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#ThisisRapeCulture

May 6, 2015 By HKearl

Three stories have been going back and forth in my mind over the past 24 hours. The first is so horrific I literally got sick last night after I read it. All three are connected by showing how much our culture fosters rape and limits girls’ and women’s mobility and sense of safety in public spaces and in society as a whole.

1. Boko Haram has kidnapped many women and girls (with school girls kidnapped from their school a year ago the most well-known globally) in Nigeria. Many have been treated as sexual slaves. The very visible proof? 214 of the 234 teenage girls rescued were pregnant. Let that sink in. Fortunately they have been rescued and their communities are welcoming them back and they will receive medical help and counseling. But. No one should have to live through that pain, fear, and suffering, with their lives changed forever by not only the experience but by being forced into motherhood at a young age against their will. It shows how disposable and with how little respect or regard some men have for girls’ and women’s bodies.

Photograph by Taylor Yocom

2. Taylor Yocom, a 22-year old photography student from the University of Iowa created the “Guarded” project to show what women carry to protect themselves, like mace or their keys, which they hold as a weapon. Via BuzzFeed: “These loaded objects on key chains where trinkets should be really do portray how women are expected to always be on guard to protect themselves…when the rapists should not be raping,” she said. “I want people to see the sexual assault statistics (whether they are from strangers who attack on the streets or from date rape) as actual individuals impacted, not simply numbers.”

Good for her. I have carried mace with me since I was 14 years old. It is ridiculous that we have to live this way, have that mentality.

3. In New York City, via Gothamist: “[The] suspect attempted to engage the victim, a 34-year-old female, in conversation. When the victim ignored the suspect, the suspect spat at the victim, who then began to laugh at the suspect. The suspect then took out a sharp instrument, slashed the victim in the arm and then fled the station.” The woman was treated at the hospital and is okay. The man is at large.

But harassers are just trying to be nice and it’s a compliment, right? WRONG. Street harassment is about power, it’s about disrespect, and all too often, it’s about an underlying threat of violence.

 

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Filed Under: News stories, street harassment

Blog Correspondents: Cohorts 1 and 2 of 2015

May 4, 2015 By HKearl

Thank you so much to our first Blog Correspondents cohort of 2015!! From Australia to Brazil, from Romania to the USA, they brought forward important stories, observations, and campaigns happening in their countries and communities.

Meet the next Blog Correspondents cohort. They will write monthly articles from May to August.

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Filed Under: correspondents, SSH programs

May 1 march in Baltimore

May 2, 2015 By HKearl

May 1 2015 Maureen in Baltimore

Our board member Maureen (on the right) marched in Baltimore last night. #BlackLivesMatter

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Filed Under: public harassment, race

Standing with Baltimore

April 30, 2015 By HKearl

On April 19, Baltimore resident Freddie Gray died in police custody from spinal injuries. How it happened has remained unknown, but it sparked protests in Baltimore this week akin to those in Ferguson, Missouri in 2014. To learn more about why, here is a Washington Post article written by a reporter who has lived in Baltimore for 30 years.

Maureen in Baltimore
Maureen in Baltimore

Because a minority of people at the protests grew violent (some burned a CVS), some media outlets have unfairly focused on them rather than the majority of peaceful protesters who simply want justice for Gray and justice for their communities.

SSH Board member Maureen Evans Arthurs lives near Baltimore. She shares what she did on Wednesday:

“I joined the No Boundaries Coalition at St. Peter Claver Parish in Sandtown, Baltimore to distribute food and toiletries to residents in need. The community asked for help, and we were right there to provide it. The media is depicting Baltimore as a city of lawlessness and upheaval, when really, communities are coming together to support one another and causing a positive uprising for change. #BmoreUnited

Every day this week there have been protests and that will continue, not just in Baltimore, but in other parts of the country. CNN reports:

“From coast to coast, marchers are taking to the streets to support Baltimore protesters and complain about police brutality in their own towns. The momentum only seems to be building as the week goes on.

Demonstrations are planned for Thursday in Cincinnati,CNN affiliate WXIX reported. And Philly.com said a “Philly is Baltimore” protest will be held at Philadelphia City Hall. Seattle, Portland, Oregon, and Oakland, California are on tap for Friday, which is also May Day or International Workers Day — often used to call attention to issues affecting the working class and minorities. In addition to Baltimore, protests took place in at least half a dozen cities Wednesday.”

Maliyka in NYC
Maliyka in NYC

SSH Board member Malikya Muhammad lives in New York and she joined the “NYC Rise Up & Shut It Down With Baltimore” last night with 1000s of other protesters. Unfortunately though, she said it turned scary, “The cops turned a peaceful protest into a jail cell roundup folks who have been doing this for awhile. I never saw anything like this before.”

Men are not the only ones unfairly policed or killed. I attended a vigil in Washington, DC, last night for Rekia Boyd and other Black women who have been killed by police. The organizers had us chant out for justice for dozens of women and women in the crowd came up to share poems, songs, and thoughts. Several reminded the Black women in the audience that they matter, their stories, their voices matter. Indeed, they do.

We hope you will do something, take a stand (take part in the “Shut it Down” event May 1 in Baltimore), speak out, and advocate for a cultural shift where #BlackLivesMatter and everyone feels safe in their communities.

Photo by Ilana Alazzeh‎
Vigil in Washington, DC. Photo by Ilana Alazzeh‎
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Filed Under: Events, News stories, race Tagged With: baltimore, Freddy Gray, Rekia Boyd

“He finally decided to slap my butt and bike away”

April 28, 2015 By HKearl

Today I was running around a lake by my apartment and a guy kept following me on his bike until he finally decided to slap my butt and bike away. I felt violated, upset, angry, mad, scared, confused, irritated, and shocked. This is not the first time I have been harassed or had my body touched without wanting to. I don’t understand how some people don’t understand it is not okay to touch another person’s body without asking them.

– LA D

Location: St. Louis Park, MN

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

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Filed Under: Stories, street harassment

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