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German woman killed for challenging harassers

December 1, 2014 By HKearl

Trigger Warning. Via BuzzFeed:

“Germans are mourning the death of a young student, Tugce Albayrak, who died after confronting a group of men harassing two teenage girls in the city of Offenbach…

Soon after, she was attacked in a car park by one of the men. Some reports suggest she was struck in the head with a stone or bat, while others say she was punched and hit her head on the pavement.

She sustained a serious head injury and was in a coma until Nov. 28, when her parents decided to turn off her life support after doctors told them she was brain dead. She died on her 23rd birthday.

An 18-year-old Serbian man is in police custody and has reportedly confessed to the attack, according to German public radio station Deutsche Welle.”

So outraged to hear about her senseless death!! She is a hero. May Tugce rest in peace.

It is heartening to hear about the outpouring of support for her. Via Haaretz:

“A large crowd bearing candles and flowers gathered Sunday outside the Offenbach hospital where Albayrak died, and where a vigil had been held since her hospitalization on November 15.

Meanwhile, hundreds paid their respects at Oranienplatz in Berlin’s Kreuzberg district, according to the report.

A petition asking Gauck to posthumously award Albayrak the national order of merit was signed by some 100,000 people.”

There have been several other stories this year where bystanders have been hurt or murdered for speaking out. Here are four of them:

* The San Francisco man who sustained life-threatening injuries last month simply because he dared to ask a catcaller to leave his girlfriend alone. 

* The Egyptian teenager who was stabbed to death in October while intervening in a harassment situation.

* The Philadelphia man who was hospitalized after a harasser he told to watch what he was saying to women nearby got out of his vehicle and attacked him.

* The Chicago man killed by a harasser after he confronted him for making “inappropriate gestures” at his daughter.

 These people are heroes too, each of them standing up for another person — in most cases, a stranger — no matter the cost. May we all be as brave. And may there one day never be cause for us to have to be brave.

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SSH will not publish any comment that is offensive or hateful and does not add to a thoughtful discussion of street harassment. Racism, homophobia, transphobia, disabalism, classism, and sexism will not be tolerated. Disclaimer: SSH may use any stories submitted to the blog in future scholarly publications on street harassment.
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