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Archives for April 2015

#EndSHWeek Wrap-Up: Day 3

April 14, 2015 By HKearl

Stop Harcelement de Rue dressed as super heroes and distributed info about harassment on the subway in Paris

There were numerous events today, from Colombia to France, from Germany to the USA. See the updated photo album for some of the photos. Here is our media coverage so far.

Virtual Events:

People in more than a dozen countries around the world tweeted about street harassment using the hashtags #EndSH and #AMLatina. Read the recap.

From April 12-18th Ryerson University Student Life (Toronto, Canada) asked students to share their experiences and thoughts about street harassment on and off campus. Photos by Brian Hongku Han

Articles:

* “Six Innovative Ways to Fight Street Harassment” on Bitch Media

* “Women Traveling Alone Should Feel Safe” on The WIP

* “Why do Men Catcall Women” for Talking Points Memo

* “Metro Transit Police to raise awareness about sexual harassment and assault,” on WMATA’s site

* “Not an Object – a Seminar on Street Harassment in Pakistan“

* “Five Ways for Men to Fight Street Harassment” on our blog, by a guest blogger from Afghanistan

* “Meet Holly Kearl, Founder of the Non-Profit Organization Stop Street Harassment,” Modern Reston Magazine

Videos:

Hollaback! Kathmandu members share their views on street harassment and how they’re standing up. #Nepal.

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Filed Under: anti-street harassment week, street harassment

Five Ways for Men to Fight Street Harassment

April 14, 2015 By Contributor

The cause of street harassment is not in the way women dress, but in the way some men think.

When I was in middle school, our Islamic Studies teacher always told us about the concept of Enjoining good and forbidding evil, however he only applied the concept to women. We were 12 to 17 years old. Mere boys. He would tell us that if we saw women going to bazar too often or wearing bad hejab and “improper” clothes, we could prevent them from doing so. He would tell us to tell the women to stay at home, hit them or even kick them. He would tell us that it has sawab: that we would be reward. For a really long time, I really thought the teacher was right. I believed that women who didn’t dress “properly” were the only ones to be harassed and that they deserved it. Since then, I have opened my eyes and look around for myself. I have realized how wrong his teachings were. I have learned that it is not about what women are wearing because I have seen men harass girls who were wearing burqas. For many men harassment has become a hobby. I have realized that the problem is in the minds of these men. Street harassment is a men’s issue. I know that even now many of my classmates still think the teacher was right so contribute to a system that perpetuates women’s harassments and protects harassers. To fight harassment, we must understand it.

One of the worse things we could do is belittle the problem of street harassment. This is a very big problem for women in our country and we know who causes it. Ultimately, the problem will not end until those men who engage in it, stop harassing women. Some of these men do not realize what impact their actions have on women. They do not know that women don’t enjoy harassment. Some men seem to think that they have a right to make comments about women’s appearances. As a man, I know that no one gave them such a right. Not religion, not the Holy Quran, not even traditions. Nothing allows men to behave in this way. We should also realize that it doesn’t matter what women are wearing.

In addition to being inaccurate, it is simply presumptuous and rude to justify men’s behaviors because of women’s clothing. We, men, are not animals. We can control our mouths, our bodies and our thoughts. A woman’s clothing should not drive us wild. Another important part of the problem is the way in which people try to fight harassment. Rarely does anyone say, “stop harassing me because I am person and I want to be treated with respect.” Rather, people say, “would you want someone to treat your sister or mom this way?” The problem is that harassers don’t care about this. Many of them don’t even allow their own family members outside. Also, we shouldn’t respect women because they are sisters or mothers, but because they are human. We must emphasis our common humanity.

Instead of belittling the problem or telling women to dress differently, if you want to do something to stop harassment as a man in our country do the following five things.

1: Start from yourself and recognize that no one has the right comment or harass women based on their clothing.

2: If someone is harassing a girl or a woman don’t be a silent bystander.

3: Use your words and show with your actions that harassment is not something you will accept or ignore.

4: If women are having a problem with men in public, don’t automatically assume they need your help. They might not feel safe getting your help. They might be afraid of creating a fight.  Don’t immediately act like a hero and start hitting people. Ask the women if they need help. If they said, “no.” Respect that. You don’t want to make things worse.

5: Using social media and other media to advocate against street harassment. Every man can campaign to change the views of other men. This will create a ripple effect.

By Mustafa Raheel, Dukhtarane Rabia (Daughters of Rabia): A blog on social justice in Afghanistan

Poster text: The cause of street harassment is not in the way women dress, but in the way some men think. 

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Filed Under: anti-street harassment week Tagged With: #EndSHWeek, Afghanistan, Daughters of Rabia, Dukhtarane Rabia, Islam

I Was 12

April 14, 2015 By Contributor

Guest Blog Post for International Anti-Street Harassment Week 2015

“Hey baby,” leered the greasy man on the public street in broad daylight

I am 12

Why is no one stopping him?

I walk

“I’m talking to you, bitch” he progressed

There are people around

I am 12

I walk, feeling his gaze imagining what’s underneath my clothing

Six and a half out of ten and I am one of them

I am 12

I faced my first harasser

I felt his gaze linger

I felt the sweat droplets roll down my face. It was hot. It was summer.

I was taught to dress modest though it is 100 degrees

I am 12

I am being sexualized

I am being called a slut and a whore and a cunt for ignoring these greasy men

I am “asking for this attention” and this “attention is a compliment” and “how are men supposed to meet women if they can’t yell obscenities at them from the street?”

How is a 12 year old supposed to walk down a street alone?

Why am I expected to carry pepper spray with me at 12?

Why was it that I got pepper spray for Christmas when I was 15?

Why do I have to change my habits to accommodate these grown greasy men?

Why is this happening to 11 and 12 and 13 and 25 year olds?

Why is it that our walk has to be commented on?

Why is our body being treated like a public display?

Why are girls constantly sexualized unwillingly?

What is appealing about lack of consent?

Why am I being sexualized at 12?

“Hey baby” is a phrase that haunts many women

“Hey baby” perpetuates the culture that shames women’s natural bodies while simultaneously sexualizing them

“Hey baby” has been said to roughly 65% of women

“Hey baby” is not my name

I was 12

I am 17 and I’ve been harassed ever since.

 

Chloe Parker, from @rebel.grrrl

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Filed Under: anti-street harassment week, Stories, street harassment Tagged With: @rebel.grrrl, #EndSHWeek, adolescent, EndSH, harassment, poem, slam poetry, teenage

Hollaback! Amsterdam: Starting, Launching and Sustaining a Movement

April 14, 2015 By Contributor

Guest Blog Post for International Anti-Street Harassment Week 2015

In December 2014, I was sitting in front of my computer scanning for resources for research I was conducting on street harassment in Amsterdam. What I found was a few scattered blog posts about individuals’ experiences being catcalled or groped throughout the city and their frustrations with the lack of attention and action around the issue.

I kept searching and came across a current campaign by a local group called Straat Intimidatie (Street Intimidation). Their goal is to demand legislation against street harassment from Dutch politicians. This seemed very promising. I reached out to the founder of the group, Gaya Branderhorst and as we spoke, it became clear: Amsterdam has a big problem. A problem that many of its residents, including women, people of color and LGBTQI people, don’t feel safe or comfortable in public spaces.

I put out a feeler through local activist circles and social media networks. Within just a few months, the Hollaback! Amsterdam was team was formed. There are five of us of four different nationalities, including Dutch, German, Honduran and American.  Some of us identify as LGBTQI, some as feminists, and all have at least a handful (if not several handfuls) of stories of experiencing street harassment. These experiences are what inspired us to join the movement in Amsterdam and are what motivate us to fight street harassment in our city.

Because we are an all-volunteer group, launching a brand new site and preparing for a major launch event this week (April 14) has been incredibly rewarding, but also not without challenges.  We have met some amazing and dedicated people through this process who are working on issues of street harassment, domestic violence, gender equality, humanitarian response and human rights. We have had a lot of interest in what we are doing expressed through our Facebook page and Twitter feed. However, every one of us, besides launching Hollaback! Amsterdam, is also working full-time, a full-time student or both working and studying.

Despite each of us juggling Hollaback! with our busy lives, it has been truly inspiring to work with a group of people so committed to such an important cause. As we approach our launch event in April, we are motivated by all of the support, engagement and inspiration we’ve received from residents of Amsterdam, communities within the Netherlands and supporters worldwide.

Eve Aronson is the Co-director of Hollaback! Amsterdam

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Filed Under: anti-street harassment week, hollaback Tagged With: Amsterdam, multinational, new organization, Straat Intimidatie

Today’s Events – April 14

April 14, 2015 By BPurdy

Virtual Events:

More than organizations from 15 different countries will be hosting an all-day Tweetathon about street harassment in various regions across the world, in various languages. Use #EndSH to join!

 

International Events:

Bahamas: Hollaback! Bahamas is issuing a press release to celebrate our one year anniversary, talking about Int’l ASHW, and announcing the STARR Initiative, their new our safe space program.

Colombia: OCAC Colombia has  prepared a tizatón to claim that street belongs to everyone. Meet us at the Río Arzobispo, diagonal 40A con carrera 19 | MARTES 14 DE ABRIL – 3PM. NOS TOMAMOS LAS CALLES. Preparamos una tizatón para reivindicar que la calle es de todas y todos. Nos encontraremos en el río Arzobispo, en la diagonal 40A con carrera 19

France: Stop Harcelement de Rue will be going in subway and suburban trains, and a Paris train station in order to distribute flyers and to sensitize people to all the types of violence women have to go through in transports. During these events, they will be wearing a super-hero costume as the “Team Zero Relou” (no streetharassers team)! [7:45pm in the RER A, a suburban train in Paris]

France: Stop Harcelement de Rue – Lyon will be distributing leaflets  [7 pm. Location in the Vaise subway station]

Nepal: Hollaback! Kathmandu will be doing a Mens Pledge at Patan Durbar Square. They will gather as many men and boys as they can to sign the pledge saying that “I say no to street harassment.” [1pm at Patan Durbar Square]

Netherlands: Hollaback! Amsterdam will be launching their brand-new chapter! Join them for their launch party! [The Doelenzaal room at the University of Amsterdam, Universiteitsbibliotheek, Singel 425, 6:30-8:30 pm]

United Kingdom: Hollaback! Nottingham is holding a Zine Workshop! The street harassment workshop will be followed by a zine making working. Expect collaging, typewriter, scribbling, doodles, thoughts, memories, experiences, stories! This is a mixed event and all are welcome. [6pm, Nottingham Women’s Centre, 30 Chaucer Street, Nottingham, UK]

 

USA Events:

Illinois: Volunteers at the University of Illinois Champagne-Urbana campus will be chalking the Quad with anti-street harassment messaging (led by Illini Art Therapy Association). [12:30pm, Main Quad]

Massachusetts: “Street Harassment is Not a Game” street action, hosted by Safe Hub Collective in Boston. “We invite women, people of color, trans and gender non-conforming people, queer folks, and disabled people to bring their jump ropes, balls, sidewalk chalk, and favorite playground songs to send the message that *street harassment is not a game*. It is violence. And it is hurtful.” [5 p.m., Boston Common] INFO.

Nebraska: The sociology, queer alliance and radical notion clubs at Hastings College will be holding an “Out in the Night” screening and panel.

Pennsylvania: Susquehanna University’s Women’s Studies Program will be hosting a Chalk Walk! Chalk the Walk 2015 encourages students, faculty, and staff to write anti-street harassment messages on the walk using sidewalk chalk. This year’s event marks Susquehanna’s third year participating in this international week of activism. [12 – 1 p.m. at 514 University Avenue Selinsgrove, PA, 17870] INFO

Washington D.C:  Zerlina Maxwell will be speaking about campus sexual assault, rape culture and feminist leadership. [7pm in the Healy Family Student Center, Georgetown University, with chalking at 6pm]

 

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Filed Under: anti-street harassment week Tagged With: #EndSHWeek, Boston, Hollaback Amsterdam, Hollaback Bahamas, Hollaback Kathmandu, Hollaback Nottingham, illinois, Lyon, massachusetts, Nebraska, OCAC Colombia, Out in the Night, paris, pennsylvania, Stop Harcelement de Rue, Washington D.C., Zerlina Maxwell, Zine

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