Victims of Amherst rape cover ups and the hings that were said to them |
So if rape and abuse is so common among our friends why do we never hear about it? I think there are several reasons. Firstly, a lot of people don’t even realise they’ve been abused because, as a society, we do a pretty bad job of explaining to women how they should expect to be treated. The second reason is because of slut shaming and victim blaming. In a nutshell, both these attitudes tell women that if they have been raped it was their own fault.
"If you didn't want to have sex with him, why were you sitting on his bed two weeks before?" |
Don’t believe it? I didn't either at first. When I first read about victim blaming I thought it was the love child of feminism and a persecution complex, but the more I thought about it the more I noticed it. Have you ever heard of a woman being abused and asked yourself what she was wearing? Or whether she went to the guy’s apartment, or if she led him on? We seem to think that some women, judging by their behaviour or what they were wearing were ‘asking for it’. When we say this we are not teaching ‘don’t rape’, we’re teaching don’t get raped. You could be walking down a dark alley way in the middle of the night wearing nothing but a ‘come hither’ smile. That still would not make you deserving of rape. Admittedly it’s not a good idea, and you’d be very cold, but it does not justify rape. Nothing does. No one is allowed to rape you or treat you with anything less than respect and dignity. No matter what you are wearing. No matter where you are. No matter how much you’ve had to drink.
"C'mon, you go out every weekend. Stop telling people he raped you or my teammates won't want to pregame in our room anymore" |
Here's my 1 step plan to not raping:
Step 1: Don't rape.
Seems pretty simple to me.
Unfortunately porn has nurtured the dehumanisation of woman, rendering them an object and making their consent irrelevant. Rape is something that will always be a reality in any society, and no amount of campaigning will stamp it out. But it is a reasnoble expectation of our generation, that we can blame rapists for rape. Not victims.
Rape culture tells me that I should feel flattered by comments yelled from car windows, or by the inevitable groping every time I go out. Sadly we get used to it. The first time I went clubbing I yelled at every guy who touched me. The first one who did it found his hand seized, a finger pointed, and me in his face, mouthing a very eloquent argument that he probably couldn’t hear over the music. His friends thought this was hilarious and proceeded to grope me every time I turned around, high fiving each other and laughing about how hilarious they were being. Many years later I was waiting at a Sydney bus stop with a homeless man yelling at me for ten minutes straight, until my bus arrived, the content of which is not public forum appropriate. I kept looking at the people around me expecting some of the guys to step up and say something, but no one did, even the guy sitting next to him in the bus shelter. Only stony, shame faced silence from the five or six men at the bus stop. Last year I was on a bus to uni when I felt something on my ribcage. I looked down to find the hand of the man behind going in for a sneaky grope. I shoved his hand off but thought that if I was to turn around and yell at him for touching me theres a chance no one would defend me, the man wouldn't change, I'd probably get kicked off the bus. Why do I expect this reaction? Because we live in a rape culture. These experiences are not rare. Ask the girls around you. We've all got stories. AmIrite, ladies?
"Why couldn't you fight him off?" |
We often compare ourselves to the wrong end of the spectrum. We look to the worst horror stories of abuse and we think ‘my situation is nothing like that’. The Bible tells us that we are fearfully and wonderfully made. We are sons and daughters of the most high God, we are loved and treasured by him. So we need to look at the other end of the spectrum. The one where are people are being treated with the dignity and respect that God meant for us. If you look at that end and can still say ‘my situation is nothing like that’ then something needs to change, and it’s not you.
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