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Archives for August 2012

“Around his friends he turns into some kind of misogynistic monster”

August 22, 2012 By Contributor

I was thirteen, walking from my neighbor’s house back to my own. I was wearing a t-shirt and athletic shorts. My childhood friend and all of his friends were hanging around outside. They stood in the middle of the street that I had to cross and started to approach me. I noticed they were all wearing bike shorts or something. You know, the kind of shorts that makes their crotches pretty damn noticeable. Immediately, they all started asking me for my phone number and calling after me as I walked around them and into my house. I could hear chuckles and fits of laughter. Yuck. Sad to say that I still hang out with that kid. He doesn’t normally act like a jerk, but around his friends he turns into some kind of misogynistic monster.

– M.

Location: Cincinnati, OH

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Filed Under: Stories, street harassment

SSH Grows Up

August 21, 2012 By HKearl

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

August 21, 2012
Contact: Holly Kearl
stopstreetharassment@yahoo.com

Stop Street Harassment Plans a National Study on Street Harassment
The New Nonprofit Aims to Document the Problem

WASHINGTON, DC – Stop Street Harassment (SSH) today launches a fundraising campaign to conduct a national study on the prevalence of street harassment. The organization, which just incorporated as a nonprofit, will survey both men and women ages 18-30.

The few studies that exist on this subject show that at least 80 percent of women experience street harassment, especially when they’re young. Street harassment negatively affects the lives of harassed people; those who experience it feel forced to limit their activities, change their commutes, or even move. More research is needed, however, to better document the problem in the United States and to understand its causes and the impact it has on people’s lives and on society as a whole.

“After researching it for five years, there is no doubt in my mind that street harassment is a human rights violation,” said Holly Kearl, founder of Stop Street Harassment. Kearl began her work on the topic by writing a master’s thesis in 2007 and later a book in 2010. “I believe that a national study is necessary to prove once and for all that this is a problem—not a minor annoyance, joke, compliment, or the fault of the harassed person—and I am excited that SSH will undertake it.”

SSH plans to work with an advisory team of PhD-level sociologists, demographers, and political scientists as well as anti-street harassment activists to develop the survey, and GfK Custom Research LLC will conduct the nationally representative survey.

For the past four years, SSH has been a website, blog, book, and the group behind International Anti-Street Harassment Week. Its work has been cited by the United Nations, New York City Council, USA Today, New York Times, Washington Post, ABC News, and more.

Now, it moves forward as an organization focused on ending gender-based street harassment by removing barriers that make public places less safe for women and all LGBQT individuals. As a nonprofit, SSH plans to conduct research, organize awareness campaigns, create curriculum, organize conferences and seminars, and engage in global and community-based outreach on the topic of street harassment.

To contribute to the study fundraising campaign, visit the SSH Razoo page to make an online donation, or send checks to SSH, P.O. Box, 3621, Reston, Virginia, 20195.

###

Stop Street Harassment is a nonprofit organization dedicated to ending gender-based street harassment worldwide. On its website, visitors can access lists of statistics, articles, films, and campaigns around street harassment as well as ideas for action. Stop Street Harassment provides people with a place to share their stories and organizes International Anti-Street Harassment Week annually.

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Filed Under: national study, nonprofit, street harassment

“I am just me”

August 21, 2012 By Contributor

Walking home from a friend’s house on Saturday evening in Glasgow, I was accosted by a man who saw fit to comment on my height ( I am 6′ 2 trans woman). I ignored him and continued on my way, only to then have him follow me and ask me if I was ” a wummin or whit (sic).”

I thought the best thing was to try to be firm but polite and said to him, “I am just me.” He then quickly made a grab for my breasts and slurred ” Naw,.. too hard to be real,” leaving me shocked and vulnerable.

–  Anonymous

Location: Glasgow G42, UK

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Filed Under: Stories, street harassment

“I live in a world that isn’t mine”

August 20, 2012 By Contributor

The following was written for The Rumpus by runner Anne Valente and it is excerpted with permission:

“While I was out running this morning, I passed two men on the path. I run a six-mile route routinely, out and back on a paved trail that winds twelve miles through the woods behind my house, and I often see the same people each day, the same people who wave and nod hello though I’ll never know their names. It is a trail that makes me feel safe enough to wear earbuds when I run. It is a trail that makes me feel safe enough to let down my guard and look only for bluebirds and cardinals and the occasional shy deer. But when I passed these men I could hear them yelling at me, even above the sound of my earphones. They were not saying hello. Whatever they were saying, it was not friendly. My body went rigid when I knew I’d have to pass them again, on my way back home.

When I spotted them ahead, on my way back, there was no one else around.  I slowed my pace, considered running back the way I’d come.  Then I saw a biker far behind them.  So I ran.  I ran fast.  I ran as fast as my body would let me, so I would pass the men at the exact time that the biker did, so I would never be alone with them in a long stretch of otherwise empty woods.

They yelled at me anyway.  I ignored them.  I don’t know what they were saying.  I know it was some combination of lewdness and denigration.  I just kept running, away from them, far enough around a bend and up where I could see a few other bikers and walkers until I could finally slow my pace, a pace that slowed long before my lungs finally relaxed.

I am a runner.  I have been running for years.  I run not only for my health, and not only because it feels as natural to me as breathing.  I run so I can inhabit my own body.  I run so that in moments like these, when my lack of power in this world becomes more violently apparent, I can feel the strength of my own body, enough to ignore provocations, enough to know alone that I could destroy both of those men if I wanted.

In some corner of my mind, I know this isn’t true. I know that no matter how much weight I can bench press, no matter how hard my muscles get, no matter how much of a machine my body becomes, it will never be enough.

But it is something still, to feel my every fiber in my body coalesce. It is something to feel them gather in defense before a threat, to feel for one moment that I am more powerful than the world will ever know.

Because the world doesn’t know. Why should it? I realize over and over again, in so many different situations, that I live in a world that isn’t mine. A world that wasn’t built for me. I live in a world where there are threats, big and small. Threats that rear themselves when I least expect it, when I think I can at last relax. Threats that I must selectively ignore or they will consume me, whether I am on a path and two men remind me that there is nowhere, anywhere, that is safe.”

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Filed Under: Stories, street harassment

“Severe Sexual Harassment and Threats of Physical Violence by Male Sara Lee Truck Drivers”

August 20, 2012 By HKearl

Via YouTube:

“After I rejected them, this guy jumps out the truck and tries to attack me!

Sexual harassment is not about the woman’s looks. As you will see here, after I rejected him, he called me “manly looking bitch” and a “bitch” after “complimenting” me earlier, showing how it is all about bullying and a form of male dominance over females and not the “complimenting” as women tend to think it is.

Sexual harassment is all about establishing male control and dominance over me because I am a petite female and he feels that he can bully me and get away with it!

Sexual harassment IS NOT about complimenting you! As you will see in this video, the guy threatens me for rejecting them since, earlier, they were cat calling and wolf whistling and saying, “Hi”, to me which is how sexual violence starts. I confronted them about their behavior and told them not to do that, that it is disrespectful and wrong and how would they like it if someone did it to their mothers. They then called me a “bitch”, and that I “look like a man” after I rejected them.

When I recorded them to get their face on tape to report them for their behavior, that is when this guy jumped out the truck and threatened me.”

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Filed Under: Stories, street harassment Tagged With: Sara Lee

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