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Trafficking, sexual exploitation, rape … just another ordinary parasha

The prevalence of sexual harassment and mistreatment isn't just a social media hashtag for this week — it has been going on since the time of Abraham

October 23, 2017 11:56
Me-too.jpg
4 min read

In this week’s parasha, Lech Lecha, Abraham trafficks Sarah (don’t believe me? Look at the UN’s Office on Drugs and Crime definition), not once but twice, to save his own life; Sarah forces her maid of at least 10 years’ service to enter into a sexual relationship with her husband; Lot offers up his two unmarried daughters for the sexual gratification of the entire male population of Sodom in exchange for ensuring his guests’ safety; and, later, Lot is twice plied with alcohol and raped.

After last week’s media storm covering the widespread nature of sexual harassment and assault, questions abound. Why did Sarah not report Pharaoh to the Cairo Police Authority domestic abuse unit? Even if Sarah forgave her husband his first transgression, why did she not leave him after he trafficked her a second time? If Hagar had worn more modest clothing, would she have been saved from sexual abuse? Why did she not speak up at any point? Did anyone at Lot’s yeshiva ever teach him that, sadly, rapists are often people you know rather than strangers? 

Harvey Weinstein and the #MeToo hashtag must never be last week’s news. If you think that, for the most part, the issues of sexual harassment and assault are less prevalent within the Jewish community, you are wrong. If you think that women and children in the ultra-orthodox community are protected by virtue of strict observance concerning modest clothing and the separation of the sexes, you are wrong. If you think it used to happen ‘back then’ but things have changed and our children are safer, you are wrong.

The number of Jewish women who have never experienced non-contact harassment – for example, being forced to see a man’s genitalia; being leered at/catcalled; being subjected to inappropriate sexual talk or threats; receiving an unsolicited sexually suggestive photo; being sent an electronic message that includes unsolicited sexual content; walking down a road and being followed by a stranger who tries to engage you in flirtatious talk – is going to be somewhere close to zero. And that’s just the start: women are regularly subjected to wandering hands, groping, being pressed up against on a crowded train or bus.  (Feeling uncomfortable yet?  I hope so.)