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Archives for October 2012

Hateful men set Sharmeka Moffitt on fire

October 23, 2012 By HKearl

Image via Clutch Magazine

UPDATE: In a weird twist, the FBI just announced that Sharmeka staged the whole thing. She set herself on fire. I still wish her a speedy recovery, both physically and mentally. 

Imagine going to the local park for a run/walk, happy and healthy, and then leaving the park in an ambulance, with 60 percent of your body covered in burns because three men in white hoods set you on fire.

It’s horrific to imagine, let alone to live through. Sharmeka Moffitt, a 20-year-old woman in Louisiana, would know.

On Sunday, this happened to her. Not only did the three men set her on fire, they also wrote the initials “KKK” and a racial slur on her car. She is now in critical condition at a hospital.

Via CBS News:

“A Winnsboro Police officer who responded to her 911 call found no suspects or vehicles at Civitan Park where the attack allegedly happened, and the park has no surveillance cameras. Lewis said the state crime lab was analyzing several pieces of evidence.

Franklin Sheriff Kevin Cobb called it “a horrific event” and said authorities would “follow the facts and seek justice.”

Otis Chisley, the president of the local branch of the NAACP, said he was in touch with Moffitt’s distraught family. He said he was waiting for more facts before drawing any conclusions about what happened and that “everyone wants to move with caution.”

Regardless of the investigation’s outcome, Chisley said that racism and KKK activity remain a fact of life in the state.

“It’s prevalent throughout Louisiana,” he said. “It’s hidden but it exists.”

We do NOT live in a post-race, post-gender society. We live in a society where racism, sexism, and hate rear their ugly heads on a regular basis.

Crunk Feminist Collective has a powerful piece about this attack and its context as well as the following:

“And for all the folks who think Black women don’t use public parks for exercise because we want to maintain our hair styles, let this be an object lesson. Maybe Black women with modest resources who can’t afford to go to the gym  don’t use public parks because those spaces are unsafe. 

As of this point, the coverage of Moffitt’s attack has been minimal. I knew about it only because folks back home were posting info from local news sources. I guess it is left up to social media to convince the world yet again that violence against Black women matters. And I hope Black folks remember, too, that Sharmeka’s life deserves the same energy that we gave to the Jena 6 and to Trayvon Martin. 

Sharmeka, you are not invisible to us. We stand with you in your fight.”

Amen. The Stop Street Harassment community stands with Sharmeka and wish her a fast recovery.

 

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Filed Under: News stories Tagged With: Sharmeka Moffitt

“This is the first time I’m sharing these stories”

October 23, 2012 By Contributor

Aly Neel is an American journalist and women’s rights activist based in Istanbul, Turkey. She regularly writes about street harassment and gender-based discrimination and violence and the social movements fighting to end them. You can find her on Twitter. This is a monologue she wrote and performed this weekend.

It’s New Orleans, and I’m hiding behind a chair. Holding my breath. Counting the seconds, minutes, hours that seem to creep by. It’s kind of like hide and seek, except I’m 22 years old and I’m hiding from my dad.

I swear I can my heart throbbing against my rib cage. He must hear me. He must know I’m here.

I remember every detail of that stupid chair. OK, it was a beautiful chair. Victorian, in fact. Mom really likes antiques. My hands are shaking, so I rub my palms along the green fuzzy but now kind of hard with age fabric. Dark wood. Smells a little like mothballs.

I remember laughing at myself for hiding behind a fucking chair. And then hating myself for it. I remember crying, silently though. And then really hating myself.

My dad never laid a hand on me. I’ll tell you a secret, though. Sometimes I kind of wish he had. Just once, maybe. It’d sure make the abuse seem more real. My feelings more legitimate somehow. More black and white.

No, there was just lots of rum.

Screaming. Rum. Cursing. Broken glass. More rum.

The other day I found a list on a crumpled up napkin. I love lists. But this one was different. Instead of wake up and do yoga, it started with “spoiled” and “lazy.” And where take a shower and cook breakfast should have been were instead “bitch,” “whore,” “slut,” “chicken shit,” “unsuccessful.” It was a list I wrote of all the things dad said to us growing up. So I wouldn’t forget. It worked.  Every word triggers another nightmare, another screaming match we didn’t want the neighbors to hear.

Rum, yelling, Rum, dented cars, beaten-in cupboards.

The last two bullet points kill…”I wish you’d never been born,” he had said to my youngest sister with for once sober conviction and then one word, “unlovable,” which he told me after a really painful break-up.

After an especially bad fight – we call it Mississippi because my dad nearly killed us in a car crash on the border — I remember sickly sweet daisies forced in our hands and apologies fed to us. “We were so much happier before you girls,” he’d say if we hesitated. I was 9. I remember, at the age of 12, begging, tears running down my face, mom not to divorce dad. And she didn’t…at least for another decade.

But we didn’t talk about it outside the house. No, we were the perfect little family. Goes to church together, walks in the park together and then nearly kills one another behind closed doors.

I’ll never forget the day – it was exactly three months ago — that I realized no matter how much time passes, the scars from my dad’s abuse will remain with me. It’s been years since he moved out, and I still feel like I’m hiding behind a chair wishing he would just leave.

It took me nearly two decades to realize my relationship with my dad wasn’t normal. It wasn’t normal, and it was wrong.

I’ve been getting really drunk lately. Where each night I drink ends with me feeling impossibly, epically sick but somehow sicker than the time before.

The other night I went out with my friend Peter and his two friends passing through. I wasn’t even supposed to go out that night. But it’s just drinks, right? What started out as wine at the apartment turned into raki at the pub. And then someone ordered a round of tequila. I suck at tequila. I mean, I don’t know anyone who’s awesome at tequila, but I really suck. Somehow we ended up a reggae bar.

More shots. I lost count. The bar was completely empty except for two French girls in the corner. But we stayed. Parts of the night are fuzzy, but I remember never leaving the dance floor. Swing. Dip. Twirl. Shots…and then suddenly there was arguing. Peter took me home.

I learned what actually happened the next, head-pulsing morning. What I thought had been a relatively tame night of us all getting stupidly smashed and swing dancing at a reggae bar on a Tuesday night had actually been a bit more planned. For the last couple hours, I learned I was the only one taking shots. I was so plastered I had no clue. Oh and both of Peter’s friends made out with me on the empty dance floor. I honestly don’t remember a damn thing. Peter said he poured out at least four shots and took me home when it was “getting out of hand.”

At least nothing bad happened, he said, sounding relieved.

But it doesn’t feel like nothing had happened. Maybe I wasn’t assaulted, but I still feel used. And I’ve thought about it every day since.

But hey, you’re no victim if you’re drunk off your ass and making out with strangers, right? That’s what another friend told me.

Then there’s what happens every day when I walk out the door.

I could tell you another story about street harassment, but there’s no point. And which one would I choose? There’s hundreds. I’ve been leered at, growled at, spit on, stalked, called a prostitute. A couple weeks ago I was assaulted by a group of teenaged boys 20 feet from my front door.

Yeah, one incident of street harassment is traumatic enough but what really wears on you and whittles you away is that, like verbal or physical abuse, it never relents. It happens every day, everywhere. And, if you’re not careful, it can grinds on you so hard that at some point you can’t remember who you were before it.

It’s funny. People say I’m confident. Optimistic. Happy. And I am. But they don’t know.

I’m Aly, and I’m a victim of violence. I was never hit with punches. But I was hit with language every day at home, a word that has always been synonymous with fear, dread and rum. I was never raped but I was taken advantage of. On the dance floor with “friends” and then on the street everyday with complete strangers.

And the only thing worse than being harassed or abused is being re-harassed or re-abused. Every time people ask me what I was wearing when I am harassed or when friends told me, “He’s your dad after all,” when I confided in them or when a friend joked about the night at the reggae bar, I feel like it is happening all over again. And I just want to hide behind the stupid Victorian chair.

This is the first time I’m sharing these stories, and I don’t know any of you. For me that’s a big deal.

But I’m not alone. That’s the point. That’s why this matters. Because violence against girls and women isn’t always so black and white. It can be grey, insidious, barely audible and yet mind-numbingly deafening. That’s why, as incredibly heart-wrenching as it is, we have to talk about it and condemn it all – the harassment, abuse, violence – for what it is – wrong.

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Filed Under: Stories, street harassment

Penn State Students Conduct Anti-Street Harassment Demonstration

October 22, 2012 By Contributor

“Show me your tits!”

This was the first incident of street harassment I experienced as a Penn State student living in State College, PA. I was walking toward a bus stop to meet a friend on a Friday night. It was the weekend of a football game in fall 2011, so the sidewalk was full of partially intoxicated patrons. A man in a striped button-down spat this lewd comment in my face as he approached me. When he passed, I felt shocked, violated, and insulted.

Don’t be mistaken: these types of incidents aren’t rare in this town. Street harassment is a widespread problem in State College, where nearly every woman I know has experienced some form of it: catcalls, taunting, lewd remarks, leering, sexually objectifying remarks, you name it. And this type of harassment functions as part of a larger issue in this town: rape culture.

It’s apparent that harmful attitudes toward women exist in State College when we consider other aspects of this town’s culture. Since the beginning of the fall semester on Aug. 27, State College police have received nine sexual assault reports on campus or in State College. That means PSU has been seeing an average of more than one sexual assault per week. In a world where the majority of rapes go unreported, these numbers should implore you to ask: how many sexual assaults aren’t being reported on this campus?

That’s why members of Penn State’s TRIOTA, the Women’s Studies Honor’s Society, decided to conduct an anti-street harassment demonstration on a busy Friday afternoon in downtown State College. On Oct. 12, we held signs proclaiming our anti-harassment message, and even included specific remarks that had been yelled at us during our time at PSU.

We saw a lot of stares and furrowed brows from passerby. Only a few people approached us to express their support, but it doesn’t matter—getting this issue in the eyes and ears of the State College community is important if we want to combat harmful behavior and attitudes toward women.

Are you listening, PSU?

Julie Mastrine will graduate from Penn State University in December 2012. She’s an activist, feminist, and writer in the PR industry. You can reach out to Julie on Twitter.

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Filed Under: street harassment

“Hey, you want a boyfriend?!”

October 22, 2012 By Contributor

I was alone, eating a burger at Five Guys. I had my headphones in, a coat, a pair of jeans, and some combat boots on. Clearly, not even paying attention to the people around me or wanting conversation. A group of guys walked by my table, as I was closest to the door, and the last guy yells at me, “Hey, you want a boyfriend?!”

Seriously. Who does that? I didn’t do anything but continue to listen to my music, eat my burger, and stare ahead of me. It wasn’t like the restaurant was empty, because it was semi-full. It’d make more sense if I was the absolute only one there. But I wasn’t. There were other customers, but I just happened to be the only girl eating alone. And apparently, that’s not okay.

– Anonymous

Location: Middletown, Rhode Island

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

Digest of street harassment news: October 21, 2012

October 21, 2012 By HKearl

By Allan Cavanagh

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:

* Global Press Institute, “Women Break Silence About Sexual Harassment on Nepali Buses“

* Bloomberg Businessweek, “Egypt to Fight Sexual Harassment by Broadcasting Attackers“

* CASS, ““Putting in the effort to catch him wasn’t just for me – it was for all of us who are subjected to disgusting behavior day in and day out””

* Brute Reason, “On Men Who Think Street Harassment Would Be Awesome“

* My Fox DC, “Website helps stop harassment on Metro“

* Gawker, “Unmasking Reddit’s Violentacrez, The Biggest Troll on the Web“

* Alakhbar, “Video Experiment Gauges Public Response to Sexual Harassment“

* Sydney Morning Herald, “‘Shocked’ Sonia’s Tahrir Square ordeal: mob gropes TV reporter after live broadcast“

* Prodigal Magazine, “His Words Burned Into My Skin.”

* The Ferrett, “Can I Buy You a Coffee?“

* Random Musings, “The Argument Over Street Harassment“

* Egypt Independent, “Are you man enough? Men on both sides of fight against harassment“

Announcements:
Reminders:

* Stop Street Harassment welcomes and announces its new board of directors!

* 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.

* There are new anti-street harassment groups in Australia and Nepal

* Read an interview with Tatyana Fazlalizadeh about her beautiful art work against street harassment

* What did street harassment look like in 1945?

* @Shefunionwomcom We are collating stories of women’s experiences of street harassment. If you have a story please email it to womens.committee@shef.ac.uk

* METRAC released a free “Not Your Baby App” to provide responses you can use when experiencing harassment

* 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. @LatherRinseRpt  Apparently it’s never too early for some street harassment. I’ve had enough of this, I am not an object and I will fight back with a lecture

2. @sallyzohney: Since our dear government &police r watching us suffer #EgWomen r fighting back by spraying harassers w/colored spray #EndSH

3. @gnomesdeplume Street harassment: turning me into a frightened 13 year-old girl since…well, since I was 13. What a shitty way to end the night.

4. @maha_ia  Thank God Egyptian women are finally speaking up. #EndSH

5. @DianaShh  Street harassment is NOT a compliment. #Jordan

6. @SharkDancing We need to stop making this excuse ” Street Harassment is unfortunate, but completely normal. You just have to deal with it”. #Fem2 #Cdnpoli

7. @Sharon_Haywood  Torcuato González Agote breaks Argentine law by taking secret photos of women on #BsAs buses & posts them w/out consent http://bit.ly/QwmNyq

8. @cairowire  as much as #egypt needs effective mechanisms to #EndSH, sanctioning CCTV surveillance without proper regulation is a recipe for disaster.

9. @MaiE_89  Ridiculous. 2010 survey in #Egypt: 80% males & 73% females agreed that a woman who dressed provocatively deserved to be harassed #EndSH

10. @ivanvector  This. MT @RespectTO: @SharkDancing Street harassment is NOT normal. It already is illegal in several US states. http://bicycling.com/blogs/roadrights/2012/08/08/no-more-bullying/ … #BikeTO

11. ‏@BLifela  Today was a rough day!Plus crazy street harassment! Professional attire turned into a site of male pleasure while walking to my research job

12. @Qatato  Stand against street harassment in Amman. Share this photo or make it your cover photo and let everybody know… http://fb.me/1WQqifJ0p

13. @CallOutCatCalls  @isitis Currently wearing miniskirt; have leggings in bag in case of #streetharassment on my late night train. I feel your pain. 🙁

14. @sw_inku  Commute street harassment tali: stranger greeting: 1, politely complimented: 1, yelled at from across the park: 1

15. @mase_430  “@ninasophia81: Big mistake wearing a sweater dress today. Let the street harassment begin. SMH!!! #longleggedgirlstruggles” ~Werk!!

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

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