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Women’s Equality Day Wish: No Street Harassment

August 26, 2011 By HKearl

The Guardian just published  an op-ed I wrote for today’s Women’s Equality Day! Check it out and consider leaving a comment.

(By the way, a dozen op-eds and articles I’ve written have been published since I did The Op-Ed Project training last year. I highly recommend it!!)

A man dubbed the “Upper East Side Groper” allegedly groped at least a dozen women in Manhattan before getting caught earlier this month. On the heels of his arrest, last week three gropings perpetrated by one man were reported in Queens, New York. Meanwhile, in northern Virginia, a man nicknamed the “butt slasher” has assaulted at least nine young women in shopping malls across the past few months. He has not been caught.

Aren’t these just unfortunate, isolated, random incidents, you may ask. No.

The news stories simply bring to light experiences that happen to too many women. Recently, when a woman in Astoria, New York, blogged about a man groping her, 45 women emailed her with similar stories. More than half of 800 female survey respondents of a 2008 study said they had been groped or sexually touched in public. The majority of the respondents were only in their teens and twenties. When I was 18 years old, a man groped me on a street near my college campus, making me part of that percentage.

Today is Women’s Equality Day in the United States. But equality is more of a wish than our reality when so many inequalities exist – including women’s unequal access to public places because of gender-based street harassment, including gropings and slashings.

Street harassment comprises actions and comments between strangers in public that are disrespectful, creeping, threatening and unwanted. It ranges from whistling and sexist or sexual comments to flashing, stalking, groping and assault. It primarily impacts women, including more than 80% of women worldwide, and it directly limits their access to public spaces.

The milder forms of harassment like whistling and comments are often dismissed as a compliment – something women “ask for” – or a harmless annoyance. The reality is, they cause harm; and their accumulation can make women feel wary in public and even “choose” not to go places unaccompanied.

For Psychology Today, Dr Kathryn Stamoulis recently wrote about how a teenage girl she counsels confided that she did not want to run errands for her parents or go to school unaccompanied because adult men sexually harass her. Many harassed individuals are like her: teenage girls whose perception of self, of men, and of their place in the world, is negatively impacted by the sexual harassment they face on the streets.

Women who face lots of mild forms of harassment, or just one serious form like groping or stalking, may feel obliged to change commuting routes, only go places accompanied, or even move neighbourhoods, change jobs or quit hobbies to avoid further victimisation. Street harassment genuinely impedes women’s equality by limiting women’s access to public places; it denies them the liberty they should have of being able to walk freely in public without harassment.

Thankfully, more and more people are recognising that street harassment is a barrier to equality and a denial of liberties – and they’re taking action. Ever since New York City councilwoman Julissa Ferreras found out that teenage girls in her district face street harassment on their way to and from school, she has made the issue a priority. Last week, she took to the streets to raise awareness about the rampant groping in Queens, and last fall, she broke new ground by organising the first-ever city council hearing on street harassment.

A college student at Stanford University with whom I’ve corresponded is currently organising a coalition of people and groups in the California Bay Area to advocate for anti-street harassment measures. This summer, she worked with transit authorities to add sexual harassment information to their brochures and website and possibly to start an awareness ad campaign.

In Washington, DC this past spring, 50 volunteers, just ordinary residents of the city, participated in a community safety audit, organised by Holla Back DC! and me. On designated dates, they fanned out across the city to analyse what the streets looked like during the day, and at night, and then made recommendations for how to make the city safer. During the last week of September, we will be encouraging interested persons to keep a “street harassment log” for a week using a log we provide. Because street harassment is under-documented and researched, the goals of these projects are to start documenting harassment better – and to add to the growing number of stories being collected online – so we can then work on solutions.

What can you do to ensure women have equal access to public spaces? Your role can be as simple as sharing a story, talking about boundaries and consent, or helping out when you see harassment occurring. Every action helps and every action can bring us closer to Women’s Equality Day being a reality, not just a wish.

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Filed Under: News stories, Stories, street harassment Tagged With: groper, slasher, street harassment, upper east side groper, women's equality day

Eww. “He was having a wank”

August 26, 2011 By Contributor

I was catching the train and a group of younger teenage boys got on from the skate park. One of the youths moved away from his mates and stared at me. Getting uncomfortable I moved seats, then one of his mates called out to me and asked me why I moved away and did I enjoy their company. The youth that was in the seat on his own was having a wank and got busted when one of the other boys went over to talk to him. His mate then yelled out for the whole carriage to hear that he was having a wank over the girl sitting near the door…. me. I had no idea what to do and I didn’t want to get off at a random station where they could have followed me…

– A

Location: Brisbane, Australia

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Serial slasher stalks and marks girls in shopping malls

August 23, 2011 By HKearl

Lisa Kaplan Gordon via McLean Patch

Great opinion piece on McLean Patch by Lisa Kaplan Gordon about the “butt slasher” :

“Since February, a serial slasher has cut at least nine of our girls as they shopped in local malls – stalking and marking them, like an animal.

The youngest victim to step forward – I’ll call her Jessica, to protect her privacy – is the 15-year-old sitting on my couch, sipping water, talking in a soft quiver teenage girls use before they find their strong voice.

Jessica’s story starts around 7 p.m. on March 11, when she and a couple of friends did what ninth graders do on a Friday night – sail in and out of stores in Tysons Corner Center, trying on outfits and sampling lip gloss.

The girls were checking out H&M, a clothing store with good prices, when Jessica noticed a paunchy Hispanic man shopping alone, eyeballing her. She saw him again walking behind her posse as they made their way upstairs to a cosmetics store, and then for the last time when he dropped something beside her, which she stooped to pick up.

“I’m sorry,” Jessica said, eye-to-eye with the creep, repeating her go-to phrase whenever something seems amiss. She stood up, returned to her shopping, and then sensed a burn in the middle of her left buttocks. When she reached around, she felt a tear in her black leggings, and then saw her hand was covered in blood.

By the time Jessica realized she had been slashed, the creep was long gone.

“I don’t want people to think it’s some kinda big deal, or that I’m scarred for life,” Jessica says, trying to regain that teenage balance of standing out while blending in. “I don’t need or want pity for this. It hurt. It’s over. It’s fine.”

At 15, you think life either sinks you or leaves you unscathed.

At 50, you know every event has impact; that even the slightest turn of the wheel can change your direction entirely.

During the hour we talked, Jess said five times that her attack was no big deal. And, a lot of people seem to agree.

National media calls the creep a “serial butt slasher,” because “butt” at once titillates and trivializes the attacks, casts them as a bit of local color, like Italian men who pinch tourists cooling off at the Trevi Fountain.

Internet gossip monger Perez Hilton embedded a video of the slasher in a section labeled “Wacky, Tacky & True,” as though the attacks were publicity stunts or akin to wearing white after Labor Day.

I heard an ABC reporter say “the most serious injury was actually treated with a Band-Aid,” hinting that the slashes were benign because they hadn’t opened an artery, yet.

Even though Jess covered her two-inch wound with a Band-Aid, it bled all night and should have been closed with a couple of stitches, a doctor said in late July. That’s when Jess, after hearing about other attacks, worried about a possible blood infection from a dirty razor or box cutter and finally agreed to medical help.

“I was embarrassed about it,” Jess says, explaining why she didn’t see a doctor or report the attack to police for four months: Her mother did contact Tysons Corner Center security soon after the slashing, but never heard from mall security again.

Most of the time, Jess waves off the attack, mock-brags that the story is trending on Twitter, laughs when friends call her a “serial butt slashee.”

“It’s better to have them think it’s a joke,” she says, “than have to explain.”

But somewhere in suburban D.C. the sadistic creep is still at large. He’s following our girls, getting his sick kicks from slicing their skin, changing their lives in incalculable ways.

And there’s nothing funny about that.”

I agree, the term “butt slasher” makes it sound funny or weird instead of a serious crime. Maybe if the media called it assault there would be more outcry over the fact that a predator IS still at large attacking girls with a knife.

(Thanks to loyal reader MRH for the news tip)

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Filed Under: Stories, street harassment Tagged With: "butt slasher", assault

Eight street harassment incidents in one afternoon!!

August 22, 2011 By Contributor

I finished hanging out with my friend today and we parted ways at the Safeway on Columbia Road in  Washington, DC. As soon as we went our separate ways, the harassers came out of the woodwork and I was harassed eight times! Since moving to a mostly-white suburb, the harassment I face has decreased tremendously. I feel that being a black woman in this mostly-white area makes me pretty invisible, so facing this much harassment was a shock.

The first four harassment encounters happened along Columbia Road, between Ontario Road and 16th Street NW.

1. A guy sitting outside of Crumbs and Coffee—in a Crumbs and Coffee uniform —said, “Howya doin’ ?” in a sexual tone. I ignored him.

2. I passed one guy who looked me up and down and said, “Hello, baby, how you doin’?” I ignored him too.

3. A third man also looked me up and down and said, “Hey, beautiful—man, you are beautiful!” He also got ignored.

At this point I called my friend’s phone to leave a message about how ridiculous all these men are and how it happened the moment we split up. I think the behavior of these men is laughable. During this, a fourth man sitting on the sidewalk looked at me. I assumed he heard me on the phone and would be discouraged from saying anything, but nope!

4. The fourth man said, “Hey, baby, lookin’ good, baby.” Once again, I ignored him. He got an attitude, and said, “Hey…hey!” in this tone that read how dare I have the audacity to ignore him.

5. I turned right onto 16th Street, and I heard kissing noises made at me from someone’s car.

I finally got to Meridian Hill/Malcolm X Park, and I took the time to sit at the lower level of the park for a moment. I wanted to observe the drum circle, but I also wanted to clear my head before heading to the top level. The air looked dark and it looked like it was going to rain. I also saw men who seemed to be doing nothing but staring at me, so I moved away. When it looked like it was going to rain, the drummers started to pack up. I wanted to walk a few laps around the top level to clear my head, hoping that the rain wouldn’t start.

Meridian Hill Park harasser (#6)

This is where the harassment went from laughable to scary.

6. During my walk, I passed a man who said, “God bless you, beautiful” and crap like that. I tried to continue walking and he kept saying garbage, and I felt I did enough ignoring for today, so I turned to confront him.

“Don’t talk to me like that,” I said. “I don’t need you telling me I’m beautiful. I’m not an object, I don’t like being talked to like that, and you need to respect women and leave women you don’t know alone.” I felt I was calm, cool and collected. The harasser wasn’t hearing that, though.

The harasser said, “I was just trying to bless you and tell you you’re beautiful—“

“I don’t need nor do I want you to say anything to me,” I said. “Leave women you don’t know alone.”

This guy goes from trying to flatter me (so he thinks) to aggressive.

“Don’t tell me how to talk to you,” he said. “I can say whatever I want.”

“When it comes to how someone approaches me, I WILL tell you how to talk to me!” I replied.

It went back and forth like that until he started yelling, “I’m trying to tell you something, I’m trying to tell you something!” Then he says “DO-YOOU-HEEEEEEEEEAR-MEEEEEEEEEEEE?” loudly and slowly as if he thinks I’m slow.

“Yeah, I hear you,” I say. “You’re so loud, the whole DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA can hear you!”

The younger guy who was with him tried to get him to stop, but he wouldn’t. And the younger guy even laughed when I made that comment about the whole of DC being able to hear the harasser.

“I feel bad that you don’t think highly of yourself,” the harasser said. He was trying to say that my not wanting him to say I’m beautiful was because I didn’t think I was beautiful. BULLSHIT! I know I look good—I don’t need the validation of my appearance by some strange man!

After more nonsense this guy said, “I’m sick of you. I don’t want to hear you anymore. Fuck you, bitch! Go away!”

When it got violent with those words, I had to take his photo to submit to the street harassment sites. (He’s the turd in the green shirt.) That set him off even more.

“Fuck you, bitch! I’ll take your photo too!” he said, aiming his camera phone at me. I think I turned my head in time and he took shots of my back, but who knows. I’m nervous of what he’ll do with my picture if he did manage to get it, but as long as there’s no “Harassers Fight Back!: Keep Harassing Women” site that harassers use, I should be fine.

This drama had gone on long enough, so I walk away to call Park Police. He followed as if he was going to try something. The younger guy looked nervous and left, though he wasn’t the one harassing me. “I’m calling the police!” I yelled, and dialed them.

The harasser continued to yell, “Fuck you, bitch!” and acted like he was coming closer, but as soon as he heard me say, “I need Park Police to come to Meridian Hill Park since there’s a man saying ‘Fuck you, bitch!’ to me and acting like he’s going to start something,” he went to his bicycle and rode off. Damn, I thought, but I did get his picture, although my phone’s been acting up and the photo is small.

The wait for Park Police was the longest ever, and I felt so alone.

7. I waited at the 15th Street entrance near the northern end of the park, and this SUV with two guys stopped. Both leered at me. I roll my eyes. When were they going to leave?

“You can leave now…damn!” I said. I thought rolling my eyes and copping attitude would’ve been the hint to drive off, but the driver asked, “Girl, need a ride?”

I went off. “No, I don’t need a ride—damn! Fuck off!” and I flipped them the bird. They finally drove off.

8. When I went to wait at the middle entrance on the 15th Street side, a man with dreadlocks looked me up and down (don’t these harassers do anything original?) and said, “How you doin’, baby?” This was the last straw.

“Don’t call me baby,” I said, in a steely tone.

“Wha—?!” he said. “All I said was ‘How you doin’?'”

“There’s a HUGE fucking difference between ‘How you doin’?’ and ‘How you doin’, baby‘!” I snapped. He also tells me “Fuck you, bitch!”

I was riled up. If the police didn’t come soon I was going to leave. I felt vulnerable, I was on edge, and I was defensive. I caught myself even snapping at a kid who looked in my direction. “Don’t think about saying a damn thing to me!” I said, putting my hand up in the “talk to the hand” gesture. He looked nervous.

After 20 minutes, an officer finally arrived, apologizing for the delay. I relayed the story of the sixth harasser and show him the photo on my phone.

“Can you zoom in?” he asks.

“Unfortunately that’s the largest it is,” I said. But I remembered something about this harasser that made it easier to identify him.

“He has a nose ring,” I said. Since the photo was small, it was hard to see that.

“He does?” the officer said.

“The photo is small but he does have a nose ring,” I said. “Like a bull’s.”

As soon as I said that the officer told me he knew who this guy was, and would try to find him. Whether he did or not, I don’t know, but at least he seemed to care when it had seemed like no one did.

I felt that this barrage of harassment today set off other things, and my mood was just dour for hours. It also didn’t help that I got caught in the downpour when I finally was on my way home. During the worst harassment at the park, I was hoping someone would ask me if I was okay and act as a bystander ally, but none of that happened. This was either entertainment to some or people acted indifferently towards it. I was alone and felt vulnerable. If I came off as an angry and crazy, I have every right to be. That type of harassment can do that to a person.

I know what family and friends are going to say:

“You shouldn’t have overreacted.”
“You shouldn’t have argued with him.”
“You shouldn’t have taken his picture.”
“You should’ve just taken it as a compliment.”
“You should’ve ignored it.”

They’re going to tell me everything I was doing wrong instead of what really needs to be said: “Those men shouldn’t have said anything to you and should’ve left you alone.” But regardless of the reaction of my family and friend, I wouldn’t change a thing I did today and stand by my original actions 100%.

What I hate about the harassers is how they’ll flip the switch. You go from being “beautiful” to a “fucking bitch” for not accepting their unsolicited and unwanted “compliments.” They’ll try to deflect the blame on you, like for instance, if a minority harasser’s advances on a white woman are rejected, he calls her “racist” to try to make her look like the bad one and him the saint. Or with what I said above, the harasser tried to make it look like I had “low self-esteem” and needed someone like him to boost it. Harassers are living in a sorry world of complete illogic.

When back in my neck of the woods, I walked the trail to clear my head and get all of the stress from the earlier incidents out of my system. When I was heading back towards home, a guy riding his bike said, “Nice outfit” to me and I thanked him. This I took as a compliment because 1. he looked me in the eye, not up and down my body, and 2. he kept it moving. He, unlike harassers, didn’t have an ulterior motive or wanted anything out of it. So to those who say, “Learn how to take a compliment,” trust me, I know how to. What harassers do is not complimentary, it’s sick.

As I said earlier, I now live in a mostly-white suburb where I am almost invisible. While I feel it curbs the harassment greatly, I don’t like feeling invisible and being written off because the color of my skin. But going to DC it’s the complete opposite—I’m a walking target for street harassment, and most of my harassers have been black and Hispanic men. In this story, 1,2, 4, and 8 are black, and 3,6, and 7 were Hispanic. (I didn’t see who was in the car in 5 that made kissing noises at me.) I hate that these harassers have me on guard anytime I pass a black or Hispanic man on the street. I hate that these harassers have me lumping in good black and Hispanic men with them because I’d rather be safe than sorry. These idiots are ruining it for everyone. And I hate being seen as property by the harassers who are the same race as me—black—who think they can say anything to me because of a shared race.

I noticed a few white women running laps around the top level of the park but did these men try to talk to them? I doubt it. I feel as if minority harassers are scared to do this to white women because they know action will immediately be taken to protect these women (save for a few minority harassers bold enough to harass white women in the way I mentioned two paragraphs up), but black women and other women of color are fair game to these sorry excuses for men and I’m sick of it.

After all that went down at the park today, I didn’t want to go back. It was not fear, but embarrassment, remembering how people either ignored my being harassed or thought of it as entertainment. I didn’t want to return to the park as “that girl.” But then I thought, I love this park, this park has more character than any of the bland parks where I live. I see diversity, art, culture, and beauty in this park. I would love to return and hopefully catch a drum circle not interrupted by the rain. The park didn’t harass me—these men did!

I don’t like living where I feel invisible, but I don’t want to live in a place where I feel harassed either. I simply want respect. There’s got to be a balance somewhere.

– Anonymous

Location: Various areas in Washington, DC (listed throughout the post) on August 21, 2-3 p.m.

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Filed Under: Stories, street harassment Tagged With: racial harassment, street harassment

Street Harassment Snapshot: August 21, 2011

August 21, 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.

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

How Many Women Find Street Harassment Flattering?

Hollaback

Hollaback Berlin

Hollaback Birmingham

Hollaback Buenos Aires

Hollaback Chandigarh

Hollaback Czech Republic

Holla Back DC!

Hollaback Des Moines

Hollaback Dortmund

Hollaback Israel

Hollaback Istanbul

Hollaback NYC

Hollaback Philly

Hollaback Queretaro

Hollaback SoCal

Hollaback West Yorkshire

Street Harassment in the News, on the Blogs:

* Psychology Today, “‘Hey Baby’ Hurts“

* Essence, “Real Talk: Protecting Our Girls From Predators“

* NPR, “‘Holla Back DC!’ Calls Out Street Harassment“

* Bell Bajao, “Don’t Call Me, ‘Eve’”

* Richmond.com, “Hollaback! Network Comes To Richmond“

* The Third Estate, “Walk this way?“

* Te Waha Nui, “Women harrassed in the street start to holler back“

* Queens Chronicle, “A different groper in Jackson Heights” and YourNabe.com, “Lawmakers warn residents of E. Elmhurst groper“

* Jezebel, “Woman-Only Earphones are Strong Enough for Him But Made Just for Suckers“

* Yahoo News, “American girl in Italy: 60 years later” and my response on Stop Street Harassment, “‘American Girl in Italy’ DOES Depict Street Harassment“

* Groundswell Voices, “Jonell on Sexual Harassment, Street Harassment and “Hey Shorty!””

* Tip of a Tongue, “Open Letter #2.“

Announcements:

New:

* Are you in Baltimore, MD? A Goucher College student is looking for focus group participants to talk about street harassment as part of her thesis research. Details.

Reminders/On-Going:

* Do you have a stare that can turn #streetharassers to stone? Then participate in the Medusa Gaze Project! http://tinyurl.com/6fhh3tz

* 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. shani_o: No, old guy on the street that I do not know, I would not like to go to lunch with you

2. wardasahra @e_Chill I speak as a girl, and those street ‘flirts’ never make me smile or grin. They are never welcome and I view it as harassment.

3. sydmosley Despite the fact that #streetharassment sucks, there is a sisterhood, comraderie, mutuality in shared experience that is empowering.

4. femmeniste “Man, I need to get me a white girl,” says guy on the street while pointing at me. #Subtle #streetharassment #comeahhhhhhn

5. clairesgould Thursday night with a side of #streetharassment. Ugh. Come on, DC. The count is getting a bit high for August.

6. sallyzohney Been told harassment verbal n physical in #hussein skyrocketing in ramadan,almost no tourists around,street beggars all around. Sad!@EngyG

7. Salencita Still can’t describe how sad, yet comforted, I am that this tumblr exists howmanywomen.tumblr.com Street Harassment Sucks.

8. FeistyFeminist1 Don’t stare at me until I’m uncomfortable, say “Hey, Baby”, and then chuckle as I scoff & walk away. Asshole. #streetharassment

9. CharriseRenee It’s definitely not polite to beep your horn incessantly or catcall a young lady… #NoBueno

10. evachen212 Just heard a guy catcall a girl (not me, thank god) by shrieking “hey, sugar booger”. men, please note: that is not at all appealing

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

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