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Archives for August 2012

“You fat ass bitch!”

August 27, 2012 By Contributor

I was walking back from the grocery store, carrying two big bags of groceries about nine blocks on a hot August day. I passed a man and he starts saying, “Hi,” to me. I just sort of smiled, but I kept walking, because it was hot and all I wanted to do was get home and put away my groceries. He then starts yelling at me, “I said hi! You don’t even say anything back? You’re rude as fuck, you fat ass bitch!”

Yeah, fucking lovely start to my day.

– Anonymous

Location: Columbus, OH

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Filed Under: Stories, street harassment

Women’s Equality Day: Safe Streets = Our Right!

August 26, 2012 By HKearl

Editor’s Note: For Women’s Equality Day, I’m posting an excerpt of the speech I gave at the We Are Woman Rally in Washington, DC, last weekend. We should have equality, but we don’t. We don’t even have the right to walk down the street safely, without facing harassment. We must keep speaking out and demand that right!

One of our most basic rights should be the right to walk down the street safely, without facing harassment, yet that is a right that many women are routinely denied.

Limited research shows that at least 80 percent of women have experienced gender-based street harassment, including unwanted leering, “catcalls,” sexually explicit comments, demands for a smile, groping, stalking, and public masturbation.

Two years ago, I wrote a book about this topic and I run a website where people share their stories.  Two days ago, a 19-year-old shared her story and this is how she opened it:

“On most days I find that I get stopped on the street by men. On a few occasions they have been aggressive, threatening and have followed me home…I have become accustomed to being particularly cautious and paranoid when I walk anywhere alone. I thought it was normal for woman to feel unsafe when out alone.”

This is heartbreaking. But sadly, the reality is, feeling unsafe and cautious because of street harassment—or the threat of it—is a way of life for so many women.

Instead of street harassment being treated as the human rights violation that it is, typically, it’s normalized; it’s treated as a joke, a compliment, or the fault of the harassed person.

I was reminded of this in June when I led a successful Change.org petition to take down a “pro-street harassment” sign at a construction site in a New Jersey Mall. The fact that the sign existed at all was problematic and then, when the petition’s success was covered by major media outlets and discussed on radio shows and local blogs across the country, I was shocked by just how rampantly people engaged in victim-blaming or dismissed the issue altogether.

If you’re like me, you want to live in a world where women can go to school, work, community meetings, corner stores, and local parks safely. Here are three things you can to do make this happen.

1. Share your own stories (online and aloud), especially with men. Bring this issue out into the open. Make it so this human rights violation cannot be ignored anymore.

2. Vote more women into office in the elections this November. A quick example why — this past February, I joined Collective Action for Safe Spaces in testifying about sexual harassment on the DC Metro system before the DC City Council during the transit authority’s performance oversight hearing. The transit authority kept downplaying our concerns, but, when the chair of the committee, Ward 4 Councilmember Muriel Bowser heard our stories, she told the transit authority leaders (all men) that they needed to do something. She said that, “As a woman, I feel differently” about the issue. Thanks to her, the transit authority has taken several measures to address the issue, including a new online reporting form and a public service announcement campaign.

3. Support an exciting new project that I am announcing for the first time. Four years ago, I founded Stop Street Harassment as an awareness-raising website. Now, Stop Street Harassment is a new nonprofit organization. The first project will be to work with a survey firm to conduct a sorely needed national street harassment study. You can help fund the street harassment study at www.StopStreetHarassment.org/Donate.

Now is the time to demand your right to safe streets! And together, let’s make sure that the next generation of women never has to think that feeling unsafe on the streets is normal!!

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Filed Under: street harassment Tagged With: our rights, street harassment, vote in november, we are woman rally, women's equality day

Snapshot of street harassment stories, news, announcements & tweets: August 26, 2012

August 26, 2012 By HKearl

Egypt, via The Egyptian Chronicles

Happy Women’s Equality Day!

Read stories, news articles, blog posts, and tweets about street harassment from the past few weeks.

** Sign up to receive a monthly e-newsletter from Stop Street Harassment ***

Street Harassment Stories:

Share your story! You can read street harassment stories on the Web at:

Stop Street Harassment Blog

HarassMap in Egypt

Bijoya in Bangladesh

Resist Harassment in Lebanon

Ramallah Street Watch in Palestine

Name and Shame in Pakistan

Safe Streets in Yemen

Street Harassment in South Africa

Many of the Hollaback sites

Street Harassment In the News, on the Blogs:

* Guardian, “Let women stand up to harassment from squids on the street“

* Lesbilicious, “Street Harassment: the taboo is finally breaking“

* Pavadanada, “I had to put an end to this“

* Women’s Web, “What Are Their Thoughts?”

* Zaghaleel, “Third Day of Patrolling against Sexual Harassment“

* Egypt Independent, “Sexual harassment wave continues for third day“

* Week Woman, “My Hijab, My Body – A Muslim Feminist on Street Harassment in Argentina“

* Egyptian Chronicles, “#EndSH : The Eid beasts are back !!”

* Egypt Independent, “In photos: Sexual harassment continues in Eid“

* Prince of Petworth, “Props to the Cops: Arrest Made in Sexual Assaults near Dupont Circle“

* The Times of India, “Stalked, abused in 1 minute, 27 seconds“

Announcements:

New:

* Stop Street Harassment recently incorporated as a nonprofit organization. Please donate so we can conduct a national street harassment study and gather much needed data documenting the problem.

* Tomorrow there is an open mic in Cairo. Share your street harassment and sexual harassment stories.

Reminders:

* Tonight in DC is a benefit concert for Collective Action for Safe Spaces

* Vote for Hollaback Philly’s transit ad project

* Activists in South Africa launched a new website about street harassment

* The anti-sexual harassment public service announcement signs are now up in several Washington, DC metro stations!

* The Stop Street Harassment book is available in paperback for $15.

* Submit art about street harassment for the VoiceTool Product exhibit in San Francisco, CA

* The Adventures of Salwa campaign has a hotline for sexual harassment cases in Lebanon: 76-676862.

* In Bangalore, India, there is a helpline for street harassment 080 – 22943225 / 22864023

* Report #streetharassment in Pakistan at @NameAndShamePk, email nameandshame@ryse.pk, SMS 0314-800-35-68 or online at http://www.nameandshame.pk

15 Tweets from the Week:

1. @mzjudge People who encourage exercise should also advocate to stop street harassment. How do you expect folks to jog when they don’t feel safe?

2. @_jenniwithani I hate that street harassment can still ruin my night.

3. @umberg: @EverydaySexism street harassment count tonight: 11

4. @oh_so_random Street harassment is real in DC though. I’m bothered by the aggressive entitled behavior by many men I’ve encountered on the streets here

5. @mirabaz Incidents of street harassment while dressed freely: only 1 in 17 months, walking past a construction site

6. @jesssolomon A few blocks N of Howard U is full of zombies, and one just literally tried to grab me. #streetharassment #dc

7. @PennyRed ‘I’m here with my mum and little sisters and you’re yelling dirty, sexist things, it’s not ok.’ They seemed genuinely shocked and sorry.

8. @MaiE_89 Hamzawy: We need legislation that targets sexual harassment specifically. #Egypt #EndSH

9. @SafeSpacesDC Props to the Cops: Arrest Made in Sexual Assaults near # Dupont Circle http://bit.ly/TZPfK9 via @popville @DCPoliceDept #vaw #DC

10. @yesgawdhunty If you catcall me, I’ll give you mean look and call you a worthless sack of shit. You’ve been warned.

11. @erindwyer Get outta ur shitbox car #dirtypervs to catcall me so I can enjoy knocking you to the ground. And teaching you some manners. #skells

12. @toridriggers Dear construction guys at McDonalds, if you catcall at me I’m not even going to give you the light of day. #Thisiswhyyour single

13. @sallyzohney AlMasryAlYoum reports 134 harassment cases in police stations over 3 days eiid holidays. These r just the women who spoke up! #endsh

14.  @MaelleP_ #VisitEgypt but with a pepper spray. Sexual harassment during Eid in pictures http://bit.ly/MMqz7v #EndSH.

15. @NihalSaad: Patrolling started at the metro #endsh pic.twitter.com/NrjGjpHC

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

“Just an example of the average, normal experience of being female in public.”

August 25, 2012 By Contributor

I used to work the night shift in a lab, so I would take public transportation home each morning as all the day shift commuters traveled in the opposite direction. At the time, the distance from my stop to my front door was about a block.

One morning, in that short walk to my house, I jumped in shock halfway there because a complete stranger grabbed my rear. Completely furious, I turned and glared, only to be met with raucous laughter from this adult man and five of his buddies. I was 23 and 5’4”, and these men were easily in their late 30s, towering over me, and with considerably more muscle. I shut my mouth, aware of my vulnerability, and went home.

That’s not even close to the worst harassment I’ve received in my lifetime. Just an example of the average, normal experience of being female in public.

– KJT

Location: Portland, OR

Donate to help fund a national study on street harassment.

Share your street harassment story today and help raise awareness about the problem.

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Filed Under: Stories, street harassment

Patrols Against Harassment in Egypt

August 22, 2012 By HKearl

Harassers Via Egypt Independent

Eid-ul-Fitr, or Eid, is the holiday at the end of the Islamic holy month of Ramadan and in Egypt, it’s sadly become synonymous with sexual harassment.

This year, there have been volunteers organized by the Imprint Movement patrolling the streets and subway stations, watching out for harassers. They’ve helped police arrest several harassers each day.

The Egypt Independent reported on the problem and published numerous photos of harassers and harassment.

“The sexual harassment wave continued in Downtown Cairo and other places during Eid. This comes as government officials and activists have asked for clear solutions to the problem that continues to be one of Egypt’s overwhelming distress.

Several anti-harassment campaigns collecting reports said that the highest numbers of cases were reported near Maspero, Talaat Harb Street. 26 July Street, the Sadat, Ataba and Shuhada metro stations and the neighborhoods of Mohandiseen, Moqattam, Heliopolis and Nasr City.”

Via the Imprint Movement

Nihal Zaghloul ‏(@NihalSaad) is one of the main organizers and wrote about what happened  (Day 1 | Day 2 | Day 3).

“I am personally happy about it and we are looking into organizing more patrols but we still dont know when. Those patrols are not the solution for harassment it is a pain killer as a result we must try to find that solution. I am still unsure of what is a grass root solution but for now i think filing reports and having them pay fines will perhaps make the harassment less.

I urge every girl who got harassed to file a report and not to leave it or ignore, it is OUR RIGHT as women to walk in the streets safely and NO ONE will give us this right we must take it ourselves.”

Visit the event Facebook page to see an album of the patrollers in action.

While there have been campaigns against harassment before over Eid, I like that this one was offline, in the streets, and visibly showed that harassment is not okay and that there are a lot of people willing to volunteer their time to try to stop it.

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Filed Under: News stories, street harassment Tagged With: Cairo, Eid, EndSH, imprint movement, patrols, street harassment

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