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Archives for May 2013

Use GivingWorks to Donate to SSH

May 9, 2013 By HKearl

Do you sell items on EBay? If so, did you know you can designate a percentage of your sales to a charity?

You can!

And now, Stop Street Harassment is listed as one of those charities. Just search for our name here and then indicate the percentage you’d like to donate to us to fund our programs.

You can also make a direct donation.

Thanks!

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Filed Under: street harassment

“I am a grandma, for crying out loud”

May 9, 2013 By Contributor

I am a 46-year-old woman. I dress conservatively and changed from a skort to pants before leaving the house. While waiting for a bus on 118 Avenue in Edmonton, two separate cars with 60+ year-old men circled the block eying me and invited me into their vehicles. I was wearing no makeup and flaps. I am a grandma, for crying out loud. I felt unsafe, dirty, and angry. If i had a gun in my hand oh boy would there be hell to pay on that city street. How can I dress to avoid this?

– Anonymous

Location: 118 ave Edmonton Alberta, Canada

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Filed Under: Stories, street harassment

“Please stop harassing the ladies walking down the street”

May 8, 2013 By Contributor

Went the Grand Pacific Hotel construction site today and read this notice:

“PLEASE STOP HARASSING THE LADIES WALKING DOWN THE STREET.

WE KNOW IT’S JUST FUN TO YOU FULLAS BUT TO THE LADIES IT’S NOT ALWAYS SO FUNNY.

WE HAVE HAD MORE THAN ONE COMPLAINT , IF IT CONTINUES, SOMEONE WILL BE MADE AN EXAMPLE AND TERMINATED!! (NO JOKE)”

I gotta say, I appreciate the fact that this construction company has made some sort effort in PREVENTING STREET HARASSMENT by it’s workers.

– Shyana, shared via the “Take Back the Streets” Facebook group

Location: The Fiji Islands

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Filed Under: Stories, street harassment

USA: Fighting the Mashers

May 8, 2013 By Correspondent

By: Talia Weisberg, SSH Correspondent

Street harassment is a daily phenomenon in every pocket of the United States during the present day. Interestingly, this social trend can be dated back to the late 1800s in America.

Back then, street harassment was called mashing. There are actually records of women who physically exacted revenge on their harassers. In 1904, a Manhattan woman arranged to meet privately with a masher so she could beat him up. Two years later, when a woman boxer in Massachusetts was grabbed by a man, she knocked him out and then revived him with smelling salts out of pity. Other women slapped mashers in the face with their handbags and umbrellas, gave them swollen eyes, and even lacerated their faces.

The police of the early 1900s were very active in combating street harassment. Female officers were often put in charge of catching mashers, and were usually extremely successful. In New York City, a group of jiu jitsu-trained policewomen called the Subway Squad patrolled the trains as plainclothes officers, looking out for mashing. In both the subway and aboveground, mashers were often caught through stings, where they had female officers or harassed women serve as bait to entice the would-be masher.

Interestingly, many victims of street harassment pursued legal justice against mashers. By the 1920s, women were likely to sue because of the availability of private hearings and public encouragement. This era was also the Jazz Age, when women began exploring their sexuality. Since they had gotten the right to vote in 1920, women felt more liberated. A possible result of this increased sense of self is that women were more likely to value their bodies, and were apt to prosecute a man for violating their space.

Men had mixed responses to mashing. Male officers were often apathetic towards victims of street harassment, part of the reason women police became so vital to the cause. However, many men in the force championed the anti-mashing cause. For example, after learning about a “masher’s corner” on 125th Street in Manhattan, the police chief stationed additional officers there. In general, men did take an active stand against street harassment. The Anti-Mashing Society was established in 1903 by a group of men frustrated by the mashing epidemic, and numerous men physically protected women who were being mashed.

What lessons can we, as anti-street harassment activists, learn from the history of mashing?

As effective as it may have been in the early 1900s, it may not be wise for us to support women beating harassers with their handbags. However, self-protection is vital, and women must be able to learn how to effectively protect themselves from street harassment. We cannot, however, pin the responsibility on women to not be harassed. We must educate men not to harass, and work with like-minded men to encourage their brethren to respect women’s space on the street. Our mission is to shift the social paradigm and change people’s attitudes. Hopefully, the term street harassment will sound just as foreign to our children as the term mashing does to our generation.

Talia Weisberg is a Harvard-bound feminist hoping to concentrate in Studies of Women, Gender, and Sexuality. Her work has appeared in over 40 publications and she runs the blog Star of Davida blog (starofdavida.blogspot.com).

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Filed Under: correspondents, SH History, street harassment

Digest of Street Harassment News: May 5, 2013

May 5, 2013 By HKearl

** 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

Collective Action for Safe Spaces

HarassMap in Egypt

Bijoya in Bangladesh

Resist Harassment in Lebanon

Ramallah Street Watch in Palestine

Name and Shame in Pakistan

Safe City India

Safe Streets in Yemen

Street Harassment in South Africa

Many of the Hollaback sites

Everyday Sexism

Street Harassment In the News, on the Blogs:

* Minnesota Daily, “Not Your Baby“

* Bikya News, “New Egypt anti-sexual harassment battle provides “safe car” service“

* BBC, “The Egyptian women fighting harassment“

* Huff Post Teen, “Street Harassment Is No Compliment“

* The GW Hatchet, “Students partner with Metro officials, urge commuters to report sexual harassment“

* Yahoo Games, “LEGO apologizes for ‘street harassment’ sticker“

* Slate, “Note to Lego: Harassment Isn’t a Construction-Worker Problem“

* Gender Focus, “See a woman reading? Leave her alone“

* Brute Reason, “Why You Shouldn’t Tell That Random Girl On The Street That She’s Hot“

* Consumerist, “Dad Complains To LEGO About Leering Minifig, Teaches Everyone About Brand Licensing“

* HBCU, “Street Harassment – Underdeveloped ‘Game’ is Civility Lost“

* xo Jane, “A Day Without Headphones: My 24-Hour Street Harassment Diary“

* Telegraph & Argus, “‘Speak out to help stop intimidation in Bradford’’

* Voice of America, “Sexual Violence Widespread in India, UN Says“

* The Gloss, “It’s Spring, Get Psyched For More Street Harassment“

* Athens Ohio Today, “Anti-street harassment group launches site for Appalachia“

* This Week in Blackness, “Hey Yo Ma: A Crash Course In Street Harassment“

Announcements:

* New SSH Resource: Companies that Trivialize Street Harassment

* View photos from International Anti-Street Harassment Week 2013!

10 Tweets from the Week:

1. @liannedemello Rescued a young woman being harassed by a couple of creepy guys on the Tube. They were so surprised they backed off. #streetharassment

2. @twitdemaria The self defense classes organized by @TahrirBodyguard helped me to feel more confident when walking in streets:with no fear. #endSH

3. @fazlalizadeh Just had two random guys stop and chat with me about street harassment as I was wheat pasting a piece. Ha.

4.  ‏@sfbuzzalino Street harassment of women by men is part of the foundation of #rapeculture #slutshaming #JacksonKatz

5. @inmywindow Street harassment was the exact opposite of what I needed today. When the fuck will it stop?

6. @lilyhiottmillis Street harassment literally makes me view all men in contempt for the rest of the day #misandry

7. @captain_seb My first time going outside without a coat on and my first street harassment of the year! #murdereverybody #maybejustthemen

8. @SocialJerkBlog “Not great, I’m having menstrual cramps.” If you keep following me asking, “Ma, how you feelin” this is what you get. #streetharassment

9. @eyoMoMO The worst thing about street harassment is that it’s not so much about complimenting you as much as it is about making women squirm

10. @ArielleDRoss Preach. RT @emmajroe: There are only two seasons for Toronto cyclists — winter and street harassment.

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

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