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Chal Hatt Tharki

September 5, 2012 By Contributor

Editor’s Note: This guest blog post was written by Janvi Mankani.

Eve teasing is a highly concern worthy issue in all of India and consequently in Mumbai today. Cat calling and snide comments against women have become such an inevitable part of the society and that calls for attention.

All the men who think they can get away with this kind of behaviour need to be addressed. “Chal Hatt Tharki” as a campaign is not directed towards men, asking them to stop cat calling and eve teasing. Instead, as the name itself suggests, is directed towards women; asking them to raise their voices against inappropriate behaviour. The very words, “Chal Hatt Tharki” here, encourage and support women to take a stance against eve teasing.

Chal Hatt Tharki is about empowering women, making them aware and letting them know that if they stand up for their rights, no one will be able to take them for granted. For when the women speak up, the men will learn their lesson with respect to eve teasing by default. It’s high time all the Eves got their due, and fearlessly stood up for their safety, their existence, and for themselves.

Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/ChalHattTharki

Twitter: https://twitter.com/ChalHattTharki
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Filed Under: Activist Interviews, street harassment Tagged With: Chal Hatt Tharki, eve teasing, mumbai, sexual harassment, street harassment

Street harassment, water balloon fights & anime conventions

August 3, 2012 By HKearl

I’ve known Shawna Potter, Director of Hollaback Bmore (and the frontwoman for the band War on Women) for a year and a half, and I’m always impressed by the creative ways she brings attention to street harassment!  Here are just two recent examples. 

Two weeks ago, she talked about street harassment with the girls from St. Francis Community Center and helped them relieve their frustration with street harassers with….a water balloon fight!

Then, last week, she led a group of activists in an outreach effort at the harbor during Otakon, a fan convention for East Asian popular culture (“anime”). Otakon occurs in Baltimore every summer.

The Indypendent Reader published an article about what happened:

“As one of the largest anime conventions, the city fills with costumed attendees –each one personifying their favorite anime (or other East Asian icon) character. For many, it is a delightful and fantastic sight and experience to behold.

Wanting to make the most of this highly populated opportunity, the activists trekked over to the Convention Center for some direct feminist outreach.The group set-up shop on the corner by the front doors. Stuffing their pockets with “Hollaback! Bmore” buttons, for an hour the predominantly female organizers confidently approached the hundreds of Otakon attendees streaming in-and-out of the Center.

Potter began the outreach. Grabbing a stack of papers, where people could share their harassment stories, she walked up to a costumed group of presumably  female-bodied individuals and said, “We’re documenting women’s and LGBTQ folks’ stories of street harassment. Has this ever happened to you?”

Soon the other activists were following her lead, passing out flyers, buttons, engaging in candid discussion on street harassment, and documenting written and video stories.

Brooks, the only male-bodied Hollaback! activist present, observed, “It’s interesting to do direct outreach at an event like this. When they see us, they think we’re part of the convention. Then when they start talking to us, you can see the realization that what we’re talking about is really very serious. And most of them, are expecting attention due to their costumes. So you can see the exact shift towards thinking about how attention can be incredibly unwanted.”

Many of the attendees were teenagers or of college age, experiencing street harassment in its first confusing waves. Some expressed the “behavior” as “annoying” but “harmless”; one young woman even stated the all-too-common conception that the “behavior” was complimentary. This is an idea that Hollaback! actively works to combat; aiming to expose women to the truth that they do not need to find their worth as sexual beings and people in this world from this form of the objectifying male conduct — that when they allow objectification they allow the oppression of their identities.Others stated that they were from small towns and didn’t recognize what was being discussed. It should be noted that much street harassment research conveys that it is prevalent regardless of location, whether urban, suburban, or rural. However, more data is needed; hence the need for more Hollaback! geo-tracking.

This being stated, many also engaged excitedly about the topic. They discussed their street harassment stories, filled up our pads of paper, and went on camera to tell their tales.

Some didn’t want to share their stories but vocalized their support for the movement. One young woman became emotional when an activist approached her, stating that she had been “jumped” just the previous night. The activist strongly encouraged her to seek support through a variety of means..

Next Steps

As the flyer collection diminished and handfuls upon handfuls of buttons were dispersed,the activists excitedly gathered to discuss their work. Immediately palpable was the organizers thrill to have interacted so intimately with so many about street harassment.

“We’re definitely going to do this more often,” reflected Potter.“So much of this movement is about education. This is a  simple yet obviously effective way to publicly discuss and bring awareness to such an often invisible issue.”

Great work!!

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Filed Under: Activist Interviews, street harassment Tagged With: anime, baltimore, hollaback bmore, otakon, shawna potter

QRASH Course: Queers Resisting All Street Harassment

June 22, 2012 By Contributor

QRASH Course. Image provided by Alli Lindner

This is a guest blog post by Alli Lindner.

On June 2nd, Queerocracy, a New York City-based grassroots organization, presented QRASH Course: Queers Resisting All Street Harassment.  QRASH Course was an afternoon-long training event for people who witness and experience street harassment in the NYC area.  During the event, attendees and trainers worked together to come up with strategies for handling all forms of street harassment.

We kicked off the day by looking at some of the different kinds of street harassment we experience, like sexual harassment, police harassment, racist harassment, transphobic harassment, and queer harassment.  One of our goals with this training was to explore more than just sexual harassment so we made sure to be inclusive of issues like racism, ableism, homophobia, transphobia, classism, ageism, and many more.

We then worked through strategies we could use when we experience and witness harassment.  Trainers presented strategies attendees could consider using in street harassment situations and acted out some strategies in a skit.  Attendees were put to the test, though, when they were put into small groups and given scenarios that they had to respond to.  Their creative responses drew from the tips they had been given by trainers and from their own experiences, making this one of the best activities of the day!

We ended the day by taking the time to share personal stories about street harassment in our “Speak Out.”  After establishing the group as a safe space, we sat in a circle and took turns sharing our experiences with each other.  The Speak Out was one of the most successful parts of the training—almost everyone shared a story!  These stories reminded me why I am committed to anti-street harassment work and why this type of inclusive training is necessary.  Many people had experienced street harassment of all kinds, not just sexual harassment, and were able to share the strategies they have used to react to that harassment.

Alli Lindner facilitating a discussion about strategies

QRASH Course was a great learning experience for everyone involved and we are in the process of planning future courses!  If you are part of a school or organization in the NYC area that could benefit from our training, reach out to Alli at lindner.ap@gmail.com.

Alli Lindner is a senior at Hunter College in the Women and Gender Studies department in New York City.  She is a proud alumna of the Young People For fellowship program and she currently interns at the Center for Lesbian and Gay Studies.

 

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Filed Under: Activist Interviews, street harassment Tagged With: ableism, agism, homophobia, NYC, queer, racisim, transphobia

Street Harassment Design Project: Booklet for women, decoy card for harassers

April 9, 2012 By Contributor

Editor’s Note: This guest blog post is by Isobel Williams, a graphics design student in London who created an amazing project about street harassment for an assignment. Her professor gave her an A 🙂

During the final year of my graphic design degree in London, my classmates and I were given an assignment to choose a social issue that we personally feel is relevant to the area we live in, then to take that issue and research it thoroughly. The research was then to be used to create and design a graphic outcome which could poetically offer a solution to the social issue.

Street harassment was the first social issue that came into my head and it remains one I feel very strongly about. Living in south London as a 23-year-old women, it’s rare that I am out and about without some kind of perverted comment…a constant reminder that this is an issue! It is something that is relevant to the majority of women in my area and the nature of my experiences are definitely not flattering.

For my project, I designed a booklet aimed at young women, particularly students new to London, on the topic of street harassment. Within this booklet I included a card which women are invited to carry on them and give to the harassing man as a decoy. The card lists a website and if they visit the site, they can view a short film offering them a chance to gain a reality check on there actions. (The film is a prototype.)

From the large amounts of research and knowledge I gained while doing my project, I conclude there is no easy fix to this issue, but I do feel a large amount offenders are blissfully unaware of the implications of there actions. Some of the quotes I got from girls about the things that men have said to them are shockingly x rated and it makes you wonder what world these men are living in!!!

After I graduate I am interested in pursuing this issue further and potentially using my design skills to help with the cause.

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Filed Under: Activist Interviews, Resources, street harassment Tagged With: decoy for harassers, design projects, street harassment

“Bring Your Brother Day” workshop on street harassment

March 30, 2012 By Contributor

(Editor’s Note: This guest blog post was written by Nefertiti Martin, Community Organizer and Katie Bowers, MSW intern at Girls for Gender Equity.)

On March 16, youth organizers at Girls for Gender Equity (GGE), a small nonprofit organization in Brooklyn, New York, that addresses the issue of street harassment, invited male friends and family members to a “Bring Your Brother Day” workshop about gender equity and stopping street harassment. “Bring Your Brother Day” was a day of conversation, connection and consciousness-raising in a fun and safe space.

The young women of GGE felt strongly about the importance of bringing the young men in their lives into their work to counteract sexual harassment and gender-based violence. The workshop grew out of youth organizers’ concerns that the conversation around street harassment and gender-based violence is taking place primarily among women. By reaching out to the young men in their lives, youth organizers are working to build allies and strengthen GGE’s work in promoting gender equity.

GGE’s youth organizers led activities throughout the three-hour workshop that explored what gender stereotypes are, how they impact the lives of young people and how young men can be allies to young women. The young men were thoughtful, open and engaged throughout the workshop.  Their comments and opinions added new depth to the conversation and reflected the positive influence of the awesome young women in their lives.

The event was hosted in conjunction with International Anti-Street Harassment Week. GGE youth organizers and their brothers attended the Anti-Street Harassment Week Rally at the Judson Memorial Church in New York City on Saturday, March 24th.

The young women felt very proud of the workshop and their contribution to Anti-Street Harassment Week and the movement to end gender-based violence.  GGE looks forward to participating in Anti-Street Harassment Week next year!

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Filed Under: Activist Interviews, anti-street harassment week, Stories

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