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Archives for April 2012

Thousands rally in Kannur, India, for safe streets

April 27, 2012 By Contributor

This guest blog post is by Maya, a PhD student in Barcelona, Spain, who is from India.

This newspaper article is from Kannur, a district in Kerala, India. The ladies gathered in the city center to ask for the rights for sharing the city at night. The ladies did a group painting in a large canvas which gave out messages that everywhere women face the same kind of problems, especially in the streets while traveling at night. They held this gathering in order to demand their right to travel safe at nights.

There was a protest and rally, where they held lit candles, it lasted almost till day break and they rallied through the city. Thousands of women joined in the rally.

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Filed Under: News stories, street harassment

But Wait—You’re Twelve

April 26, 2012 By Contributor

Yesterday, I went to the grocery store.

I was wearing tight, black skinny jeans and a white beater under a light gray zip-up hoodie and a faux leather jacket.  I was minding my own business walking home, with a leopard-print backpack full of the ingredients I’d need to make a Caprese panini when I got back to my kitchen.  I was hungry.  And I was excited.

I live in a very safe, very young neighborhood in South Philly, crawling with twenty- and thirty-something hipsters.  My street is a popular spot for nightlife on the weekends, with its multitude of bars and restaurants, and the neighborhood is extremely friendly and well-lit.  It feels less like living in a huge city, and more like living in a town.  Because of the demographics of the neighborhood, there are very few families around – which means very few kids.

As I was walking home from the grocery store, I spotted ahead of me a small group of boys who I guessed to be around twelve years old.  There were three of them sitting on a stoop, in their school uniforms, having just been dismissed.  They were singing—well, okay, maybe “singing” isn’t the right word.  They were making screeching sounds in various pitches to what one could call a melody.  I believe this constitutes “singing” to a twelve-year-old boy.  Two older boys – fourteen, maybe? – walked by then, and they stopped in front of the stoop.

“Shut up,” one of the older boys, clearly a friend, complained.

“Yeah,” said the other.  “You guys are obnoxious.  Shut up.  A girl’s coming.”

And I walked by.

“Yeah, I’d like to get that pussy.”

I stopped.  I didn’t physically stop, no.  I didn’t want them to have any indication that the catcall had fazed me.  The boy who said it, one of the younger ones on the stoop, I figured, was just trying to look cool to his friends, and my responding would only give him twelve-year-old street cred.  But in the split second after his remark, my mind stood still and my heart sank as I made the quick decision to walk on, seemingly unbothered.

The group of boys gasped, and I heard one of the older boys whisper: “Dude, what the fuck?  That’s not cool, man.”

And then, from another one of the twelve-year-olds: “Yeah, girl, you got a nice ass.”

When I stopped in my tracks, before I even turned around, I could hear the boys jump up and huddle together.  Clearly, they hadn’t thought out the aftermath.  Obviously, they didn’t think that a woman walking down the street would actually stop; an adult wouldn’t bother with their nonsense, they probably thought.

I turned on my heels, blood boiling, to find the younger boys pointing at one another, trying to convince me of who the culprits were, while the older boys hid behind them, mouths agape.

“You know what though?” I asked, clearly mad, but keeping my cool.  “When you get older, and you talk to a woman like that, it’s never going to work.”

Anger started rising in me, as I thought about all of the men in the entirety of my life who have thought it was useful or worthwhile to hurl lewd comments at me in hopes of either getting in my pants or, at the very least, getting a reaction out of me.  I thought about all of the societal pressures put on boys to posture masculinity.  I thought about all of the confusing messages in the media.  I thought about all of the grown men in those boys’ lives who would’ve slapped them– either in the face or on the back – for saying that to a woman.  And I was incensed.  Livid. Not necessarily at the words that they said to me, but at the idea that we live in a society that allows it – not just a society that is forgiving of violence against women, but a society that promotes dangerous expectations for masculinity.  Was I the victim in this situation?  Sure.  But you know who else was?  Those boys.

“You better get out of that fucking habit now,” I spat, “because that’s fucking disrespectful as shit.”

Ashamed, the offenders looked down at the sidewalk; I watched as their smiles faded into blushes as they realized that they had made a mistake (or, at the very least, that they had gotten caught).  The other boys broke out into an applause, shouting to me, “Thank you!  Thank you! Someone needed to tell them that wasn’t okay!”  And to them: “We told you.  We told you.”

And I want to be pissed off.  I do.  I felt a heaviness in my heart – a solid block for my solar plexus – for the rest of the day.  And later on, when I tried to be sexual with my boyfriend, I held back and had to shake the thoughts out of my head, because I was so affected.  But I see a glimmer of hope here.

Because they knew it was wrong.

Because the bulk of them were offended by their friends’ actions.

Because they sided with me on the issue.

Because they’re young.  And impressionable.  And I said something.

So maybe next time one of them thinks about catcalling a woman on the street, he’ll think twice.  And maybe he’ll remember what happened yesterday, and he’ll think better of it.  And maybe it’ll only ever happen that once.  But a small victory is a victory nonetheless.

So I have some hope that maybe someday, we’ll stop raising our sons to think that violence is a way to prove their worth.

– Melissa A. Fabello

L0cation: Philadelphia, PA

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Filed Under: Stories, street harassment

Afghanistan Videos: This is My City Too

April 26, 2012 By HKearl

The Afghanistan-based organization Young Women for Change celebrates its one year anniversary this week! The young women who lead the organization continue to make street harassment one of their central issues of concern (read an article by co-founder Noorjahan Akbar about her harassment experiences). Below are two new videos they produced about street harassment, with English subtitles.

They’ve conducted a 4,000 person study about street harassment in Kabul and it will be released this summer at a press conference event. This is the largest study on the topic that’s ever been conducted. If you can, please donate a few dollars to them as the funds will enable them to print women’s stories and the survey results and then hand those out to attendees and people in the streets. Most Afghans do not have computers/Internet access so print materials is the best way for Young Women for Change to spread their message.

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Filed Under: Resources, street harassment Tagged With: Afghanistan, street harassment, young women for change

Exposing a stalker

April 25, 2012 By HKearl

Ariane Friedrich - Image via Zimbio

After a man allegedly sent her sexually explicit photographs online, Ariane Friedrich, a German high jumper who expects to compete in this summer’s Olympics, decided to publicly shame him.

Via Yahoo News:

“I’ve been offended in the past, sexually harassed and I’ve had a stalker before,” she wrote in a recent Facebook post that included the name and email address of a man who she says sent her explicit messages and pictures of his genitals. “It’s time to act, it’s time to defend myself. And that’s what I’m doing.”

German authorities are now investigating the matter, according to Friedrich’s manager. The matter has touched off an intense national debate on privacy with Friedrich, who is trained as a police officer, at the forefront…

“The removal of anonymity is a means to clarify,” she wrote in a statement translated from German. “Just think of all the children, young people and adults who are secretly harassed by perverts and don’t know what to do or how to defend themselves. Should we not go forward as a good example and demonstrate strength?”

German newspapers have asked whether Friedrich had a legal right to publicly disclose the man’s name. In that country, names of offenders aren’t disclosed in the media.”

Via the New York Times:

“As Niko Härting, a lawyer specializing in media and Internet law, points out, the legality of the issue hinges on the question of whether the man named by Ms. Friedrich, who has become a public personality in Germany since placing seventh in the 2008 Olympics in Beijing, actually wrote and sent her the message.

“It all hangs on one question: Is it true or false?” Mr. Härting said. “If it is true, then she is allowed to post it.”

Why would she make this up? And surely she has copies of the photos. It always makes me feel like the people who protest this have something to hide. Like the people who are upset when we call out harassers. Why would anyone be upset about that, unless they’re harassers?!

It took a lot of guts to disclose the name of this man who is harassing her and guess what, I bet he doesn’t harass her or anyone else in this way again. And it may put other would-be stalkers on notice.

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Filed Under: News stories Tagged With: Ariane Friedrich, harassment, online stalker

She-Hulk mode — “I’ve had enough of being harassed on the street”

April 24, 2012 By HKearl

Photo by Mark Garfinkel, via the Boston Herald

In Boston, a young woman would not let a public masturbator intimidate her during her trolley ride home from work. Instead she called him out and got him arrested.

Via the Boston Herald:

“This guy was just being a real creeper,” she said. As she shuffled along the train, he followed her. She zoned out, listening to music, only to look up and see him standing over her.

“I looked up and felt awkward, so I looked down,” she said. She said the man was exposing and touching himself, but tried to cover himself with his shirt.

The woman — not someone to meekly let an alleged creep get away with it — shouted out what he was doing, but no one stepped in to help. She said one male passenger even shrugged. So, she said, she went into “She-Hulk” mode, lunging as the man tried to bolt at Packard’s Corner in Brighton.

She said she held the man with one hand and “berated” him while she waited for the cops to arrive. She said he looked frightened.

“He kept saying sorry, but he was just sorry for himself,” she said.

The man told transit cops that the “packed and jostling” trolley caused his shorts to fall, according to a police report. He told police that he was unaware he was exposed until the woman started screaming.

T cops charged Michael Galvin, 37, of Somerville with open and gross lewdness. He was released on his own recognizance and ordered to stay off the T.

The woman said she acted because, “I’ve had enough of being harassed on the street. I’m tired of it and I want it to end. It was the last straw.”

She also had some choice words for the people who stood by and did nothing on the train: “That’s appalling. That makes me so angry. I want everyone to know that they have to say something.”

Her courage and determination are commendable. Hopefully that man will think twice before masturbating on a trolley. Her story reminds me of the amazing Nicola Briggs in New York City who did something similar when a man exposed himself to her on the subway.
When we feel safe and have the time, engaging in public shaming can be a very effective way to stop a harasser.

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Filed Under: News stories, Stories, street harassment

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