Coco was walking around the intersection
of Somerset and Preston streets when two men said hello
to her in what she considered to be a creepy manner.
She ignored them, but they stopped her again later that day and
tried to convince her to have a drink with them.
A few days after the first incident, they approached her again.
She yelled back and called the police, but she was still left
feeling powerless.
Cocos story, as told on her blog, is not a unique one.
In an interview, she asked not to have her real name published
Coco is the name she uses in her blog for fear
of attracting the wrath of psychos.
Coco has become part of a new movement of people who use online
journals or blogs to discuss and fight what is called street
harassment.
I wanted to empower myself, she says. I think
the blog is a great tool to fight back against harassment.
Street harassment happens in public places when a person makes
someone feel threatened, either verbally or through their body
language, as the harassed person is in transit within that public
area, says Elsy David, program director of Womens Initiatives
for Safer Environments.
Groups like the Womens Initiative for Safer Environments
say an action can be considered harassment as soon as a person
is given unwanted attention and is made to feel unsafe.
But the definition of criminal harassment is highly subjective,
making it hard for victims to bring the matter forward.
Street harassment does not exist in the criminal code, and is
lumped together with the various other kinds of harassment, such
as workplace harassment or phone harassment, says Staff Sgt.
Monique Ackland of the Ottawa Police.
Coco says she contacted the police after the second incident,
but was told there was nothing they could do because the men
did not follow her home or behave in an overtly threatening manner.
However, she maintains it was harassment, adding that she feels
offended that men can freely accost women in the streets.
Its not just hello in their minds,
she says. It could be nice ass, but theyre
hiding it in hello.
Cocos research led her to two other blogs in New York City
and India, where women deal with harassment by taking photographs
of the offending individuals and posting them in the blog.
She says the blogs prompted her to start her own as a way of
fighting street harassment and venting her feelings.
Jessica Carfagnini, public education co-ordinator at the Sexual
Assault Support Centre of Ottawa, says blogs are valuable because
people can now bear witness to a crime which often goes unreported.
Picture a woman at the water cooler talking about her experiences,
with people going how terrible, its happened to me
too, says Carfagnini, who also blogs about her own
experiences with harassment. Its about sharing experiences
and validating other women so they know theyre not alone.
She says the challenge with street harassment is its often
done by a stranger, and a single person could be harassed by
many different people, which makes it difficult to report.
The vast majority of women will say yes if you ask them
if theyve been hooted or hollered at, she says. We
just get used to it, and may downplay the fear.
Ackland says Cocos case was definitely not a case of criminal
harassment, and emphasizes how difficult it is to define harassment
in many cases.
If I come by your house every day and say hello and you
dont like it, Im not a criminal, Im just stupid,
she says.
Ackland says harassment can be defined as repeated actions and
words which are not necessarily threatening, but are unwelcome
nonetheless.
However, criminal harassment is evaluated case by case and is
too open for interpretation to be explained in a hypothetical
situation.
As there are limited avenues for dealing with street harassment,
womens groups agree blogs could be a good way for victims
to voice their anger and embarrassment.
Keeping a journal is a good idea as victims can use it
to start keeping a paper trail of the harassers description
and so on, says David.
Since she started the blog, Coco says she isnt angry any
more and doesnt have the time to run the blog on her own.
But she says she hopes community groups will step forward to
help her run it in the continuing fight against street harassment,
and victims will submit photos and stories about their experiences.
If this idea is broadcast, it could attract the attention
of people who have been harassed, she says. We can
then self-police, and start a community blog, a village, to tell
stories and reach people.
Cocos blog can be found at http://safestreet.blogspot.com.
om/ and http://blanknoiseproject.blogspot.com/2005/06/note-car-no.html. |