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New Survey: Harassment on Transit in Washington, DC

April 12, 2016 By HKearl

WMATAsurveyToday for International Anti-Street Harassment Week, Washington Metropolitan Area Transit Authority (WMATA), Collective Action for Safe Spaces (CASS) and Stop Street Harassment released the results of the first-ever survey on the Metro system. This is the biggest study of its kind for any transit system in the United States.

In the 1,000 person-regionally representative survey conducted in January 2016 by Shugoll Research, 21 percent of riders in the Washington, DC area had experienced some form of sexual harassment, with verbal harassment being the most common form. Women were three times more likely than men to experience sexual harassment.

In positive news, 41 percent of the riders were familiar with the latest anti-harassment campaign and those who were familiar with it were twice as likely to report their experiences of harassment. Based on the findings, WMATA, CASS and SSH are currently working on a new awareness campaign that will be released in a few weeks.

IMG_6562Today, during evening rush hour, we’ll be handing out materials about harassment and how to report it at five Metro stations.

Metro Center
4:00 – 6:00 p.m.

Tenleytown-AU
4:00 – 6:00 p.m.

Shaw–Howard U
4:00 – 6:00 p.m.

Takoma
4:00 – 6:00 p.m.

Clarendon 
4:00 – 6:00 p.m.

WMATA, CASS and SSH have collaborated for four years on an anti-harassment campaign that has included station-wide awareness posters, an online reporting form, the training of employees, and outreach days at Metro stations. All of these efforts set the tone that sexual harassment is unacceptable and is taken seriously.

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Filed Under: anti-street harassment week, SSH programs, street harassment Tagged With: metro, public transportation, survey, transit, WMATA

Review & Book Giveaway: Sex Object, by Jessica Valenti

April 12, 2016 By HKearl

“Deeply moving, honest, and unflinching, Sex Object secures Jessica Valenti’s place as one of the foremost writers and thinkers of her generation. Her personal story highlights universal truths about being a woman, and makes the case for why feminism today is an unstoppable force.” – Cecile Richards, President, Planned Parenthood Federation of America

SEX OBJECT BOOK GIVEAWAY1In honor of International Anti-Street Harassment Week, we have partnered with Dey Street Books for a giveaway of @JessicaValenti’s new memoir. I’ll do a random drawing for two copies of the book per day, from April 12-16.

To enter the drawing:

  • Post about street harassment on social media using #EndSH and #SexObject and tagging @DeyStreet and @StopStHarassmnt

OR

  • Share your street harassment story, poem, article etc via tinyurl.com/ShareSHStory.

If your name is drawn, I’ll be in touch to get a mailing address from you in a few days. Note, Sex Object is on sale June 7th, so Dey Street will fulfill shipping at that time.

____________________________________________________________

I’ve been following the work of author and Feministing.com co-founder Jessica Valenti for a while. I’ve read a few of her books and I read her Guardian columns. I follow her on social media, including her new podcasts for the Guardian.

I’ve been a regular Feministing.com visitor for nearly a decade. In fact, I think Feministing was where I first learned the term street harassment via a feature about websites like Hollaback and the Street Harassment Project in 2006, and that led to me writing my master’s thesis on street harassment at GWU in 2007. I had one of the first accounts when Feministing started their community section and I’ve had the honor of guest blogging and being interviewed on the site.

I feel a lot of gratitude toward Valenti for the ways (likely unknown to her) that she has shaped my life and work.

While I’ve never met Valenti, from reading so much of her writing and seeing photos of her pup Monty and glimpses of her daughter Layla, I felt like I knew her a bit. But how much do you really know a person from their online persona?

After reading an advance copy of her forthcoming memoir Sex Object, it was clear that even when someone like her shares a lot, it’s still not everything (nor, of course, is everything in her book, either).

As the title suggests, a main theme throughout her book is how people treat her based on her body and the ways in which her body has informed some of her decisions and life paths. She writes about dealing with relentless street harassment, assault, slut-shaming in person and online, abortions, drug use, and the dangerous, life-threatening delivery of her daughter months before her due date.

To set the stage, in the opening of her book, she writes about the violence her mother and grandmother experienced by men in their lives and how “female suffering is linear” in her family. “Rape and abuse are passed down like the world’s worst birthright, largely skipping the men and marking the women with scars, night terrors, and fantastic senses of humor.”

This resonated with me as there has been a line of sexual violence, rape, incest, domestic violence, and street harassment on my maternal side of the family. I also have heard snippets about street harassment, including stalking, from my paternal grandmother and my dad’s sister. Sometimes I feel like I’m carrying the weight of not only the harassment I routinely face, but also the violations my female relatives and family members have each survived.

Valenti writes, “Worse than the violations themselves was the creeping understanding of what it meant to be female – that it’s not a matter of if something bad happens, but when and how bad.”

When every woman around you has faced violations, this rings completely true.

Sex Object titties quoteShe discusses her street harassment experiences, including the many men who flashed her and masturbated at her – and even on her – when she was a teenager.

She writes, “Living in a place that has given up on the expectation of your safety means walking around in a permanently dissociative state. You watch these things happen to you, you walk through them on the subway and on the streets, you see them on the television, you hear them in music; and it’s just the air you breathe, so you narrate the horror to yourself because to engage with it would be self-destructive.”

I agree. For so many of us, street harassment is an undercurrent of our life, and one that we don’t always want to acknowledge or dwell on because it’s so depressing. It’s hard to understand or realize how much street harassment – let alone all the other ways our bodies may be violated – impacts us, our psyche and our achievements and peace of mind. I am grateful to her for bringing this reality forward to clearly.

Valenti is always a compelling story-teller and she doesn’t disappoint in this book. I read it in a weekend, curious about her life, saddened to learn what she’s been through, and inspired by her resilience to keep on going, to do the work that she does that has helped shape so many women like me.

I recommend it to anyone who is a fan of her work and also to any who has gone through the tough experiences she has, as there is some comfort to be had in knowing you’re not alone.

Just as Valenti’s first book Full Frontal Feminism helped so many women identify as feminist, I hope her memoir can help women who’ve faced similar forms of abuse against their bodies know that it should not have to be “normal” or inevitable, and that together, we are strong and we can speak out and change the culture. In the same way that Valenti is working to create a better world for her daughter, so too can we all work together to ensure that life is better for the next generation.

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Filed Under: anti-street harassment week Tagged With: dey books, feministing, jessica valenti, memoir, sex object, street harassment

Day 3: International Anti-Street Harassment Week

April 12, 2016 By HKearl

Join tweetathon april 12Hello Day 3!

Here are photos from the week so far! Here are the media hits.

Our board member Erin walks us through 3 street harassment myths.

Thanks to everyone who joined the Tweetathon ALL DAY using #EndSH —

(Note: By tweeting and using #EndSH, #SexObject or tagging @DeyStreet, @StopStHarassmnt, you can enter a drawing for a copy of Jessica Valenti‘s new book Sex Object. LEARN MORE)

Here are some of the events and actions that took place —

  • Brazil: Chega de Fiu Fiu created a video looking at how movies, series, music videos and songs try to normalize street harassment and help perpetuate it.

  • Chile: A law amendment to criminalize street harassment was passed unanimously today in the Chilean Chamber of Deputies! Read more (Spanish).
  • Egypt: Imprint Movement hosted an online awareness campaign across the week  [Cairo]

4.12.16 Imprint Movement - 'The law in on your side... Speak UP'“The law is on your side, speak up”

  • Nepal: Activista Nepal conducted a workshop on ” SAFE CITY & STREET HARASSMENT” at KATHMANDU MODEL COLLEGE (KMC), Balkumari Lalitpur District. Around 50 students took part in the workshop.
4.12.16 Activista Nepal conducted workshop on 'SAFE CITY & STREET HARASSMENT' at KATHMANDU MODEL COLLEGE 3 4.12.16 Activista Nepal conducted workshop on 'SAFE CITY & STREET HARASSMENT' at KATHMANDU MODEL COLLEGE 10 4.12.16 Activista Nepal conducted workshop on 'SAFE CITY & STREET HARASSMENT' at KATHMANDU MODEL COLLEGE
  • Papua New Guinea: The UN Women Safe Cities programme site will host an “Anti-Harassment Awareness Day” in Port Moresby at two venues and times. First, in the Gordons Market, there will be a community conversation animated by the Municipal Gender Desk and a youth group that promotes ending violence against women in public spaces through yoga (10 a.m. – 12 p.m.). Then, from 3 – 5 p.m., they will interview women commuters at women-only bus stops about their personal impressions and solutions to harassment in public spaces. During this activity also the repheral pathway, developed by UN-Women and the local government, will be shared and accesible to the women commuters. [10 a.m. – 12 p.m. and 3-5 p.m. in Port Moresby]4.12.16 UN Women Papua New Guinea - doing yoga to stop street harassment
  • Illinois: University of Illinois hosted a keynote speech with Stop Telling Women to Smile artist Tatyana Fazlalizadeh.

4.12.16 WCIA3 IL

  • Iowa: End Street Harassment – Iowa City is hosting a few events in Iowa City across the week, including sidewalk chalking. [8:30 p.m. Meet at the Iowa City Public Library]

Cat+Calling

  • Maryland: Hollaback Bmore is hosting a Self-Care Gathering at the MICA Wellness Center [6 p.m.]
  • Washington, DC-area: WMATA, SSH and Collective Action for Safe Spaces (CASS) released the findings of the city’s first-ever transit harassment survey and co-hosted a flyering event at several metro stations. [4-6 p.m.]

4.12.16 DC flyering Clarendon

  • Washington, DC: CASS hosted a public workshop on responding to street harassment. $10 suggested donation.  [6-8 p.m.]

4.12.16 CASS street harassment 101 workshop in DC

There are various online campaigns too:

Nepal

Egypt – HarassMap

New song about street harassment from La Castor (in French)

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Filed Under: anti-street harassment week Tagged With: chile, france, Nepal, papua new guinea

Day 2: International Anti-Street Harassment Week

April 11, 2016 By HKearl

4.10.16 Nufoshey firstharassedWelcome to Day 2!

Here are photos from the week so far! Also, check out the 7 easy ways to respond to street harassers video our board members Erin McKelle and Manuel Abril created.

We had a Tweet Chat today at 11 a.m. ET led by Sayfty, with #EndSH, #SayftyChat. Read the recap (created by Sayfty).

Sayfty chat

Here is a sampling of the offline events that took place around the world:

  • Bahamas: Hollaback! Bahamas partnered with the College of the Bahamas for a chalking event along a main walkway on campus. The chalking will span four days, with an all-school break with artists on hand to help with the chalking on April 14.

Bahama

  • Egypt: HarassMap did awareness-raising actions at Mansoura University in Mansoura governorate
  • Guatemala: OCAC Guatemala launched a pilot street harassment mapping project, an interview with Congresswoman Sandra Moran, and a social media campaign.

4.11.16 OCAC campaign launch in Guatemala

  • India: Safecity shared the following:  After a series of discussions and campaign activities, seen here are Anjali and Sahil of Sanjay Camp who have come together with other girls and boys of their neighborhood to paint a mural on equal access to public spaces and opportunities. Girls spoke of their restricted choices and options when they step out of their houses and boys spoke of how that wasn’t a concern until they heard the girls talk about it. They are looking to change this together. This mural is part of their efforts for the ongoing International anti street harassment week, we are excited to see the mural they’ll end up painting!

4.11.16 Safecity India - Anjali and Sahil of Sanjay Camp painting a mural

  • The Philippines: Game Changers, a group of Communication Research students from University of the Philippines (UP Diliman), supported the Safe Cities Metro Manila Programme in the celebration of International Anti-Street Harassment Week with their original Photowalk posters in universities. ‪#‎EndSH‬ ‪#‎freefromfear‬.
 4.11.16 Safe Cities Metro Manila Programme  4.11.16 Safe Cities Metro Manila Programme with Game Changers, a group of Communication Research students from University of the Philippines 3  4.11.16 Safe Cities Metro Manila Programme with Game Changers, a group of Communication Research students from University of the Philippines 2
  • Iowa: End Street Harassment – Iowa City held a “Not in My Community: Music to Destroy Rape Culture!” event with local artists and organizations tabling with relevant information. [7-11 p.m., Public Space One] | Read about it in the Daily Iowan.
  • Illinois: CHLH 340 students at the University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign did tabling on the campus quad to discuss sexual assault portrayal in the media [11 a.m. – 3 p.m.]

4.11.16 U of IL tabling 2

There were a lot of virtual actions, campaigns and events too, including the launch of several Latin American OCAC organizations’ joint campaign #NoEsMiCultura — street harassment is not my culture. Join in across the week.

OCAC online campaign

ActionAid South Africa:

4.11.16 ActionAid South Africa

Safecity India is asking “What would your safe city look like?”

"These amazing girls we're working with in Indira Nagar, Jogeshwari (E) in partnership with Vacha Charitable Trust say, their safe city will have freedom for girls."
“These amazing girls we’re working with in Indira Nagar, Jogeshwari (E) in partnership with Vacha Charitable Trust say, their safe city will have freedom for girls.”

 

Check out this video made for Anti-Street Harassment Week in Cheltenham, UK, under the hashtag #cheltbitesback (written and voiced by Joy-Amy Wigman).

Remember to tag us in the photos of your actions with #EndSH or @StopStHarassmnt (on twitter and instagram) and if you have a pup, take their photo and tag them for #HoundsAgainstHarassment!

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Filed Under: anti-street harassment week Tagged With: Bahamas, Guatemala, India

“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

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