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“Then threw rocks at my car while we were driving”

April 15, 2017 By HKearl

On 4/6/17 the driver of the van for the company Grooming on the Go…address on van is 126 Columbia Avenue in Jericho, NY, was tailgating me and then threw rocks at my car while we were driving in the pouring lane on Jericho Tpke heading West off of Rte 106 South and then sped away. I took pictures and posted them on Yelp and Google so anyone seeing this van would stay clear of him. Owner’s name is Nick Pepe but phone number on website just rings and according to his old neighbors he just moved with his wife and son so he is no longer at that address. This person is dangerous and should be taken off the street by the police.

– Anonymous

Location: Jericho NY

Need support? Call the toll-free National Street Harassment hotline: 855-897-5910

Share your street harassment story for the blog.
See the book 50 Stories about Stopping Street Harassers for idea
s.

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Filed Under: Stories, street harassment

“You’ve got nice legs but your nose is too big”

April 14, 2017 By Contributor

I was 12 years old. I was walking along a busy street with my mother. A man leaned out of a car and shouted, “You’ve got nice legs but your nose is too big”. It made me feel scared and ashamed, and suddenly conscious of my appearance.

Optional: What’s one way you think we can make public places safer for everyone?

Educate everyone about equality, and how harassment affects people. Make misogyny a hate crime.

– Anonymous

Location: London, UK

Need support? Call the toll-free National Street Harassment hotline: 855-897-5910

Share your street harassment story for the blog.
See the book 50 Stories about Stopping Street Harassers for idea
s.

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Filed Under: Stories, street harassment Tagged With: 12 years, young age

Microaggressions, Major Impacts

April 11, 2017 By Contributor

Guest blog post by Lindsay Linning

To write is the only form of catharsis I can find. Because as a coping mechanism, often all I can do in the moment is mentally file away the harasser, the location, the feeling, into the annexes of my mind, to ferment nicely until the time comes when I take to my keyboard to document and immortalise the incident. It is my small victory, using the fury it invokes to fuel a creative pursuit like writing.

In doing the research for my dissertation on males’ perceptions of street harassment in the UK, I have read countless accounts, many atrocious in nature, of instances of street harassment that have escalated into something more sinister. Sexual assault, rape, physical violence, for example. These stories serve as proof of why we must never perceive street harassment as innocuous fun.

In my own life I have been at the receiving end of stalking, public masturbation, and violence. This handful of incidents punctuate my otherwise mundane personal history of harassment in public by men, and are typically the anecdotes I refer to when substantiating my arguments for why this phenomenon must be taken more seriously by certain individuals. They are the incidents which invoke a look of shock, disdain or disgust in the face of the listener, or are met with a degree of incredulity – ‘There’s no way in my beautiful city that this could happen!”

Sensational stories involving sex and violence have a cinematic quality, stimulating the voyeur within us. They are the incidents which have made the men I know sit up, take note, and imagine for a moment or longer what it is like to be a typical female, leading a typical life, in the world today. They are valuable.

But what about those more frequent, more mundane, innumerable microaggressions? The ones we label as ‘not that bad’ and forget and accept because that’s what the world has conditioned us to do as women and girls? These too are valuable. The risk we run is that daily experiences are invalidated, overwritten and pushed out of focus by the more extreme stories we have become accustomed to considering more worthy of our attention. There needs to be space to acknowledge the seemingly mundane alongside the major.

It has been this accumulation of daily micro-harassments across my life that has collectively instilled a building fury within me towards the lived reality we contend with on a daily basis as females, rather than the more shocking and obscene experiences I’ve had.

My problem lies with men in cars. The car affords men a certain power in instances of harassment. With a car, no sooner have you been intruded upon than the perpetrator has sped off, leaving you powerless on the pavement. You can’t retaliate, you have no agency, and are left to shake off the incident, awash with anger and/or fear.

Sometimes I wonder if vehicles allow men to behave more audaciously in public in a manner akin to how the internet enables online trolls to unleash a side to their personalities that would remain unseen were it not for the anonymity afforded to them by the internet. People can use the internet and vehicles as tools to provoke, intimidate and threaten without bearing any consequences: they never come face to face with their victim. It’s a highly unequal game of cowardice. This is reflected in how some feel entitled to glare, ogle, shout ,gesticulate and blast horns from their cars to an extent I have found does not happen face-to-face on the street. Harassers in cars have led me to feel physically assessed, menaced, taunted and panicked. There are different nuances every time. If these men did this walking down the street, there would be repercussions: I could retaliate, report them, or alert fellow passers-by. Safely cocooned within their cars, however, harassers feel a sense of liberty and their safe space enables them to strip others of their own sense of safety.

Efforts must be sustained to ensure microaggressions of street harassment are not overlooked or dismissed. Because they too have a cumulative effect on the victim and while they may not escalate into more pronounced forms of violence, they chip away at women, reminding us that we are not out in the world on an equal footing with the men around us. Until the harm of living in this day-to-day reality is acknowledged, I’ll keep writing.

Lindsay is an MSc student at the University of Edinburgh in Sociology and Global Change. She’s working with the Edinburgh branch of Hollaback! and is researching street harassment for her dissertation.

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Filed Under: street harassment

“He slowed right down and drove alongside me”

April 10, 2017 By Contributor

I was 7 months pregnant. I was walking home one evening. A man, who runs local estate agency, Besley Hill, was driving towards me on an otherwise empty street. He slowed right down and drove alongside me, leaning out of his car window, leering at me. I felt scared.

Optional: What’s one way you think we can make public places safer for everyone?

Make men think about their actions.

– Anonymous

Location: Chelsea Road, Bristol

Need support? Call the toll-free National Street Harassment hotline: 855-897-5910

Share your street harassment story for the blog.
See the book 50 Stories about Stopping Street Harassers for idea
s.

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Filed Under: Stories, street harassment

Day 7: International Anti-Street Harassment Week 2017

April 9, 2017 By HKearl

Yesterday was the final day of the 7th annual International Anti-Street Harassment Week! Here are some highlights from that day as well as the extra events that occurred today

  • You can view more photos of the actions in our photo album.
  • Check out the list of media coverage.

Here are more photos from the International Wheatpasting Night led by Stop Telling Women to Smile on April 7. People participated in Berlin (Germany), Duluth (Minnesota), Albuquerque (New Mexico), New Orleans (Louisiana), Chicago (Illinois), New York (New York), London (UK), Bristol (UK) and Toronto (Canada).

Afghanistan:

Free Women Writers released a second street harassment video.

Canada:

Hollaback! Ottawa hosted a sidewalk chalking.

Croatia:

Hollaback! Croatia held a flash mob.

France:

Stop Harcèlement de rue – Toulouse hosted a gathering where people could share their street harassment stories and strategies.

Germany:

ProChange engaged in street action in Dortmond.

Mexico:

La Ciudad es Nuestra held street action and chalking in Mexico City.

Nepal:

“Youth Demonstration against street Harassment” was organized by Youth Advocacy Nepal in partnership with various like minded organizations including ActionAid Nepal, Campaign for People-Led sustainable Development, NDYN, Dalit Youth Alliance and among others at Maitighar Mandala.

The Philippines:

UN Women Safe Cities Metro Manila conducted focus group discussions and follow-up/refresher workshops with tricycle drivers; held in Bagong Silangan, Quezon City. They also met with the local government official in the barangay (the village head) to outline what support they need to implement Quezon City’s anti-sexual harassment in public spaces law.

Poland:

Hollaback! Poland invited people to share their stories using the hashtag #STOPmolection.

UK:

Proactive Dance launched the Cat-Call Counter Attack! It is a site responsive dance piece that seeks to playfully agitate and reclaim the streets around the Royal Festival Hall and Southbank Centre in London.

USA:

Rallies were held in three cities:

Atlanta, Georgia (led by Slutwalk Atlanta – watch a video of it)

New York City (led by Hollaback)

Washington, D.C. (led by Collective Action for Safe Spaces)

Brooklyn Movement Center’s anti-street harassment working group No Disrespect, The Safe OUTside the System Collective of the Audre Lorde Project, and Culture Push hosted street action. There was screen printing, de-escalation skills sharing and opportunities to plug in to local organizing.

Maryland: FORCE: Upsetting Rape Culture held a quilting workshop for the Monument Quilt to honor survivors of sexual violence in Baltimore.

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Filed Under: anti-street harassment week, street harassment

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