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Youth in Jordan: “fed up with the way men harass women in public”

July 2, 2012 By HKearl

Human Chain in Jordon. Image via Albawaba.com

Last week, youth in Jordan formed a human chain from Al Hussein Sports City to the Interior Ministry Circle to protest various gender-based crimes, including street harassment, the practice of forcing rape survivors to marry their rapist, and honor killings.

Via Albawaba.com:

‘This is the first time activists from different women’s initiatives get together for a demonstration… it was a spontaneous event and we only thought of it a few days ago,’ said Toleen Touq, one of the organisers of the “There is no honour in crime” campaign.

She noted that the demonstration came after the ‘accumulation of years of suppression, discrimination and insult against women in Jordan.’

‘We wanted today [Monday] to get people’s attention. The fact that passers-by read the banners we held means that our ideas were delivered and they would start to think about them,’ Touq, an artist, told The Jordan Times.

Among the activists was 19-year-old Rasha Abu Dajar, who said she was ‘fed up with the way men harass women in public.’

‘Last week I was leaving school after sitting for a Tawjihi exam and a man kept following me and saying dirty words. It was not until I got home that he disappeared,’ she said, stressing that ‘whatever women wear is not an excuse for men to harass and insult them.’

Iraqi Ali Mahdi noted that his sisters do not feel comfortable walking in the capital’s streets, saying that harassment is tolerated in Jordan and is often treated as ‘justified.’

‘I wanted to stand today in solidarity with every woman who is subject to daily public harassment,’ he said.”

Good for them!! It takes a lot of courage to speak out against gender crimes when they are so normalized and common that they’re accepted and the people who speak out are seen as being in the wrong. May we all be so brave.

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Filed Under: News stories, street harassment Tagged With: activism, honor killings, jordon, sexual harassment, street harassment

“S.H.O.W You Care” (S.H.O.W. = Stop Harassment of Women) in Sri Lanka

June 25, 2012 By HKearl

Photo submission to the S.H.O.W. You Care Facebook page

To address the widespread problem of sexual harassment on public transportation in Sri Lanka, Sri Lanka Unites in Colombo is undertaking a unique project this week called S.H.O.W You Care (S.H.O.W. = Stop Harassment of Women).

Via Facebook:

“From June 25th to 30th in all bus routes in Colombo, students (from mostly boys schools) will board the buses according to a formulated plan and address the passengers in all three languages (Tamil, Sinhala, English):

1) apologizing to all women for any incidents of harassment they may have encountered in the past,
2) handing out leaflets highlighting the legal recourse available to women if they experience such treatment,
3) making a general statement of the right of women to be treated respectfully and the men taking the responsibility to safeguard this right and the negative reflection on them, if they fail.

These leaflets will also contain information regarding basic women’s rights and the actions that could be taken if one’s found violating them.”

It’s great that so many young men plan to participate…we must have boys/men involved in these efforts in order to make them truly successful.

Their decision to target bus riders is very smart. More than 70 percent of women aged 15 to 45 surveyed in Sri Lanka last year said they’d experienced sexual harassment on public transportation. The survey was conducted by the Legal Aid Commission. In other studies, it was revealed that more than 95 percent of women feel it’s unsafe to travel alone in public spaces in Colombo, and one in four women report sexual harassment on public transportation in the country, according to a report by the Transport Ministry.

Sri Lanka Unites is a grassroots youth movement that empowers youth to be the driving force of social change in the country. Already their initiative has received nice media attention. Look for another blog post later this week to recap how their efforts went.

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Filed Under: male perspective, News stories Tagged With: activism, male allies, Sri Lanka Unites, street harassment

Ukranian news anchor harassed on film

June 18, 2012 By HKearl

In this clip from a Ukrainian TV’s raw feed, a Ukranian news anchor tries to do a field piece story during a Dutch pride parade at Eurocup 2012, but for nearly three minutes she is continually interrupted by people in the parade.

While most of the people are just hamming it up for the video camera in front of her, around minute 2:25, a group of men surround her, rub against her, and make her uncomfortable to the point that she runs away. Very clearly harassment.

Would the passersby have treated a male anchor the same way? Perhaps some of the joking around for the camera would have been the same, but I doubt they’d engage in the kind of behavior that happens at 2:24.

Jockular.com, where I found this video, dubbed it “The funniest mass street harassment of a sports reporter in European history.”

AAHH. Yes, some of the people’s antics for the camera were funny, but when they focused their antics on the news anchor and when the group of men surrounded her and made her run away, it was NOT funny.

Street harassment is NOT a joke.

Thoughts?!

 

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Filed Under: street harassment Tagged With: dutch pride parade, news anchor, street harassment, ukranian tv

Petition Victory! Goodbye, Offensive Sign

June 18, 2012 By HKearl

Don’t underestimate the effectiveness of online petitions and social media!

Thanks to YOU, in just over 24 hours, around 1500 people asked that an offensive pro-harassment sign be removed from a construction area at MarketFair Mall in New Jersey.

I contacted the mall and was given the email address for Robyn Marano, the VP of Marketing for the mall and sent her information about the petition. She called me a few minutes ago and let me know that the mall would remove the sign tonight, after all of the customers were gone from the mall.

Victory!!

When I launched the petition yesterday (my first) on Change.org with the support of the amazing activist Shelby Knox who works there, I had the lofty goal of 250 signatures. Because so many people shared the link, tweeted it, posted it on Facebook, and wrote about it (like on Feminist Philosophers & Jezebel), it surpassed that goal very quickly.

Thank you for your help and congratulations on helping make MarketFair Mall a more welcoming environment for shoppers by pressuring them to take down the offensive pro-harassment sign.

This is what online activism looks like.

(And, as stated a few other places, I apologize for wrongly associating E A Reeves construction with this sign. They were not responsible for it.)

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Filed Under: street harassment Tagged With: change.org, MarketFair Mall, social change, street harassment

Sign petition to take down pro-street harassment construction sign

June 17, 2012 By HKearl

Change.org|How to Start a Petition

Please sign this petition asking for the removal of a sign at a New Jersey Mall that reads, “We apologize for the whistling construction workers, but man you look good!”

Sexual harassment is illegal, not a joke or a compliment, and public sexual harassment impacts more than 80 percent of women worldwide, especially when they’re young.

Construction companies should view sexual harassment as something to penalize their workers for doing, not as something to encourage their workers to do, especially at a mall where there are so many teenage girls who could be the target of the harassment.

Help me reach 250 signatures!

This petition was made possible because of these individuals: Katie Broendel who alerted me to the sign yesterday morning, Feminist Philosophers for posting the sign on their blog (which Katie saw and sent to me), Elizabeth Harman for taking the photo of the sign and then telling me where it was located, Alan Kearl for researching the name of the construction company, and Shelby Knox for suggesting the Change.org petition strategy.
Update 6/18 — My apologies to the E. A. Reeves construction company who is not responsible for the sign as I first thought.

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Filed Under: street harassment Tagged With: change.org, E. Allen Reeves Construction Company, MarketFair Mall, petition, sexual harassment, street harassment

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