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Archives for April 2013

Nepali Youth March Against Street Harassment

April 11, 2013 By HKearl

“Youth from more than 30 districts of Nepal got together on one platform “National Youth Forum 2013″ today. At the end of the workshop, they showed solidarity to the Anti-Street Harassment Campaign by conducting a Walk from Gyaneshwor to Sundhara, stopping on the major busparks for quiet demonstration of the slogans against harassment in public spaces. Each of them made their own Chart to carry with them. The public stopped by to read the charts and also to ask questions.”  – Smriti RDN, Field Research Coordinator, Safe Cities and Unpaid Care Work Research Initiatives

View the photo album.

Read more about what’s happening in Nepal for International Anti-Street Harassment Week!

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Street Harassment Discussion on HuffPost Live

April 11, 2013 By HKearl

A lot of great media sites are covering the topic of street harassment and International Anti-Street Harassment Week right now! Here’s a list.

Check out the HuffPost Live 30 minute segment on street harassment that aired Tuesday featuring Nuala Cabral, co-founder of FAAN Mail and a Stop Street Harassment board member, Nihal Saad Zaghloul who founded Imprint Movement, Debjani Roy the Deputy Director at Hollaback, Pierre Berastain. Director of Media Relations at the Hispanic Black Gay Coalition, and me.
.

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Reverse Pick Up Line

April 11, 2013 By HKearl

Here’s  a great reverse pick-up line to use on street harassers!

Available here.

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“Let’s continue the fight for equitable and safe streets”

April 11, 2013 By Contributor

Sometime last summer, I found myself in the middle of Times Square with 4 people (3 women, 1 man), waiting to begin work for my internship. A man came up to us, in the middle of Times Square, and began asking me where I’m from. I knew this routine and told him New York—blatantly showing my disinterest (if you know me, you know I can have the ILL stank face.)

He pursued, as I knew he would, asking where I was really from. I said New York. He continued. I gave in-Ethiopia. The other 4 were watching and listening (and smiling) as this man continued. “What is your name?”

“I’m working,” I told him.

“What is your name?”

I probably either told him Assefash or Sara, but I don’t remember. He said, “Give me your number.”

I said, “I’m not interested.”

“Give me your number,” he began to move closer. One woman laughed and said, “Haha, I don’t think she’s interested, sir.”

He didn’t even pause to look at her, “Oh, she’s interested. Write your name and number on a $100 bill and give it to me.”

“Seriously, I’m working and I’m not interested.”

“No—write your name and number on a $100 bill and give it to me.”

“Leave me alone-I don’t want to have this conversation!”

He finally waved his hand and continued on his way—through the middle of Times Square. The 4 people laughed it off and we continued to work.

I’m sharing this story because this week is International Anti-Street Harassment Week and I’m asking you all to take a moment to engage with the movement in one way or another. I’m still trying to figure out how I can really do something, myself. Street Harassment is a real thing, despite people’s tendency to brush it off as, “Oh, they’re just flirting,” or “Oh, it happens all the time-don’t be so sensitive.” Whether or not the intention to threaten is there, street harassment does just that. Let’s continue the fight for equitable and safe streets.

– ATM

Location: Times Square, NYC

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Egypt: “I am revolting against harassment”

April 11, 2013 By Contributor

This is a guest blog post for International Anti-Street Harassment Week, by Amani Massoud in Egypt.

In January 2011, inspired by the nuisance of sexual harassment that women in Egypt are subject to every day…correction…every minute…of their waking hours, I wrote “What to wear on a revolution”. It was only a few days before January 25th that I sat down and had a serious discussion with some friends over what best to wear to the protests, which, even if we didn’t know it at the time, were to mark the start of the Egyptian revolution. Now I suppose if a bunch of people were to sit down and discuss that same topic anywhere else in the world, they would have talked: light or warm clothes depending on the weather, comfortable shoes or a practical outfit for the long day out, red shirt or yellow shirt, symbols, etc… but not us…we were intensely and meticulously discussing to the minutest detail how we’ll make ourselves immune to highly probable harassment. There we are at one of the greatest turning points in the history of our nation and our greatest concern was wearing “nothing that gives way to sexual harassment or a chance to have your clothes pulled off” ? Something isn’t right.

And while I’m in the business of writing great things in my head that only ever stay there, there are those rare incidents when I get my thoughts actually…well…written. Say when your country is ridding itself of a 30 year old corrupt regime or on Blogging and Tweeting Day Against Sexual Harassment to name a couple. Do I need to elaborate on how immensely I feel against sexual harassment? I guess not. I am revolting now against sexual harassment as I revolted then against political harassment.

I do not however claim to have lived for 30 of my 34 years in a country where sexual harassment against women is as frequent as the horning, beeping, cussing and cursing coming out of thousands of cars (barely) driving through the densely populated streets of Egypt. I would like to think that the intensity of the problem of sexual harassment is not as old as Mubarak’s regime and I’m pretty sure I could walk the streets of my hometown Alexandria some 12 years ago without reaching that level of frustration that makes me want to just strip naked in the middle of the street and throw myself right in front of the next passing bus…on a good day.

Yet the body adapts, and just as your ears learn to filter out the sound of horns and beeps, only enough so the noise doesn’t drive you crazy, you learn to adapt with the cat-calls and the stares. You get your vaccine in multiple dozes and you become immune. Days will go by when you just walk around in a daze completely unaware of your surroundings, humming even, until the effect of the vaccine wears off again. Then you start using all the tried and true tactics: you dress big and ugly, only to realize it has nothing to do with what you’re wearing…you stare back, only to find their stare turning into a victorious smile…you stop em in the street and give them the meanest cruelest insult you can think of, only to find them answering back meaner and crueler…you crack a joke…you say hello…you stop and pretend to ask for help (which believe it or not is by far the most/only/slightly reliable tactic)…nothing works…none of the tactics are evidence-based and if they’ve worked once with a girl you know they won’t work with you again…and if they’ve worked against one guy, they won’t work against another. And so it hits you, no matter what you do, they win, and their immunity to our tactics is growing as ours to harassment is waning.

In India they’ve got a word for this, Eve-teasing, which includes anything from street harassment, molestation, sexually suggestive remarks, groping, perverted teasing and cat-calling. There too, traditionalists blame it on the way a woman behaves or wears in public. Men are increasingly being drawn into this World they have collectively imagined up where women actually enjoy being humiliated on the streets like that. Well guess what, we don’t, and no, it has nothing to do with what we wear.  I could be wearing Firefighter Coveralls and I’d be “eve-teased” if some of those men had a remote suspicion I might be a woman.

The saddest part is that none of this is news for practically anyone, and the problem of sexual harassment is growing at the same rate as shouting out against it. Perhaps we’re not being explicit enough? Here we are trying again:

“Breaking News: It is NOT OK to Sexually Harass Women on the Streets!”

Amani is the Human Rights Education and Campaigns Director at the Egyptian Initiative for Personal Rights. Follow her on twitter.

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Filed Under: anti-street harassment week, street harassment

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