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Archives for March 2017

5 Things to Know for 2017 Anti-Street Harassment Week

March 12, 2017 By HKearl

In three weeks, from April 2-8, Stop Street Harassment is organizing the seventh annual International Anti-Street Harassment Week. Already groups and organizations in more than 25 countries have pledged to participate. The Week is a chance for us to join together in solidarity and amplify each other’s voices so that the world listens, as well as to raise awareness in our local communities.

IMPORTANT INFORMATION:
    1. Tell Us What You’re Doing!
      If you are participating, we want to know what you’re doing! Please either complete this form, or e-mail me, Holly, with info at hollykearl@yahoo.com. Thank you for your help.
    2. Ideas for Action
      Do you still need ideas for what you can do? Here are several. Also gain ideas from the 2016 wrap-up report and the 2015 wrap-up report.We especially hope to see offline discussions involving diverse community members of all genders and backgrounds. It will take EVERYONE to truly create safer communities.

      But at minimum, any individual can participate through simple acts like telling their street harassment story, writing chalk messages, and sharing information online.

    3. Tools
      We have a selection of shareable images and downloadable fliers on our website and will be adding even more in the next two weeks. If you have ideas or want to offer translation help, please email hollykearl@yahoo.com.
    4. Write a Blog Post
      Afghanistan, India and USA are among the countries represented this year!

      If you’d like to write a blog post for Stop Street Harassment (or have an entry cross-posted from your blog) that would be great! It can be for the week itself, or you can advertise what you’ll be doing for the week and why. Just reach out to Holly, HollyKearl@yahoo.com, with a short pitch about what the blog would cover and the preferred date or time range you’d like it published.

    5. Tweet Chats
      April 4 will be our global tweetathon. Tweet about street harassment using #Endsh throughout the day (from whatever time zone you’re in, using whatever language/s you want). We are in the midst of scheduling the daily tweet chats — If you are planning to host one but haven’t been in touch yet, please reach out and I will add it to the official list.

Feel free to reach out anytime with questions, suggestions, or information!

-Holly

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Filed Under: anti-street harassment week, SSH programs

“It never fails to shake my sense of safety”

March 11, 2017 By Contributor

When I was a junior in college at the University of Cincinnati, I had a lots of friends who lived on Ohio Street. One day on a weekend in the morning I was walking down the street from my car to a friend’s apartment when some men leaned out a window of a large house and called at me. I ignored them. No response. They called me a bitch and threw an old flatscreen TV (the heavy kind with a large bulb and black plastic housing) out of the window at me. It landed mere feet in front of me. If I had been walking faster or if they had thrown it more to their left then it would have probably killed me or at the very least rendered me disabled or paralyzed for the rest of my life. It shattered into pieces at my feet. Without thinking I burst into a sprint and ran to my friend’s house and called the cops and filed a report. The experience was incredibly disturbing.

But it wasn’t the only time.

Once a van attempted to kidnap me on a one way street. The door flung open and they tried to grab me. So I walked the “wrong” way. The van flung into reverse, despite being on a one way street, and pursued me. I never got caught but the experience was mortifying. I had an apartment in a gated community for additional safety.

Honestly, I get cat calls maybe once a week. It never fails to shake my sense of safety and make me feel paranoid like I’m being chased. I feel threatened. I feel a lack of security. There’s nothing like feeling threatened the minute you walk out of your house. I have two 60 lb dogs and people think I’m crazy. It’s literally the only way I can go out in public and feel safe when my husband isn’t with me. I’m a white woman in my early 30’s. I can only imagine what other women experience.

Optional: What’s one way you think we can make public places safer for everyone?

Emergency Phones, Ample lighting

– Anonymous

Location: Cincinnati, Los Angeles, Savannah, NYC, Chicago, Italy, OKC, Seattle, Everywhere I go

Need support? Call the toll-free National Street Harassment hotline: 855-897-5910

Share your street harassment story for the blog.
See the book 50 Stories about Stopping Street Harassers for idea
s.

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Filed Under: Stories, street harassment

Northern Ireland: How Do We Best React to Street Harassment?

March 10, 2017 By Correspondent

Elaine Crory, Belfast, Northern Ireland, SSH Blog Correspondent

2016 street harassment themed mural in Brooklyn, NY

I’ve written at length about the damaging long-term implications of street harassment; about how it hurts the self esteem of women and girls and encourages the idea that public space belongs to men. It teaches us at a young and impressionable age that we should expect to receive comments on our appearance, be they positive or negative, when out in public. It teaches us to feel scared and ashamed when we are yelled at, followed or groped by men rather than to feel defiant and angry.

In the spirit of International Women’s Day’s 2017 theme Be Bold for Change, I want to look at some of the positive steps individual women and activist groups have taken to challenge the assumptions that allow street harassment to continue, and to suggest some ways that we can try to dismantle rape culture altogether and boldly change the rotten structures that hold it up.

Over the past decade, technology has advanced a great deal. Smartphones mean that most people have excellent cameras to hand at all times, and internet access at the touch of a button. When Hollaback! was originally conceived it was intended primarily as a way for women to share their stories and to gain strength from the expression of solidarity from others who “have your back”. Women were encouraged to snap photos, if they felt confident enough, and to challenge their harassers verbally.

Soon the word spread and it became clear that street harassment was an international phenomena with many regional quirks which allowed for responses as diverse and inventive as the women who experienced it. Women began to use social media to spread stories and share ideas, and a number of different groups sprang up, including our own Stop Street Harassment, with the aim of spreading resistance and standing up to the tired narrative that tried to convince us that it is all a harmless joke.

Individual women have spoken of how freeing it is to challenge harassers peacefully but forcefully, to put them in the spot and demand that they account for their behaviour – which, invariably they cannot – and how it becomes clear in doing so that what has happened is not their fault. Victim blaming is one of the decaying planks upon which the whole structure of rape culture rests, and challenging that has proven again and again to be a powerful antidote to the power of street harassment. In India a project by Blank Noise called I Never Ask for It collects stories and images of what women were wearing when they were harassed or sexually assaulted, the mundanity of the clothing giving the lie to the old excuse. Jezebel conducted an informal survey of circumstances in which women had endured harassment, and the variety is both impressive and proof positive that is is not about what we wear or where we go. The point of these exercises, more than anything else, seems to be to prove to ourselves and to society generally, that victim blaming will not wash. And there is power in that, in saying “no, this is all in you”.

What next, though? This list is endless and growing, a testament to the creativity and dedication of activists all over the world.

  • In Mexico, activists chase their harassers with blaring feminist punk music and confetti guns, turning the shaming around quite beautifully.
  • A Minneapolis woman created Cards Against Harassment that a victim can present to a harasser to challenge their behaviour.
  • A beautiful and challenging mural has appeared in Brooklyn, New York.
  • There is a week of action against street harassment coming up in April organized by SSH.
  • Activists worldwide are organising events such as Reclaim the Night in my own city of Belfast and many other sites, to make it clear to all that street harassment will not be tolerated.

All of these actions are positive, confronting harassment directly in an active way. They challenge behaviour and help to put power back in our hands.

But the root causes of street harassment remain, and far too many people fail to understand why it is wrong. So the problem persists across generations. But it does not have to. When a number of universities introduced mandatory consent classes a significant number of young men reacted angrily, as though an understanding of consent and appropriate behaviour was simply innate and did not have to be taught. I would argue that this reaction demonstrates just how deeply rape culture has permeated, and shows that we have reached many of these young people too late. Comprehensive and compulsory sex and relationship education (SRE) that covers sexist attitudes and treatment of women in public space as well as in interpersonal relationships would go a long way towards preventing these harmful ideas from taking root to start with.

Let’s start where the problem starts. If the timbers that hold up rape culture are rotten, let’s replace them with some new planks fit to hold up confident, respectful and responsible relationships between all humans. Let’s be bold for change.

Elaine is a part-time politics lecturer and a mother of two. She is director of Hollaback! Belfast, co-organises the city’s annual Reclaim the Night march, and volunteers with Belfast Feminist Network and Alliance for Choice to campaign for a broad range of women’s issues.

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Filed Under: correspondents, News stories Tagged With: activism ideas, consent in school, International Women's Day, victim blaming

At Stop Street Harassment, We #StandWithGavin

March 10, 2017 By HKearl

We believe that transgender rights are civil rights. Stop Street Harassment works to document and end gender-based public harassment worldwide, and we recognize that this includes the harassment of women and LGBTQ individuals across every race, ethnicity, national origin, religion, disability, age, and socio-economic status.

Gavin Grimm’s case is the case of thousands of transgender people across the country.  “It’s not just about bathrooms,” Gavin said earlier this week. “It’s about the right for trans people to exist in public spaces.” While Gavin’s case focuses on his access to restrooms in the school context under Title IX, it has much broader implications about who belongs in public spaces in the first place.

Our organization has documented thousands of stories from people of all genders around the world who have experienced verbal harassment, and sometimes physical violence, in public spaces simply for existing: Simply for being a woman. Simply for being LGBTQ. Or simply because, no matter who they are or what they are wearing, public harassment is at its core about power. We reject the idea that – across identity categories – women have less of a right to be in public than men, that gay and lesbian individuals have less of a right to be in public than their straight peers, or that transgender people have less of a right to be in public than cisgender people.

We also believe that an attack on any marginalized community is an attack on all of us. We’ll continue to stand with transgender students like Gavin, and all transgender people, who feel like they are not welcome in public spaces simply because of who they are. We’ll continue to fight with and for them, and will never give up on our global efforts to combat gender-based harassment.

Gavin’s fight has been delayed, but it’s far from over. We look forward to the day when all people feel welcome to exist and worthy of existing in public spaces – no matter who they are, what they look like, where they live, or who they love.

Signed,
The Stop Street Harassment Board of Directors

(Special thanks to board member Patrick Ryne McNeil for drafting this statement.)

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Filed Under: LGBTQ, SSH programs

Peru: Construction Workers against Street Harassment

March 9, 2017 By HKearl

“In Miraflores, a traditional middle-class neighborhood in Peru’s capital, Lima, where construction sites abound, a group of construction workers [posted this sign]: ‘At this construction site, we don’t whistle at women and we are against sexual street harassment'”!!!

Let’s see these kinds of signs EVERYWHERE!!

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Filed Under: male perspective, News stories, street harassment

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