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Sexual harassment common in schools, the streets. Two mothers speak out.

November 9, 2011 By HKearl

Did you know that 48 percent of students in grades 7-12 faced sexual harassment during the 2010-11 school year in the USA? Sadly, it’s true. In addition to my anti-street harassment, I work full-time at the nonprofit AAUW, and this week, AAUW released a report on sexual harassment in schools that I co-authored.

You can access the full report online for free and read one of the 1000+ articles about it, including one from The New York Times.

While boys faced sexual harassment too, especially in middle school, far more girls faced it and overall they were more negatively impacted by it (e.g. had trouble sleeping, didn’t want to go to school, missed school). When you look at the broader picture, many of these same teenage girls face street harassment from grown men, too, which means they’re dealing with harassment at school and before/after. This is NOT okay.

The many ways girls are harassed is illustrated well in an important blog post written by my AAUW co-worker Gloria Blackwell. She gave me permission to cross-post it:

“Like most parents, when my firstborn left the nest for college, I was filled with angst, not worrying about her judgment or common sense, just stressed about all the ignorant people (read: young men) I knew she was bound to encounter. It really hit home last summer as we commuted to work together every day. She dressed pretty modestly, but it didn’t matter what she wore. I would notice young men and grown men (her father’s age) checking out her body. She already knew how to give the “death stare,” but I found myself doing it for her. They would quickly turn away, and the few who looked defiant quickly gave it up, clearly thinking twice about taking me on. I was like Clint Eastwood some days … “Go ahead, make my day.”

When she was a high school student athlete, blatant staring at girls and sexual references to their bodies was the norm. She told me, “Guys commented on my legs and butt all the time. Not just me, though. It was most of the girls, especially the runners and volleyball players who wore spandex. I usually just gave them the death glare or threatened them physically. And guys were really bold with their … ogling. And commenting. They didn’t care.”

Some girls didn’t even try out for sports to avoid the negative environment. Her sophomore year, the school adopted mandatory uniforms. But it really didn’t matter what the girls wore (and who knew you could purchase uber-tight khakis and too-small polo shirts to defy the rules!). Boys felt empowered to treat girls with zero respect, and unfortunately many girls were too frightened, embarrassed, or humiliated to speak up. The harassment of girls began in middle school. She recalled hearing guys in high school talk about “the kinds of things they were doing with girls in empty classrooms in middle school.” I’m sure not all of it was consensual.

But there’s another side of the dilemma. Many girls were extremely angry at other girls for wearing too tight, short, or revealing clothes; modifying their uniforms to look “sluttified;” and (they felt) giving boys free reign to pass judgment on them all. This judging has, of course, migrated to social media, where student Facebook pages from middle to high school to college now “rate” girls or call them out as “sluts” and “hos.” The local term in the Washington, D.C., and Maryland area is “roller,” which Urban Dictionary defines as “a hoe [sic] or a slut, mostly used in the D.C. area for a girl who is a REAL freak. … That girl is a roller — she [is] always with some new dude.” Girls get so little respect that new labels are created to demean them?

We’re talking about young girls! These types of labels do irreparable harm to their self-esteem, body image, academic performance, and even their safety. And try erasing that stigma from your social media footprint as you apply for college, scholarships, internships, or employment. We need to make our schools free from sexual harassment for girls and boys. I hope that AAUW’s new research report, Crossing the Line: Sexual Harassment at School, inspires all of us to create a culture of respect in our schools and communities to keep girls and boys safe. In the meantime, I’m preparing my younger daughter and son for the road ahead.”

In a related vein, Huffington Post writer and mother of three daughters Soraya Chemaly published a piece last night with advice for parents for how to talk to their daughters about sexual harassment, including street harassment. She writes:

“Here are the top five things that I came up with:

1. Review the basics with her in a “safety rule” — not “scary reality” — way:

  • Be safe and develop good habits — don’t scare her, but make sure she knows the safety rules relevant to where she’ll be.
  • Don’t engage — don’t answer questions, get into a conversation or respond in anger. But, don’t lose confidence. This is hard. Whereas you, as a an adult might be able to stare the guy down and say, “Don’t touch my arm again,” a younger girl may not be equipped to do the same. Even most adult women aren’t. In a recent survey, 69% of women said they never make eye contact on the street to avoid harassment.
  • Be confident — if she wants the independence to walk around or has to for other reasons, like getting to school, then she needs to feel confident enough to say STOP if she has to, or ask someone for help. She has to speak loudly and clearly. Practice with her. If someone touches her without her consent she can call 911 and she should.
  • If you and she live in a place where the harassment is really prevalent and frightening find a self-defense class.

2. Teach her that street harassment is not a compliment and that she has to trust her instincts. Harassment can be confusing to girls and women since the line between a compliment from a well-meaning and polite man and unwanted, potentially threatening harassment from a creep can be fuzzy and often incorporates cultural differences that are hard to parse. For a lot of women, and especially teen girls trying out their newfound, more adult femininity, certain comments can seem flattering. But it’s a precariously thin line between seemingly benign behavior and the threat of something ugly. Girls and women don’t have the time or luxury of determining which is which. I asked my daughter, now 14, if she could come up with a hard and fast cross-cultural rule that all girls could apply when developing their instincts about when to feel threatened and how to respond. She came up with this simple rule to determine the difference between a compliment and harassment: If you can look the person in the eye, confidently and uncoerced, and say thank you (even if you don’t actually do) — then it’s not harassment.

3. Let her know that if she’s groped, yelled at, whispered to, it’s not her fault, she doesn’t have to “like it.” It’s bullying. Let her know it’s doesn’t have to be this way, she’s not alone and she doesn’t have to shamefully keep the harassment to herself. A recent article in Psychology Today, “Hey Baby Hurts,” discusses some of the psychological implications for teens, which includes fear, self-objectification and withdrawal. Often, girls don’t talk to their parents about the street harassment that they are subjected to. The study released today explains: “Nearly a third of the victims said the harassment made them feel sick to their stomach, affected their study habits or fueled reluctance to go to school at all.” Share with her the fact that there is a worldwide movement to combat street harassment. Organizations like Stop the Harassment and Holla Back! are dedicated to empowering girls and women by teaching them assertive responses, self-defense, and easy mechanisms for reporting harassers.

4. Set an example if you’re her mom or grandmother or aunt. Stop accepting sexually-based street harassment as the price of being a woman. Men who harass often don’t know they’re being offensive. Tell them. There are places and times when even if you feel threatened you don’t have to be scared. You can look for allies, politely but firmly say, “Stop, that’s offensive,” shame the jerk, call the police. Model fearless behavior for her. If you’re a dad, it’s really important that your daughter understand you don’t think she’s “asking for it.” If she tells you it’s happening, don’t ask her what she was wearing, because she could be wearing a burka and it would happen.

5. And, lastly, very importantly tell boys and men in your life what’s going on. It’s vital. Most men don’t harass women on the street, but they also don’t realize the extent to which their mothers, sisters, daughters, female friends and coworkers go out of their way to adapt to this reality. We have to stop saying street harassment is just “boys being boys.” This excuse is a reductionist and harrowing definition of masculinity that maintains essentially that all men are animals. Most men are not animals. They are capable of respecting civil boundaries and personal space in public. In particular, boys need to learn three things:

  • That they can participate in bonding experiences, but that harassing girls is an unacceptable way to do it.
  • That they need to stop looking the other way and should intervene in support if the situation warrants it.
  • How to empathize with what their mothers, sisters, aunts, cousins, grandmothers, girlfriends, wives are dealing with.
  • How to speak to girls as people, with respect and decency.
  • All of these are hard in the media environment they’re stewing in.

The Good Men Project has an excellent article for boys and men, as well as several pieces about empathizing with what women experience. The international organization Stop Street Harassment also has a page for educating boys.”

If you’re not already, parents, please have these conversations with your children. It will help them be safer and more empowered and allow them to live fuller lives.

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Filed Under: News stories, street harassment Tagged With: AAUW, gloria blackwell, mothers speak out, sexual harassment in schools, Soraya Chemaly, street harassment

NY subway platform groper arrested

November 8, 2011 By HKearl

Shyane Dejesus - image via NYDailyNews

“I was raised to fight back. I felt disgusting. I’m nice but I’m a tough cookie.” – Shyane DeJesus

Last week, 22-year old college student Shyane DeJesus attacked, berated, and snapped a cell phone picture of a man who groped her on a subway platform in New York City.

Yesterday she identified him from a police lineup of suspects.

Via NY Daily Mail:

“I knew it was him right away,” Shyane Dejesus, a senior at City College, said Monday. “It is a face I couldn’t forget. … I was overwhelmed. I started crying.”

The man she identified, Froylan Andrade, 39, was awaiting arraignment Monday night on sex abuse charges — a day after cops arrested him at his Elmhurst, Queens, home…

Cops said they were able to arrest Andrade because of a tipster who recognized him from the photo Dejesus snapped.

Andrade was arrested Sunday after his brother gave cops his address.

Both brothers work at Spring Natural, a restaurant on Spring St. Police went there after getting the tip…

Dejesus, who got off the subway at Astor Place, urged other women to fight back too.

“Don’t let them scare you,” she said. “They’re cowards.”

If you’re able to take a photo of a harasser, it can be really useful to do so, especially if you’re going to report the harasser to the police, transit authorities, or business owners (depending on where the harassment took place). Since the harasser is a stranger to you, having a photo can help those in charge identify the perpetrator. Without the photo, DeJesus’ groper may not have ever been caught, or at least he may not have been caught so quickly.
As DeJesus suggests, if you feel safe, speak up against harassers. Here are tips for how to respond to them and how to report them.
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Filed Under: News stories Tagged With: arrest, groper, Shyane DeJesus, street harassment

Street Harassment Stories, Articles & Tweets: November 6, 2011

November 6, 2011 By HKearl

Read stories, news articles, blog posts, and tweets about street harassment from the past week and find relevant announcements and upcoming street harassment events.

** Sign up to receive a monthly e-newsletter from Stop Street Harassment ***

Street Harassment Stories:

Share your story! You can read new street harassment stories on the Web from the past week at:

Stop Street Harassment Blog | “Street Respect” stories

HarassMap Egypt

Resist Harassment Lebanon

Many of the Hollaback sites

New Activism:

* Brooklyn Bike Patrol (NYC, USA): “Call us @ 718-744-7592 we escort women from subway stations to their homes safely in the late evenings hours.”

* Zero Tolerance Campaign (Mumbai, India): “Every woman in Mumbai, be it our mother, sister or friend has been groped or touched inappropriately at some point of time…As a campaign we have three major goals: 1) Spread awareness especially amongst the youth, that Sexual Harassment is just not acceptable and we need to be ZERO TOLERANT, be it victims or onlooker; 2) Empower women through imparting information about their rights and the existing laws to book the culprit and combat the menace; 3) Petition Shri. RR Patil through a signature campaign both online and offline. To strengthen sections 354 and 506, make them non bail-able, a move that is under consideration by the government but has not been implemented.

* maps4aid – Fighting Violence Against Women In India (India): An Innovative way to report incidents of Violence against Women, NGO Activities, Crisis Situations through Web/SMS/PhoneApps! using the famous Ushahidi platform and integrated with FrontlineSMS

In the News, on the Blogs:

* Bikya Masr, “Harassmap launches new anti-harassment campaign, as its services are requested globally“

* Yale Daily News, “BELDING: People are subjects, not objects“

* CBS New York, “‘Occupy Wall Street’ Sets Up ‘Women Only’ Tent After Sexual Violence In Zuccotti Park“

* Safe Streets AZ, “Harassment-free Halloween?“

* The ArtBlog, “Hannah Price on photographing men on the streets in Philadelphia – a new podcast“

* Gawker, “Your New Subway Hero: The Groper Smacker‘” and The Frisky, “The Woman Who Beat Up Her Subway Groper Gets Animation Treatment“

* The Times of India, “Eve-teasing double-murder: Amboli girls to cite sexual harassment, says main complainant“

* Sian and Crooked Rib, “Comment on the New Statesman“

* BBC, “Mumbai murders fuel India ‘Eve teasing’ anger,” and IBN Live, “Eve teasing: Justice for Keenan and Reuben“

* Greater Kashmir, “World is Not Just Men“

* The Times of India, “Women’s commission chief seeks arrest of college girl’s murderer“

Announcements:

New:

* Sign the Zero Tolerance Campaign’s petition calling for stronger enforcement of laws banning street sexual harassment in India.

* Contact the California sandwich chain Togo’s and tell them that trivializing street harassment in their television ad is NOT okay.

* Street harassment is not okay: Watch a new 2 minutes cartoon about street harassment

Reminders:

* Sign the petition to tell Toronto Police to stop blaming victims for street harassment and sexual assault!!

* Donate to Students Active for Ending Rape so they can mentor and teach students to advocate for safer campuses!

* If you’re in London, help a Ph.D. student out with her dissertation research by meeting to share your street harassment stories.

* Contribute to the Monday “Street Respect” series that highlights the type of stories we want to see instead of street harassment stories!

* Are you in Egypt? Use HarassMap to report your street harassers

* Have an iPhone? Download the Hollaback iPhone app that lets you report street harassers

10 Tweets from the Week:

1. louisethewheeze It is not a compliment to stare and purse ones lips at a lady. makes me wonder how good of a billy club my umbrella is. #streetharassment

2. aliciasanchez wish black men would understand it’s not personal when black women don’t always want to engage with them in public spaces+

3. EVAWhd @RichardJGarside home ok thnx. Regular occurrence for all no doubt & been talking re tackling street harassment today so got me thinking x

4. sydmosley Just gave a guest lecture at John Jay College on #windowsexproject & #streetharassment. It was AMAZING.

5. Monabdelaziz Is sexual tension higher closer to Eid? The harrassment is getting way out of line these days. #EndSH

6. MaiiNewaishy It just feels so good insulting every son of a bitch that calls out something at me on the street. #endSH #Egypt

7. EndStHarassment While crossing the street some dudes yelled ‘yeah baby’ from their car at me. Made me nervous & wish I was not outside. #endstreetharassment

8. acu_margarita I am reminded of the vital importance for women to stand up to #streetharassment, a daily experience for many of us.

9. maps4aid “I ignored him and continued walking but he caught hold of my hand and slapped me four times” – Victim of #StreetHarassment #vaw #India

10. thetrudz I’m 32. By age 25ish all women have heard all pick up lines, attempts to flatter, and street harassment spiels. Now they just repeat. Yawn.

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Filed Under: hollaback, News stories, street harassment, weekly round up

“I yelled that he just groped me. I literally started punching him in the head”

November 4, 2011 By HKearl

Via NY Post -- Shyane DeJesus

22-year old college student Shyane DeJesus attacked, berated, and snapped a cell phone picture of a man who groped her on a subway platform in New York City.

From the New York Post:

“DeJesus, who lives in Queens, was headed to work at a shoe store at 9:50 a.m. Oct. 23 when the drama unfolded as she stood on the platform and leaned over the tracks to see if a train was coming.

That’s when she noticed a man sneaking up alongside her.

Before DeJesus could step away, the deviant began rubbing against her thigh.

“It was disgusting,” she said. “I felt so violated.”

When the downtown No. 6 train arrived, the man “grabbed my right shoulder and pushed my head down and lifted my skirt up and groped me,” DeJesus said.

Via NYPost -- Report this man if you see him!

She began fighting back, and the cowardly creep ran onto the train.

“He went on the train and sat down as if nothing happened. I was hysterical. I yelled that he just groped me. I literally started punching him in the head,” she said.

No one came to her aid.

DeJesus got in a few more knocks on her attacker, and, as the train pulled in to the next station, took her phone out of her bag.

“I held the door and positioned the phone in his face. I was shaking, I’m surprised I got it,” she said.

“He smirked when I looked at him. He never said a word, not a word. All I got was that smirk.”

DeJesus then got off the train and ran to her job, where she called police.

Cops are still searching for the man.”

While I don’t condone violence, I sympathize with her actions. When man after man gets away with sexually harassing, stalking, groping, and assaulting women on the streets, subway platforms, buses, and stores of our country, and when bystanders stand by and let it happen, there comes a breaking point. Maybe after getting kicked and yelled at by a person he thought he could easily grope, this perpetrator won’t be so quick to grope someone else. Especially if the police catch him. Good for DeJesus.

DeJesus is not the only New York City woman to have this type of reaction to groping. In the past year, we’ve heard from Nicola Briggs who was videotaped yelling down the man who rubbed against her and flashed her on the subway (he was later arrested and deported), Kate Spencer who hit the man who groped her on a subway platform, and Robyn Shepherd who chased down a man who smacked her butt as she walked down the street.

Street harassers, beware: more and more women are fighting back and not just figuratively and not just online, but actually, physically fighting back. So stop harassing us. We don’t like it, no one does. If you continue to harass us, you may just find out how much we don’t like it when you get a slap to the face or a kick to the groin. I don’t like violence, I don’t like harassment. Stop the harassment, there will be no violence.

And bystanders: do something if you see another person facing harassment! Ask them if they’re okay if you’re not sure if they’re being harassed or not. Just do something! Standing idly by is not acceptable.

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Filed Under: News stories, street harassment Tagged With: college, fighting back, groping, Kate Spencer, New York City, Nicola Briggs, Robyn Shepherd, Shyane DeJesus, street harassment

Street Harassment Snapshot: Stories, News, & Tweets: October 30, 2011

October 30, 2011 By HKearl

Read stories, news articles, blog posts, and tweets about street harassment from the past week and find relevant announcements and upcoming street harassment events.

** Sign up to receive a monthly e-newsletter from Stop Street Harassment ***

Street Harassment Stories:

Share your story! You can read new street harassment stories on the Web from the past week at:

Stop Street Harassment Blog | “Street Respect” stories

HarassMap Egypt

Resist Harassment Lebanon

Hollaback

Hollaback Berlin

Hollaback Croatia

Holla Back DC!

Hollaback Israel

Hollaback London

Hollaback Mumbai

Hollaback NYC

Hollaback Philly

Hollaback Queretaro

Hollaback Tegucigalpa

Hollaback West Yorkshire

In the News, on the Blogs:

* Racialicious, “Unsafe in Seattle”

* Feministe, “So There’s a Woman Dressed All Sexy-Like: Your Role as Observer“

* Huffington Post, “Street Harassment is Everywhere; What do We Tell Our Daughters?“

* Negin Dahya, “Big City Etiquette“

* HR Daily Advisor, “I Stopped My Harasser in His Tracks” and HR Daily Advisor, “How to Respond to a Harasser? 10 Things to Say“

* The Times of India, “On Diwali eve, many roads without street-lights“

* Reuters, “NY may close bus service that makes women sit in back“

* Gender Across Borders, “Street Culture“

* Her campus University of Leeds, “Street Harassment – The Daily Battle“

* Cool Age, “That evil called ‘street harassment‘”

* NY1, “Police Ramp Up Search For Queens Sexual Assault Suspect“

* LiveMint.com, “A girl’s guide to public speaking“

Announcements:

New:

* Sign the petition to tell Toronto Police to stop blaming victims for street harassment and sexual assault!!

Reminders:

* Participate in a “Taking Back Halloween” contest and show off your creativity for creating non-sexy costumes

* Donate to Students Active for Ending Rape so they can mentor and teach students to advocate for safer campuses!

* If you’re in London, help a Ph.D. student out with her dissertation research by meeting to share your street harassment stories.

* Contribute to the Monday “Street Respect” series that highlights the type of stories we want to see instead of street harassment stories!

* Call for men to share views/stories about street harassment

* Sign Mend the Gap’s petition to address subway harassment in Delhi, India

* Are you in Egypt? Use HarassMap to report your street harassers

* Have an iPhone? Download the Hollaback iPhone app that lets you report street harassers

10 Tweets from the Week:

1. Karnythia What I will do to protect myself is nothing compared to what I will do to protect my child. You won’t be here to engage in #streetharassment

2. nualacabral Excited to speak out on #streetharassment at the Media That Matters Film Festival this wk in NYC. mediathatmattersfest.org/news/media_tha… #p2 #fem2

3. feministteacher Students @lreinyc are writing their own responses to #streetharassment via spoken word, poetry, response yfrog.com/h7bltugj @GGENYC

4. rlalita @Bell_Bajao censors should ban every Bollywood movie with eve teasing, street harassment, & any form of abuse against women. #rewrite

5. cathredfern YES. Just successfully challenged street harassment i am shaking now so much

6. MarwanAnwar #EgyptianMisconception Hitting on random girls on the streets would make you the coolest person ever born

7. VAWMonth Read today’s live chat with @BLANK_NOISE on Street Violence Against Women by following #VAWAM.

8. HollabackCHD #KeenanSantos lost his life standing up against #streetharassment He chose to speak up. Will you? chd.ihollaback.org/2011/10/keenan…

9. PamelaScully Street harassment against women is most visible symptom that society uses fear to control more than 1/2 the population. huff.to/vclgbY

10. HollaBackBmore Women don’t always have the time or safety margin to determine between #streetharassment and a compliment. ow.ly/7d6au

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Filed Under: hollaback, News stories, Stories, street harassment, weekly round up

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