.

She decides to write in front of the subway entrance, on the sidewalk. It’s a busy spot. When she starts, some people actually stop to see what’s she’s writing, what’s happening. The language changes. Writing in French now.

A guy comes over asks us ‘what we are doing?’ We explain, he thinks ‘this is great, he hasn’t seen anyone do this before’.

Ingrid boldly reclaims ‘De Brouckere’.

We hug and congratulate her and we’re off again to our last stop: the bridge at the cemetery of Ixelles. The place where Julie was harassed.

Again a busy place. Cars honk their horns at us while we’re on the bridge. What are we doing? People pass.

Julie writes in beautiful French. It feels like artwork. We let her get into her moment. She writes: ‘J’ai été harcelée ici. La rue m’appartient. Hollaback’.

La rue m’appartient: The street belongs to me. Such a ‘right way’ to say this.

When Julie is finished, she goes and stands on the bridge and fiercely reclaims it. We hug her and cheer!

And that .. concludes the first part of our day! AWESOME is not even a strong enough word to describe it! EMPOWERING comes close! What we discovered was that writing with chalk on the sidewalk, on the street, on the bridge, telling Brussels: “I was harassed here’ ‘I reclaim the street’ is a powerful, liberating ritual and an amazing hollaback !

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Filed Under: anti-street harassment week, hollaback Tagged With: belgium, hollaback brussels

“When we discuss anything to do with race and gender we have to explore the importance of how both overlap and in turn the importance of intersectionality”

March 25, 2012 By Contributor

I should start this by saying my name is Saba, I am from Western Canada and a member of Black Feminist UK. It was when I moved from my tiny city to London that I was really introduced to the concept of Street Harassment.

In the area I was living in, I was catcalled and followed on almost a daily basis. I felt fear and annoyance almost daily basis on my way home from the tube stop to my flat. I was made to feel uncomfortable and threatened for walking out my door, because it was simply “what happens when you live in a big city”.

What made me the most upset was sounds men would make when I walked past, they wouldn’t want to engage me at all, they would just put me in my place.

We all know that Street Harassment is gendered, the type of harassment that men would receive is different from what women receive on the street. At the same time race is also a major part of street harassment. For example; stops and searches in London are a huge issue with young Black Men; and Street Harassment of Black women is different from those of other women. When we discuss anything to do with race and gender we have to explore the importance of how both overlap and in turn the importance of intersectionality.

I am a huge supporter of this whole movement because I believe that I should be able to walk down the street and feel safe. We need to be discussing all the things that need to change in order for that to happen.

@SabaEm

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Filed Under: Stories, street harassment

“Every time it happens, I feel disgusted.”

March 25, 2012 By Contributor

About two or three times a week I walk 1.8 miles to my current work and then the same distance back a few hours later. And every time I make the walk, I always get at least one horn honk or one one greeting yelled out a car window. This isn’t an isolated incident.

And it isn’t always obvious harassment. A lot of the time it’s a man (or more men) offering me a ride. Would they still offer me that ride if I were a man? I doubt it.

I always ignore it. They’re in speeding cars most of the time anyway. If they’re in a stopped car and they keep shouting, it’s very easy to just pull out my ipod and play with it, making it clear that I can’t hear them because my music’s too loud. (I can hear them, but I’d rather not be expected to respond.)

The funny thing is nobody talks to me when I’m using my umbrella as a parasol in bright sunlight on dry days. No guy wants to hit on a girl who’s some weirdo using an umbrella when it isn’t even close to raining.

Every time it happens, I feel disgusted. I wish I could put on an unattractive body for my walks and take it off when I get to where I’m going. Why can’t I just take a goddamn walk? Why do these men feel the need to intrude on my peace? Why do they feel like it’s okay for somebody I’ve never met to yell things at me just because I’m there and I happen to be a woman?

I’ve been making that walk regularly for only a month and a half, and already car horns don’t make me jump anymore. How can they, when I hear them so often?

– Deborah N.

Location: Folsom Blvd, Rancho Cordova, CA

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Filed Under: Stories, street harassment

“Not sure I’m in the right bathroom? I’m not sure you are either, but I’m not going to ask you about it.”

March 24, 2012 By HKearl

For International Anti-Street Harassment Week, a few student groups at George Washington University in Washington, DC, worked with the DC Trans Coalition to create fliers to post in public restrooms about the harassment most transgender individuals face there.

The campus would not let them. Via the DCist:

“The GW Graduate Feminists has been attempting to post signs in bathrooms around campus warning against the harassment transgender people often report experiencing when using gender-specific restrooms. But to the group’s consternation, campus officials have said fliers are not permitted to be mounted in the bathrooms inside the Marvin Center, GWU’s student center at 21st and I streets NW.

Elizabeth Owens, a member of the Graduate Feminists, told DCist that given the subject matter, it would have made sense for administrators to bend the rules and allow signs warning against violence in restrooms to be mounted inside restrooms. Instead, according to an email from a university employee that was forwarded to DCist, fliers are only allowed near the Marvin Center’s elevator banks.

But given recent violent crimes around D.C. in which transgender people have been assaulted and killed, Owens feels that there ought not to be such a limitation on where precaution can be advised.

“In the context of the violence that is going on in the D.C. area and a perception that trans issues are not being highlighted—even within the LGBT community—we saw a need to bring offer some resources,” she said in a phone interview.

Owens’ fliers implore bathroom visitors to give transgender people as much privacy as they would expect from themselves. “Let transgender folk pee in the restrooms we feel safest in,” some of the notices read. The fliers also cite a 2009 survey taken by the D.C. Trans Coalition reporting that 70 percent of transgender people interviewed reported being either harassed or assaulted while using a gender-specific bathroom. These trends, the Trans Coalition’s report said, can lead to a withdrawal from public life, deeply affecting a person’s education, employment and health.”

The GWU campus paper published an article about the issue too.

I received my master’s degree from GWU and I’m disappointed they wouldn’t let the students post the fliers. While Anti-Street Harassment Week is coming to a close, that doesn’t mean it’s time to stop bringing attention to public harassment/street harassment. Here are four of the fliers they made, feel free to download them and post them wherever you can.

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Filed Under: anti-street harassment week

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