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I discovered it almost by accident.  My friend had been raped.  But this had not just happened; it had actually occurred several years ago.  Sadly, she could tell me the exact date, time and minute that the rape transpired. 

I asked her whether she had pressed charges.  Her answer was ‘no.’ I asked her whether she had spoken with her family about it, and her answer was ‘no.’ I sat there aghast until she filled in the story. 

The rapist was a respected family friend.  He, apparently, had been coming on to my friend — who was CONSIDERABLY younger than him — to the point of making my friend very uncomfortable.  She communicated this to a brother of hers who was friendly with the soon-to-be rapist.  The brother was told by the soon-to-be rapist that this was all in the imagination of my friend and that my friend had misunderstood his words.  The entire family believed the soon-to-be rapist. 

Subsequently the rapist visited the house when my friend was there alone.  Despite my friend’s pleas that he stop, he sexually assaulted her.  Raping her without a condom, he gave her human papillomavirus (HPV), a contributor toward cervical cancer.  When he finished with her and was leaving the house, she told me, he informed her that he would be back. 

Sexual violence against women is one of those subjects that we often prefer to ignore.  When we hear the stories, we want to disbelieve them.  We, very often, think about the Tawana Brawley-like stories and other such claims that turn out to be untrue, thereby writing off legitimate concerns.  In fact, the climate is such that women, like my friend (and I have actually more than one friend who has experienced rape), feel that they cannot tell anyone what happened to them.  My friend, despite her internal and external strength, is deathly afraid that she will be judged and blamed, and the sad fact is that she almost blames herself for the rape having occurred. 

I don’t know what happened in the Duke Lacrosse incident.  It sounds as if the authorities handled the case like a bunch of Keystone Cops. Yet, for each such case, there are countless others that either go unreported or are dismissed.  In the case of my friend, the rapist was an ‘upstanding’ member of the community whose word was believed before the word of my friend because, after all, my friend was just a woman; in fact, at the time she was a very young woman. 

It strikes me that when it comes to women of color, the presumption is almost always that they are lying.  Usually this is connected to allegations of excessive sensuality and/or provocative-ness on the part of the woman.  We men are all too often prepared to disregard the concerns and warning signs because it might break some sort of brotherhood or code among men.  It is as if we believe that ‘boys will be boys.’  Among many women, however, there is also a tendency to believe that the problem starts with the woman. 

We have few places in our communities to have honest discussions about sexual violence.  We rarely debate it in our newspapers, or even on line, except when we are in a gossipy mode.  But serious discussions about prevention, sexual trauma, as well as struggling with the sexist behavior among so many men who believe that a woman exists for their own domination and pleasure, just do not happen. 

After hearing this story from my friend, I wanted to believe that there was something that I could say to assure her that it would not only not happen to her again, but not happen to other women.  But how can I do that when our community fails to put this issue on the front burner for discussion? 

BC Editorial Board member Bill Fletcher, Jr. is a long-time labor and international activist who currently serves as a visiting professor at Brooklyn College-CUNY. He is the immediate past president of TransAfrica Forum. Click here to contact Mr. Fletcher.

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March 15, 2007
Issue 221

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