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“Live up to the bravery you find inside you”

April 11, 2016 By BPurdy

Britnae Purdy, Past SSH Blog Correspondent and Anti-Street Harassment Week Manager

Switzerland, Image from the author
Switzerland. Image via the author

This past summer, at age 23, I experienced complete freedom of movement for the first time. I have been driving for eight years, living out of the family home for six – but because I am a woman my ability to move freely though the world on my own time schedule is often limited by either overt threats or an internalized sense of fear. You’ve heard them – get home before dark. Don’t wear that skirt downtown. Text a friend when you arrive home so they know you’re safe. Don’t walk alone. Not exactly conducive to a busy schedule.

I didn’t entirely know what to expect when I moved to Switzerland to pursue an internship opportunity at the World Health Organization. I applied on a whim – I was newly graduated and terminally unemployed. In no realm of reality did I expect to actually land it, and when I did I surprised myself even more by accepting immediately. The next couple weeks were a tizzy of navigating the visa system, booking flights, finding housing, and shoving as much French into my brain as I could.

I was nervous the entire time. Could I actually do this? Was it safe? All the travel materials I read assured me that Geneva was a safe place – but of course, my US hometown is supposed to be as well. In today’s world, safety seems more and more subjective. I’m not a daring person – why on earth would I think I could do this?

The first time I rode public transportation in Geneva, two days after arriving, was to a work function that ended up keeping me out long past dark. I was literally shaking the entire ride home, though the city’s busiest stops, where I briefly got lost switching lines, and to my apartment on the far, far side of town. I would never do this on the Washington DC Metro.

Not a single person bothered me that night. Nor the next night. In fact, throughout the three months I spent in Geneva I was not verbally or physically harassed once.

Slowly, I realized that the fears I learned in the United States were not necessarily universal. In the US, and indeed many places of the world, public spaces are  often not welcoming of certain genders, races, and other identities. It’s difficult to reconcile this against the image of America that I love and am proud of – but undoubtedly, some of these fears and experiences had become ingrained in my mind.

My new sense of freedom was a delicious thing. I took the usual precautions of course – assault and other crimes do happen everywhere, after all, but I never felt particularly in danger because of my gender. If I needed something from a store across town, I went. If I stayed late at work and missed the bus, I walked. If I wanted to visit a tourist site across town on my day off, I didn’t feel the need to drag a friend along. When temperatures climbed to 100 F I wore a mini-skirt and went out anyway.

Eventually my new bravery led me to take trips outside of the country by myself, as well as solo train trips to all four regions of Switzerland. Where I once was a timid traveler who often avoided social situations due to extreme anxiety, I now relished the process of picking, planning, and enjoying a trip all by myself. My confidence at work flourished. My French improved; my German went from nonexistent to…well, barely existent. If I ran across a problem I felt emboldened and competent to sort it out on my own. I felt more at home in the world.

Switzerland. Image via the author
Switzerland. Image via the author

I’m not saying this to tout Switzerland as the best country in the world, or start some kind of comparison between countries. What I do know is that my time in Switzerland shook up my deeply engrained sense of how I could travel and move as a woman. I now firmly believe that solo travel – whether domestically or abroad, long or short – can open up so many possibilities and lessons you might not even see coming.  If I hadn’t pushed through my fears of traveling alone, I might never have known that such a freedom was possible. I’m ten times less timid than I was before I took a chance and jumped on that plane.

In today’s world, travel can be scary – even more so if you’re a solo female traveler. Be smart, be informed, be precautious, be nervous – but go anyway.

Soak it in. Bring back what you learn. Grow in ways you didn’t think you could. Demand the world acknowledge you as a full human being despite any differences you may have from the status quo. Live up to the bravery you find inside you.

Britnae Purdy is a health professional and freelance writer currently in Durham, NC. Her travel blog, Nerding Abroad, focuses on promoting pragmatic, feminist, and yes, nerdy travel.

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Filed Under: anti-street harassment week, Stories, Street Respect Tagged With: switzerland, travel

300 Afghan Students, Teachers Speak out Against Street Harassment

April 10, 2016 By Contributor

“Harassing women and girls does not make you a man.”
“Harassing women and girls does not make you a man.”

To commemorate International Anti-Street Harassment Week, Free Women Writers, an Afghan blog for social justice and gender equality, called on people around the country to send photos with messages about the harassment of women and girls in public spaces. Within the first week, dozens of powerful pictures were sent to the blog via Facebook, Twitter, Instagram, and Email.

The photos and the messages were inspiring, but Star Educational Society (SES), a private learning center with branches in several provinces in Afghanistan, went beyond that and engaged hundreds of students and teachers in speaking out against street harassment.

In three different branches located in Kabul, SES organized class discussions about street harassment in which men and women spoke about the problem and efficient ways of fighting with it. Then students and teacher wrote and took pictures with signs about street harassment. The pictures and slogans were published in the center’s newspaper to encourage further debate.

“With this campaign we not only stand against the negative perceptions that exist about Afghan men, but we also redefine masculinity and stand firm to build a better community,” said Ali Reza Yasa, Chairman and Chief Executive Officer at SES.

"Good men don't harass women. They support them," some of the signs read.
“Good men don’t harass women. They support them,” some of the signs read.

12498485_590868481066724_833176978_n12789989_10153830915469471_1781306621_oUsing Free Women Writer’s campaign, SES not only created a meaningful debate about street harassment in their centers but also allowed students the opportunity to feel agentic by raising their voices. According to Yasa, one of the most encouraging outcomes of the campaign was that girls, who usually do not want to take photos due to fear of violence or harassment, participated with enthusiasm and passion.

“We are so glad to have been part of this initiative. The culture of street harassment has to end. Let’s hope for a better Afghanistan, one we all deserve,” Yasa said.

 

 

Noorjahan Akbar is a human rights advocate from Afghanistan. She runs Free Women Writers, a blog about gender equality and social justice in Afghanistan. 

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Filed Under: anti-street harassment week Tagged With: Afghanistan, Free Women Writers, SES

Day 1: International Anti-Street Harassment Week

April 10, 2016 By HKearl

commuteIt’s here!!

Groups and organizations worldwide take action in their communities year-round to address street harassment, but there is strength in numbers. That’s why Stop Street Harassment creates space for them each spring to join forces and take action in unity, in solidarity, during Meet Us on the Street: International Anti-Street Harassment Week.

It starts TODAY.

From April 10 to 16, groups in more than 30 countries will take part. People will hold rallies and marches, create public art, organize workshops and speak-outs, and share their stories.

Read how groups in six countries will participate and why.

Read a guest blog post about actions in Afghanistan!

Anyone, anywhere can participate in the week, including by sharing your stories and/or images online, writing sidewalk chalk messages, hanging up Stop Telling Women to Smile posters, snapping photos of your dog/s for #HoundsAgainstHarassment and joining the Global Tweetathon on April 12 (use #EndSH in your tweets).

Here are 10 ideas for how an individual, anywhere in the world, can participate.

I invite you to Meet Us on the Street. It is so empowering to join with thousands of people in taking a stand. No action is too small to make a difference.

Watch the street harassment 101 video our board members Erin McKelle and Manuel Abril created.

Here are some of the events that happened today:

Argentina: The Women’s Movement Mumalá (Women of the Latin American Matria) conducted an awareness campaign in the Plaza Mitre about street harassment.

4.10.16 argentina SSH 2

Canada: Women in Cities International, in partnership with Lucie Pagès, and Noémie Bourbonnais, hosted a vox pop on the street. They went into the streets of Montreal and asked people questions regarding street harassment and did sidewalk chalking.

 4.10.16 WICI in Montreal  4.10.16 WICI in Montreal 4  4.10.16 WICI in Montreal 2

France: STOP Harcèlement de rue coordinated a campaign across France, including sidewalk chalking [April 10, Lyon, Paris , Nantes, Marseille , Montpellier, Toulouse — See specific times and meeting places here.]

 4.10.16 Stop HDR Paris chalking 10  4.10.16 Stop HDR Paris chalking 7  4.10.16 Stop HDR Paris chalking 3

4.10.16 Stop HDR Paris chalking group

Egypt: HarassMap volunteers talked about how to stop sexual harassment in public spaces in Korba and Cairo.

India: Safecity did sidewalk chalking in Mumbai (see photos).

4.10.16MumbaiIndia

Nepal: Youth Advocacy Nepal had a sign-making party (See photos).

4.9.16 youth advocay nepal 7

Maryland: FORCE: Upsetting Rape Culture hosted Not Alone Baltimore. The Monument Quilt blanketed two blocks of North Avenue between Howard and Charles Street with 1500 stories from survivors of sexual and domestic violence and messages of support from their communities. The day-long event included readings, discussions, workshops and performances. [April 10, 12 -5 p.m.]4.10.16 FORCE sexual assault survivor monument quilt in Baltimore, MD

South Carolina: In Columbia, Alright, Rebel and local activists distributed flyers and post signs during the monthly Second Sunday events around Marion Square and King Street [April 10]

4.10.16 Alright, Rebel - South Carolina 2 4.10.16 Alright, Rebel - South Carolina 7 4.10.16 Alright, Rebel - South Carolina 1

Washington, DC: Collective Action for Safe Spaces (CASS) hosted chalking to reclaim the streets. [April 10, 1:30-3:30 p.m., pick one of three locations: 1) 14th & U St NW; 2) Anacostia Metro Stop in SE; 3) H & 8th St NE]

4.10.16 DC by Melissa Yeo 4.10.16 DC chalking by Zak Rogoff 4.10.16 DC Chalking - Layla Moughari 2
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Filed Under: anti-street harassment week

Man in his 40s Harasses 9- and 11-Year-Old Girls

April 9, 2016 By Contributor

When I was 12 years old, I was walking down to the beach with my cousin who was 9 years old at the time. We were both wearing shorts with a bikini top on because we were going swimming. On our way down to the beach a man that looked around 45 whistled at us and kept on staring at me and my cousin.

At the time I only ever heard stories about cat calls and never had it done to me. When it happened, I got really scared my stomach felt like it dropped to my feet. Then my cousin asked why he whistled at us. I didn’t know what to say so I just said, “It was to someone else not us”.

That was a lie, but I didn’t want her to feel bad about what she was wearing and blame herself for that happening. I told her to not talk about it ever again. I never told anyone because I was embarrassed and felt like it was my fault for wearing shorts and a bikini.

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

I think one way to make public places feel safer would be that if you ever see anyone being cat called, make sure you let them know to not blame them-self. If you blame yourself you get an awful feeling inside that never goes away. Catcalling and harassment are NOT a compliment.

– MA

Location: Hastings, Oshawa, Canada, at a cottage

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 Tagged With: canada, young age

Men Grope Sled Dog Musher in Alaska During a Competition

April 9, 2016 By HKearl

Via CBS News:

“Authorities in Alaska were investigating after a female competitor in this year’s Iditarod Trail Sled Dog Race said two men on snowmobiles groped her as her mushing team passed by.

Alaska State Troopers were looking into the March 13 incident as harassment for now, James Lester said Monday. The 27-year-old rookie musher reported the groping at the checkpoint in the village of Nulato, almost 350 miles from the Nome finish line….The woman went on to complete the 1,000-mile race,”

Unreal. What the hell. I’m so sorry this happened to her. How upsetting.

As an aside (because I was like, why isn’t this assault?), in Alaska, groping falls under “Harassment in the First and Second Degree” and it comes with up to a $10,000 fine.

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Filed Under: News stories Tagged With: alaska, grope, idiatrod trail, sexual assault, sled dog race

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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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