2.7.07

Looking

One of my closest friends has a problem with Blank Noise. It's a very specific problem and every time we enter into the argument, we follow the same familiar patterns: I feel obliged to adopt a feminist perspective of outrage at what he's saying and he assumes an alpha male aggressive position that is cleverly bound into a rights argument. “How can you stop me looking,” he'll ask, in mock outrage. Not a moralistic outrage but from a position that sees the act of looking as a sort of basic right. As long as I do not harm you, touch you, attack you... what right have you to stop me just looking?

And I will counter him, trying my best to avoid slipping into the nebulous and often weakening terrain of argument that rests on “personal experience”, by keeping this argument within the realm he has defined – one of rights. Are we denying someone a basic right when we say we “object” to being looked at in a way that is unwanted, sexually aggressive, invasive? Who decides when someone's look has changed from “Eesh, what terrible clothes” to one that is unsolicited and sexual?

In a sense the parameters of this debate seem to have already been defined by Section 509 of the Indian Penal Code that Annie has just written about. It mentions criminal liability for “words, gestures, sounds and exhibition of objects” and through that list has acceded that physical contact is not the only invasion that can be punished. It leaves out looking – why? Because this is too nebulous, too open to conflicting interpretation to be codified by law?

Blank Noise has always maintained however that a look which is invasive (you could call it a “leer”, I suppose), persistent in the face of expressed disapproval from its recipient and unwanted is equatable to harassment. “But if a girl is pretty of course I will stare at her,” says Alpha Male. And Alpha Female would agree that she would stare at a hot guy too. But initial interest is invariably tempered by the response to it. In seconds you will know if you are making someone uncomfortable. When you persist with your looking beyond that initial stage, you are being invasive. This is not a naive, innocent act anymore, it is not someone “looking” around at their environment or “glancing” at a pretty girl. It is a knowing incursion into someone's private space that is making them uncomfortable. The breaching of the line where the “right” to look infringes upon the other's right to “be” - stand, walk, wait for a bus without being hassled – is one that the perpetrator of the look is always keenly aware of. We assume this when we talk about "looking". This looking despite knowing it is unsolicited and making someone uncomfortable is what we are addressing.

Take a crowded narrow road like Bangalore's Brigade Road, for instance. Men drape themselves on the railings, looking at women passing by. Of course they are not always just looking. They reach out as well, to poke, pinch, grab. In the rush and the melee of all the concentrated shopping that unfolds on that street, women often just look downward, avert the male gaze and hurry past. But sometimes, when you're out shopping, you want to just wander down a road. You want to take your time, looking at stores, making eye contact with people walking the same street that you are. You don't want to have to seem like you're apologising for your presence on a public street. And yet when you're met by people “looking” at you (“checking you out”, “leering”, “sussing you”), you shrink into the barest minimal space and hurry on.

Blank Noise began holding interventions along the long stretch of road which was so far dominated by men. Power equations defined by the dominant male presence were challenged and then flipped as women from Blank Noise occupied the railings along the road, looking back at men who looked at them. Men were eased off the railings as women took over them. Often on these interventions there would be as many as 40 women along the railings on that road: a space which was usually occupied by women hurrying down it, looking downward now had women lounging around, enjoying what is, essentially, a public space for everyone to lounge around in.

So when men suggest that looks are easily misunderstood, I wonder if this is something that only men could believe. Blank Noise isn't talking about meeting someone's eye when you walk along a street. We're not talking about thinking “oh, that girl's cute!” at a bus stand and then walking on. We're talking about persistent, annoying, invasive looking which is completely unmindful of the response of the person you're subjecting to your insensitivity and “desire”.

We're talking about this.


And this.



Like that man on the train who reached out repeatedly to make my journey hell and then, pleading forgiveness, told me “he could not help it”.

"Looking" is not always a neutral, innocent act.


27.6.07

Hostility, or My name is not Neha.

Delhi, June 17th.
7pm - 11pm

Connought Place is a funny place. Broad spaces outside shops all around two concentric rings. Crowded, but rarely overcrowded. And yet, and yet, not free of harassment, or eve-teasing.
That's why, on June 17th, we chose to do a night intervention there.

About seven of us met at M block. The plan was to do some stencilling (using spray paint, on the floor/road/pavement). It turned out to be a very busy night, for we got down to the business of spray cans and stencils, starting with the bus stops leading from M block to Regal cinema.

Responding to a last-minute idea, we'd also decided to do some chalking. With coloured chalk, we would either write testimonials on the walls, or simply 'IPC 509'. That is, remind people about the existence of section 509 of the Indian Penal Code.

In the afternoon, earlier, we had been chatting about IPC sections 509 and 354, the laws applicable to street sexual harassment and how there's so little discussion about the criminal aspect. In fact, even the volunteers tend to forget which sections of the law apply.

[Of the two, section 509 seemed the more obvious choice, because it is "broader in its purview. It includes words, gestures, sounds or exhibition of objects with a view to insult the modesty of a woman. It also includes the words “intrudes upon the privacy of a woman”. Section 354 requires "that there be assault or criminal force used intending to outrage the modesty of a woman or knowing that it will outrage her modesty." This deals with attempted rape or actual physical assault, but may not cover all aspects of sexual harassment.]

On shutters, wooden boards, corners. We chalked 'IPC 509' everywhere we could, in the hope that it will force people to think what it is and why it is there. Maybe even the cops would notice and remember its existence.

The stenciling this time was an interesting experience. We'd always been met with interest, and curiosity, until now. This time, we saw hostility. Our plan had been to tackle the space around movie theatres in CP. These are the busiest spots and on a weekend, we'd have the most people reading those testimonials.

Near Rivoli cinema, I'd barely finished stenciling one testimonial (which reads like 'Neha, age ..., time.... pm. Some men made rude comments and when I protested, the public laughed. My dupatta was snatched away'.]

One man stood right next to me and his foot shifted the stencil. Abhishek, one of our volunteers, asked him to step back a little, and he wouldn't. I had to step back and when the stencil was removed, this man aggressively started asking - 'What is this?'

We told him to read it himself. That's what it was there for.

He read it and started yelling. He told us, we were doing something wrong, that it was not done, that he would call the cops.

He asked me if I was Neha. He demanded to know who Neha was, and if she wasn't here, why were we writing those words down?

We sensed it was time to move, and tried to, but a crowd had gathered and by the time we managed to break away, a cop was on the scene. The man was still yelling.

By then, it was fairly apparent that the man was drunk, and the cop let us move on, without further ado. The evening proceeded smoothly there on. We did most of our stencilling just outside or inside subways, which were likely to have a lot of visibility. When paint and energy ran out, we split and went home.

However the hostility was interesting. In retrospect, I believe that we needed to witness it. That man, drunk as he may have been, was openly critical. What is even more interesting was that the crowd around us seemed hostile too, taking his cue from him.

He (and many others) responded with a testimonial of a girl being harassed with anger. Not empathy, not defensiveness, but anger. Also, he felt we were victimizing the girl - the mythical 'Neha'. He felt, we were insulting her. In his view, the insult does not lie in the act, but in the acknowledgment and public declaration of it happening.

This is something we've been struggling with for a while. Many women, when they do talk of sexual harassment, speak of it in a hushed way. Maybe they're not ashamed, but there is a lingering sense of shame - as if to be viewed as a sexual object/being is wrong.

I think it is worth thinking about: that we get harassed everyday, within this cultural context. In a context where being sexual - and how can you not be? - is 'wrong', the very fact that you're out there, dressed in anything ranging from a mini to a burqa, the fact that you are who you are - and you are inescapably a sexual being too - will be perceived as 'wrong'.

24.6.07

30th June- 7th July BLANK NOISE IN YOUR CITY




Thankyou for signing up to participate in the Blank Noise meet on June 30th + event on July 8th.

The venue and time for each city will be announced shortly.

Please email us at blurtblanknoise@gmail.com to confirm your attendance.

Thankyou

Names of people signing up from each city:

Hyderabad: Jaya Krishna, Kunal Singla, Kanakarao Kodidasu, Vishnu Reddy, Kunal Singla
Time: 5 pm
Location: Lawns to the right of EAT STREET

Delhi: Abigail Crisman, Annie Zaidie, Abhishek Baxi, Harneet Bhatia, Ritambhara Mehta, Amit Kendurkar, Upasna Wahi, Namita Arora, Aishwarya Subramanium, Jappreet Kitty, Purba Sarkar....
Time: 6 40 pm.
Location: MEET AT THE JNU GATE. from there a Blank Noise member will take you through a secret passage to your meeting zone. be prepared!!

Mumbai: Pallavi Sen, Reema Banerjee, Asavari Gill, Kanishka Sonthalia, Nisha Chandwani, Tracy Alex
Time: 5 pm
Location: Colaba. BARISTA

Chennai: Vidya V. Raja, Sukanya Ragunath, Vivekanand, Jessica Richard, Neelam Jain, Hamsini Ravi
Time: 5 pm
Location: Coffee World, RA PURAM


Bangalore: Rohan Gonsalves, Richa Ranjan, Neha Sahi, Sindhu, Yamini, Anushree, Tharunya Balan, Anupama GS, Pallavi K, Ratna Apnender,.....
Time: 5 pm
Location:India Coffee House

Cochin: Bad Dog, Abhilash Narayan+ colleagues from work,.....
Time: 5pm
Location:- Cocoa Tree,Avenue Regent

Lucknow: Nabila Zaidi, Snigdha, Noaman Khan, Shinjini Singh, Ankita Pandey, Bela Krishna, Dhruv Halwasiya, Kiri Atri, Dr Manoj Singh , Rashi Ahuja, Ridhima, Aiman Khan+ 10 people.....
Time:4 pm
Location: Cafe Coffee Day, Gomti nagar


Kolkata: Sunayana Roy, Dana Roy, Anuj Dasgupta, Madhura Chakraborty
Time: 5 pm
Location: T 3

Lahore/ Pakistan: Mina Farid Mallik....+
Time: 2 pm
Location:

22.6.07

BLANK NOISE MEETING IN YOUR CITY- 30TH JUNE




Because you emailed us and told us all about 'eve teasing' in your city. Because you believe it's time we did something!


Are you in:

Delhi, Hyderabad, Mumbai, Lucknow, Chennai, Kolkata, Bangalore, Cochin and Lahore/ Pakistan.

This 30th of June,Saturday
we open the project to you by inviting you to participate in the next Blank Noise meet.
This meeting attempts to bring about and document a discussion about street sexual harassment/ eve teasing in the cities. It also
initiates a process following which the Blank Noise communities will intervene in the streets of their cities.

The street intervention will take place 2 weeks from the 30th of June- July 7th. The intervention idea will develop from a 2 week process the new team follows.

The meeting will re introduce you to Blank Noise/ history/ future/ present. It will be moderated by volunteers from your cities.

Blank Noise is open to everyone. Blank Noise is open to people from different age groups. Please be there if you are:

Have experienced street sexual harassment.
Have caused street sexual harassment.
Have witnessed street sexual harassment.

If you do not have 2 week commitment phobia :)
If you have never dealt with it
If you think you can deal with it
If you ignore it
If you are curious
and most importantly: if you are willing to listen, share and understand.

This will be our first meet in Lucknow, Lahore, Cochin!
The third meet in Kolkata
millionth meet in Mumbai, Chennai, Hyderabad
+millionth meet in Bangalore and Delhi

The cities have been selected based on the emails we have received from people wanting to initiate Blank Noise there.

Join us as we renew/ recyle/ repeat/ refresh/ re start/ re birth/ re juvenate/ exchange

To participate email us at blurtblanknoise@gmail.com subject titled BLANK NOISE MEET- 'CITY NAME' Please email us asap so that we can add your name to the blog and confirm your participation. Do send us your contact details- phone no. too and a little note about yourself.

Bring along friends, neighbours, family!

See you!

Blank Noise Team

21.6.07

Number-plated memory

Young man. Striped shirt. Big-ish car... cannot tell which make; never cared enough about models and names.

Young man leans out to ask for directions. The rest is a familiar, old story.

'Where is PVR Saket?'
'Do you live around here?'
'Would you like to come with me to PVR?'

And after I say 'No', he says, 'Fucking bitch'.

I stop, turn around, take a good, long look at him. No words. I glance down at his number plate, and walk on ahead.

He follows.

'Excuse me, ma'am. Sorry, ma'am.'

Whoever was driving HR29 Q 1782, on Monday evening, June 18th, 2007, is not a very nice young man. The apology was not accepted.

[Cross-posted on known turf]

16.6.07

Night Action Plan 3!


It's Delhi again!

Be part of our 3rd Night Action Plan. The group meets at 7 pm at CP Barista, M block on Sunday
(tomorrow) June 17th.

The activity will conclude by 10 pm... come along and bring your friends/ family too!

The act requires you to be quick/ fast and spontaneous. It isn't acrobatic- just adventurous.

To confirm email us at blurtblanknoise@gmail.com.

19.5.07

What do you want?


Some want to walk across the moon. Some just want to walk in the rain.

Some want to touch a stranger. Some want not to be touched by strangers.

Some want to stretch their arms, high, over their heads. Some want not to shave.


Some months ago, the women spoke up about what they wanted from their cities. Their dreams, their fantasies about public spaces. Their responses were documented as ' I wish, I want, I believe.'

Now, it is the men's turn.
We want to know what you want from the city, and we especially want to hear what you want from women in public spaces. What do you wish, want, dream, desire? Tell us by leaving a comment here, or sending an email to blurtblanknoise@gmail.com

You can be anonymous, if you choose.

16.5.07

BLANK NOISE KOLKATA


Blank Noise started in Kolkata this May! This means we have started group discussions, created a google group and are ready to take on the first phase-
that of listening and documentating testimonials of men and women in this city,
You could be anyone, any age, write to us at blurtblanknoise@gmail.com if you want to be part of the Kolkata Blank Noise community.
To be part of the Kolkata mailing list sign up at :

making your city safe for me

TO DO
google: ban on women in karnataka

9.5.07

BLANK NOISE IN KOLKATA!


You are invited to attend the first Blank Noise meeting in Kolkata

Saturday 12th May
4 45 pm at T3- Park Street

Please let me know if you will be there...and do bring along anyone who might be interested.

blurtblanknoise@gmail.com to enquire or confirm
My temporary calcutta no. is 990311 9885

Looking forward to seeing you!

Jasmeen for Blank Noise