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Yoni Birnbaum

ByYoni Birnbaum, Rabbi Yoni Birnbaum

Opinion

Torah's take on sexual abuse

October 21, 2016 11:00
3 min read

In the immediate aftermath of the publication of the now infamous obscene Trump videotape, Canadian writer Kelly Oxford decided to ask women to tweet their "first experiences of sexual assault", under the hashtag #notokay. She described the results as "harrowing". For 14 hours straight, she received a minimum of 50 tweets per minute, each recording a separate instance of assault. Two days later, she was still receiving tweets "every second".

Sadly, it would be wishful thinking to expect that the results would be any better in this country. According to the national Coalition to End Violence Against Women, a woman is raped in Britain every six minutes, and sexual bullying and harassment are "routine" in UK schools.

In conjunction with International Women's Day on March 8, a YouGov survey asked 889 women in the UK whether they had experienced some form of sexual harassment in public places, such as inappropriate comments or unwanted advances from strangers. Shockingly, two-thirds (64 per cent) of the women questioned said they had experienced such unwanted behaviour. More than 63 per cent admitted that they generally felt unsafe in public places.

The Coalition's co-director Sarah Green demanded that society "hold up a mirror" to this behaviour and challenge it. According to Green, "girls and young women are growing up in the UK today being exposed to unwanted sexual attention, harassment and assault." As a result, she argues that, "we need to really question any idea that this behaviour is trivial or in any way acceptable given what we can see about its impact."