• About Us
    • What Is Street Harassment?
    • Why Stopping Street Harassment Matters
    • Meet the Team
      • Board of Directors
      • Past Board Members
    • In The Media
  • Our Work
    • National Street Harassment Hotline
    • International Anti-Street Harassment Week
    • Blog Correspondents
      • Past SSH Correspondents
    • Safe Public Spaces Mentoring Program
    • Publications
    • National Studies
    • Campaigns against Companies
    • Washington, D.C. Activism
  • Our Books
  • Donate
  • Store

Stop Street Harassment

Making Public Spaces Safe and Welcoming

  • Facebook
  • Instagram
  • Pinterest
  • Tumblr
  • Twitter
  • YouTube
  • Home
  • Blog
    • Harassment Stories
    • Blog Correspondents
    • Street Respect Stories
  • Help & Advice
    • National Street Harassment Hotline
    • Dealing With Harassers
      • Assertive Responses
      • Reporting Harassers
      • Bystander Responses
      • Creative Responses
    • What to Do Before or After Harassment
    • Street Harassment and the Law
  • Resources
    • Definitions
    • Statistics
    • Articles & Books
    • Anti-Harassment Groups & Campaigns
    • Male Allies
      • Educating Boys & Men
      • How to Talk to Women
      • Bystander Tips
    • Video Clips
    • Images & Flyers
  • Take Community Action
  • Contact

Afghanistan: No excuse for street harassment

April 18, 2015 By Contributor

Painting by Roya Saberzada, 16

Guest Blog Post for International Anti-Street Harassment Week 2015

To be honest, I didn’t understand Afghan women’s problems till I got engaged. Before that, I was living in a family of men. I have three brothers and no biological sisters living with us. My mother is a traditional woman who believes that in-order to go to heaven; she HAS TO obey my father. It is the belief of so many other Afghan women I have met too.

Before, although I knew something is wrong here, but I couldn’t understand or feel it, till I fell in love with Fereshta. I saw the first street harassment to the girl I loved just in the second day of our engagement, and during an interval of two months I had seen at least a dozen instances of street harassments against her.

Sometimes the harassment seemed small and included men at her, but other times, we would be abused because she was driving and I was sitting next to her. It became obvious to me what most Afghans think about women driving. In their eyes, I am an honor-less man who lets his wife drive the car while he is in the car.

Many times I couldn’t control myself and fought back, sometimes even physically, because I love my fiancé and I couldn’t watch people harm her. Harassment makes women angry, but it should also make men who claim to love women angry.

I knew my fiancé was harassed when I wasn’t around, but what made me even angrier was that sometimes they harassed my fiancé even when I was with her. This was their way to denying my masculinity and her respect. The harassers thought that by doing so, they were taking the ownership of her body from me, as if I owned her body. I am not talking about the times that we were in the car and someone started shouting at us. They harassed and touched her even when I was walking right beside her in the bazaar. Most of the times, when confronted they denied the harassment claiming that it was an accident and sometimes they escaped. Other times, in the worse cases, they stood against us and fought back. They even defended her behavior.

After experiencing these instances with Freshta, I was assured that the harassment of women doesn’t have anything to do with women. I knew that it absolutely isn’t women’s fault. Sometimes we hear that some radical Mullahs say: “If women don’t go out alone, it won’t happen to them. It is the consequence of those who go out without a man.” But what about those days when I was with Fereshta and she was harassed in the streets of Kabul?

Some of them say: “The way women dress, grabs the attention of men.” I always think about this and say to myself: “OK, for a moment let’s consider that they are right. Let’s say that it is all because of the way the women dress. But does it mean it is right to harass women in the streets?”

And of course I am not talking specifically about Fereshta.  There are women who are harassed even with Chadori, the most conservative attire in Afghanistan. What excuses their harassment?

So, I can surely say that harassment won’t stop unless men rethink their behaviors.

By Omid Haqbin, cross-posted from Dukhtarane Rabia (Daughters of Rabia): A blog on social justice in Afghanistan.

Share

Filed Under: anti-street harassment week, male perspective, Stories, street harassment

Today’s Events – April 18

April 18, 2015 By BPurdy

Bangladesh

It’s the last day of International Anti-Street Harassment Week! Here are some of the actions taking place.

International:

Bangladesh: AUW Speak Up Club members will go out to streets of Chittagong with flyers and message boards to raise awareness about street harassment, to ask people to share their messages, to raise their voice, and to join the campaign.

Canada (Alberta): Hollaback! Alberta is holding “Street Harassment Happens Here,” where they will be walking through the high traffic areas of Whyte avenue, stopping every 5 minutes, and providing chalk & support to those who wish to participate. Participants are welcome to use sidewalk chalk to describe their experiences and/or feelings regarding street harassment on the sidewalk. It can be specific incidences that have occurred on Whyte Ave, or they can be general statements. Chalking can be a powerful way to share your experiences, reclaim spaces that are made to feel unsafe, and support those who are silenced by street harassment. [April 18, 1-5pm on Whyte Avenue in Edmonton between Gateway Blvd and 109th Street.]

Chile: OCAC Chile will host an event in a local park with performances and art [April 18]

Colombia: OCAC Colombia is hosting a an event in Bogota: SATURDAY 18 APRIL – 7PM: We will closure the week dancing, so you are invited to a pro-fund International Week Against Street Harassment spree. See you at la Redada, Carrera 19 No 33A-26 | SÁBADO 18 DE ABRIL – 9PM. Cerraremos la semana bailando e invitándoles a una farra pro-fondos Semana Internacional Contra el Acoso Callejero. Nos vemos en el Rehuso, en la Carrera 19 No 33A-26

France: Stop Harcelement de Rue Lyon will be holding a chalk walk [April 18 – 3 pm. Location: Montée de la Grande Côte]

France: Stop Harcelement de Rue Lille is holding a wall of shame: post-its are made available for passers-by to write insults and catcalls they were subjected to. The post-its are then glued to a giant board (this is the second wall of shame as the first one took place on International Women’s Day). [April 18 – 2 pm]

Nepal: The Nepal Mahila Ekata Samaj (Nepal Women Unity Society) will be chalk writing on street and bridge – Write the slogan and demand on street and bridge inform the public and masses abou the issue. [April 18]

Romania: FILIA: Centre for Curriculum Development and Gender Studies: is hold a public action in park to raise awareness and to share fliers with information about street harassment and also write chalk messages, discussing with people and ending the activity with a flashmob about the importance of bystander intervention and avoiding victim-blaming attitudes.

Serbia: Equity Youth Association will be hosting a week long campaign to educate locals about what street harassment is. This will include flyering and handing out graphics and info across the city with information from their recently conducted survey, and hosting a chalk walk with local university students in a city park that is notorious for being  a high-harassment area [Flyering April 12-18, Chalk Walk April 17th]

Turkey: Hollaback! Izmir will be hosting several events through the week, including a street harassment forum [April 12, 2-3pm at Caffenol Bistro], a banner-making workshop [April 12, 3:30-4:30pm] and panels and street activity [April 18, 2-6pm] Find more info here. 

United Kingdom: Hollaback! York will be holding their launch event during #EndSHWeek! Join them to share stories and learn more about their new community survey. [April 18, 1:30-3pm Fishergate Room the in the Priory Street Centre]

 

USA Events:

Maryland: STREETWISE is hosting a Basics of Self Defense Class. This 4-hour hands-on workshop will give you the confidence, knowledge and strength to feel empowered in a life-threatening situation. You will learn basic defense techniques on how to recognize, react to and survive an attack! [Saturday, April 18, 2015 @ 10:00am – 2:00pm  at Fitness Craze – 223-D Brierhill Drive, Bel Air, MD 21015] INFO

Nevada: Hollaback! Las Vegas is hosting a Self-Defense Workshop with Israeli Martial Arts. The workshop is FREE but spaces are limited. To register, email gabrielle@RCCLV.org with the subject line “self defense workshop” [Saturday, April 18th 11am to 1pm]

New York: dianINQUE will be hosting community outreach via chalk walks and flyering on April 18 and 19.

North Carolina: SSH campaign manager Britnae will be hosting a charity yoga class at Durham Yoga Company. Street harassment takes a toll on our mental well-being. Take some time to recenter and focus on self-love during this yoga class! We’ll be giving out SSH-themed gift bags! Class is free, but 100% of proceeds will go back to Stop Street Harassment.  [Saturday, April 18, 6-7:30pm]

Massachusetts: Guerilla Feminism Boston will be hosting Reclaim Our Spaces: A Chalk Walk for Black Women, WOC, Queer, and Trans Women. Join them while they use chalk to share our stories, tell our truths and stand in solidarity for those we have lost to street harassment & gender based violence. Allies are welcome as long as they are active in their support of the communities mentioned above. [April 18, 3:30-5:30pm at the Mass Ave T Stop on the Orange Line, Boston]

Washington, DC: SSH, CASS and Batala! will host street action at U Street and 14th Street, 2-4 p.m.[April 18]

Share

Filed Under: anti-street harassment week Tagged With: Batala!, Bogota, canada, CASS, dianINQUE, Durham Yoga Company, Equity Youth Association, FILIA: Center for Curriculum Development and Gender Studies, france, Guerrilla Feminism Boston, Hollaback Alberta, Hollaback Izmir, HOllaback Las Vegas, Hollaback York, lille, Lyon, maryland, massachusetts, Nepal Mahila Ekata Samaj, Nevada, north carolina, OCAC Chile, OCAC Colombia, Romania, self defense, Serbia, SSH, Stop Harcelement de Rue, STREETWISE, turkey, UK, Washington DC, yoga

Hollaback! York – The Challenges and Rewards of Starting a New Group

April 18, 2015 By Contributor

Guest Blog Post for International Anti-Street Harassment Week 2015

We are launching a new branch of Hollaback in York, UK and getting set up and running has been a pretty positive experience for us so far. York is a fairly small city and isn’t really known for its activism, so we had been worried at the start that there wouldn’t be many people wanting to get involved. But the response has been really great – it just goes to show that street harassment really is something that affects almost everyone and once you start the conversation, people are always keen to join in. The two universities in York have recently launched anti-sexual harassment campaigns and zero tolerance policies, and seeing people in our community take sexual harassment seriously makes us really hopeful that things can change in York to become a much safer space for everyone.

Having said that, we have had a couple of challenges, including being denied permission from the council to do a chalk walk during International Anti-Street Harassment Week. We were really looking forward to that; chalk walks from other anti-street harassment groups are always really popular, as they are a great quick and fun way to spread awareness that prompt the public to ask questions and get involved. So we are having to get a little creative and find some alternatives instead!

Our favourite part so far has been the incredible network of support from other anti-street harassment sites and blogs all over the world, all sharing and learning from each other and working together to build our knowledge and understanding of such a complex issue. However, what we are really looking forward to is making a difference to people in York when our site is officially up and running. Street harassment can be a dangerous and humiliating experience and we are keen to get stuck in with anything we can do for our community to show some support, provide some comfort, or empower someone to speak out.

We have found out that there are plenty of ups and downs in this work, but we are definitely looking forward to more of it!

This piece was written by the Co-Director of Hollaback York

Share

Filed Under: anti-street harassment week, hollaback Tagged With: #EndSHWeek, challenges, council, england, hollaback, new organization, rewards, York

Afghanistan: I Will Fill You With Lead

April 17, 2015 By Contributor

I screamed with all my might so that of God or one of His followers might help me. But everyone just kept watching.

Guest Blog Post for International Anti-Street Harassment Week 2015

About seven months ago, one afternoon I was walking out of a class I taught with enthusiasm and full of energy and headed home. On the way, I decided to stop by a super market to purchase somethings I needed.

When I exited the store, I saw a big car with black windows parked near the entry door of the market. There were two men inside the car. They immediately began inviting me to their car and calling me names. I ignored them. I looked down and continued walking home, but before I knew it I noticed one of the men in front of me with his arms wide open as if he wanted to embrace me. I said something loudly because I was terrified. He moved out of my way and I kept walking. I then noticed two guards standing in front of a building very close to the market. I asked them why they hadn’t done anything to protect me and one of them said abruptly, “we are here to guard this office. Defending women and girls is not our job.”

I was debating with the guards when I found the black car near me once again. This time, they began saying obscene things to me. I got really angry and asked them, “are your sisters and mothers prostitutes that you assume all women are?”

One of the men got really enraged and got out of the car. He ran towards me and began slapping my face. Soon, he was hitting me everywhere and kicking me. I had not imagined this would ever happen so I didn’t know what to do. I began screaming in the hopes of God or one of His followers helping me. The most shocking thing was the fact that both guards were still watching in silence. My screams brought a crowd of men and women around. People came of their houses and offices and began to watch me being beaten. The enraged man did not stop at hitting me. He ran back to his car and brought a big gun out with him. He looked at me and said, “I will fill you with lead.”

He loaded the gun, but his friend attempted to calm him down and ultimately stopped him from firing.

After that, they both got inside the car and left the area while yelling obscenities at me. The crowd was still watching me. Some people looked at me with pity while others with hatred and blamed, but they all had thousands of questions. Some asked me who the men where, what they wanted from me and whether I knew them. The same people who moments ago were quiet as rocks had somehow regained their voice and were questioning me. I do not remember what I told them. I just wished I could erase this day from my memory.

By Azada Faqiri, cross-posted from Dukhtarane Rabia (Daughters of Rabia): A blog on social justice in Afghanistan

Poster text: I screamed with all my might so that of God or one of His followers might help me. But everyone just kept watching.

Share

Filed Under: anti-street harassment week Tagged With: #EndSHWeek, Afghanistan, Daughters of Rabia, Dukhtarane Rabia

Sexual Comments Belong Exactly Where Sex does: Between People Who Have Given Explicit Consent

April 17, 2015 By Contributor

Guest Blog Post for International Anti-Street Harassment Week 2015

A few months ago, I began a social experiment where I post on Facebook each time I experience street harassment as I go about my days as a working professional, graduate student, and a woman living in Washington D.C.. My goal was to see how my group of Facebook friends may react to my stories and how the interactions made me feel violated as many others who experience it do.

Most of the time, I receive an overwhelming number of ‘likes’ on my post, friends and colleagues showing their support and sometimes sharing their own stories of harassment in their own cities all over the country. But, there are also times when the comments to the posts are not as supportive. People have asked me what I was wearing during these events, if I was in a supposed “bad part of town”, and have even commented about the dangers of walking around a city. But most interesting to me, one Facebook user took this time to make a joke about how upset he was that he never gets this kind of attention when he goes about his day. Multiple people liked his comment.

I created this series as a way to share with my community just how much of an issue street harassment is in my city. But also, as a way to share my own experiences as a way to start a conversation about what effect street harassment can have on the person receiving such attention. Through my own commentary, I shared how street harassment has made me lose confidence, has made me feel over-sexualized and in many cases unsafe about what the person who is yelling at me is willing to do to me if they feel so comfortable saying such things in public about me and my body. And in just one comment, a person was able to make my entire social experiment look like I was bragging about how many people think I am pretty as I walk to work.

I named this social experiment “Cat-Call Shaming”, and I did so as a way to ground the movement in such a way that takes the shame of being cat-called and put it back on the person who is willing to draw unwanted attention to a complete stranger. Just like with other forms of sexual violence, my belief is that society promotes an injustice upon survivors of street harassment by placing the blame on the receivers of these unwanted comments as if that person is responsible for how all people act towards them. Someone who has been sexually assaulted should never be blamed for that experience, so why should a person be to blame for receiving sexual attention from a stranger on the street?

What upset me most was not the person who made the comment, but the number of people both online and in person who had a similar reaction to my series. It upset me that these were educated people, individuals who sat through sexual assault awareness training at their universities just like I had. These were people who were taught to always ask first, to make sure their partners are able to consent to sex, people who I had discussions about my own stories of feeling intimidated or coerced by partners after I had already said no. Yet, these were people who didn’t seeing anything wrong with street harassment, who told me that I should feel flattered about how often it happened to me like it was a badge of honor to be harassed by strangers.

Why is it that these people understood the danger of sexual assault yet could not understand why street harassment wasn’t just as much a social issue? How can a person believe that it isn’t okay to coerce someone into having sex but thinks it is perfectly fine to make sexual comments towards strangers they are attracted they see walking down the street? One of the ways that consent is taught in colleges today is grounded in the idea that we as individuals should always respect the boundaries that other people have set for themselves because each person has the right to decide how or when they choose to engage in sex. Teaching about sexual harassment can be approached in the exact same way. It can be taught that someone’s words are just as powerful as their actions, and that when you draw unwanted sexual attention towards someone you are disregarding the boundaries that they have set up for themselves. Sexual comments belong exactly where sex does, between people who have given their explicit consent to be touched or talked to in such a way.

By teaching not to rape without teaching not to harass on the street, we are telling the next generation of adults that it is okay to objectify other people as long as you are not touching them and this completely disregards the emotional and mental negative effects that street harassment can have on the person getting yelled at near the bus stop.

Jen Stutman is a GW Alumna and Former GW Students Against Sexual Assault Member

Share

Filed Under: anti-street harassment week, public harassment Tagged With: Cat-Call Shaming, facebook, George Washington, George Washington Students Against Sexual Assault, GW, GWSASA, Social experiement, Washington D.C.

« Previous Page
Next Page »

Share Your Story

Share your street harassment story for the blog. Donate Now

From the Blog

  • #MeToo 2024 Study Released Today
  • Join International Anti-Street Harassment Week 2022
  • Giving Tuesday – Fund the Hotline
  • Thank You – International Anti-Street Harassment Week 2021
  • Share Your Story – Safecity and Catcalls Collaboration

Buy the Book

  • Contact
  • Events
  • Join Us
  • Donate
  • Facebook
  • Instagram
  • Pinterest
  • Tumblr
  • Twitter
  • YouTube

Copyright © 2025 Stop Street Harassment · Website Design by Sarah Marie Lacy