T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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204.1 | | VIKING::TARBET | Margaret Mairhi | Tue Feb 17 1987 15:36 | 34 |
| ================================================================================
Note 201.15 Once Upon a Dream? 15 of 16
CSC32::JOHNS 28 lines 17-FEB-1987 12:56
-< Parisian Experiences >-
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I, too, had a problem in Paris, although not in the small French
towns I visited. I was 17 and travelling with a group of college
students. We lived in Paris for a month while studying there, and
any time that my 17 year old girl friend and myself walked around
we were constantly harassed in several languages. We would walk
straight ahead, not acknowleging the men, just like we had seen
the French women do. They ran behind us, the same way they did
in note .14. Most of the men that did this were Arabs living in
Paris.
Perhaps it would be different if you were with a man for 24 hours
each day.
A story we heard when we arrived in Paris was told to us by a French
professor who had been there before. I would have been terribly
embarrassed to do what she did then, but would do it now in an instant.
(This actually happened to me in Italy, and instead of doing that,
I ran through people to my mother.) The professor was on a crowded
bus, and a man very quietly reached over and started stroking her
crotch. She reached down, lifted his hand in the air and yelled,
"Qui a ce main?" meaning, "who owns this hand?"
The man was terribly embarrassed when the whole busload full of
people looked at him. If I ever experience this again, the man
had better hope that I take this tactic, because he's going to be
darn lucky if I don't kill him.
Carol
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204.2 | | ULTRA::ZURKO | Security is not pretty | Tue Feb 17 1987 15:55 | 7 |
| One of the times I was in Paris I was there with another woman.
We were both in our early twenties. Although we did not experience
harassment at quite the level of the previous two noters, we did
experience more harassment than what we considered normal. Remarks,
being followed, come-ons, etc. I probably would have been more shaken
if not for the daylight (which might have been silly of me).
Mez
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204.4 | Hitchhiking died with the '60's. | LATEXS::MINOW | I need a vacation | Tue Mar 03 1987 23:33 | 15 |
| I've heard stories to the contrary. I would specifically *not* recommend
anyone hitchhiking in Europe any more (I did it for a summer and-a-half
20 years ago). The reason is that the kids who used to choke all the
highways are now taking the train (using the very cheap Interrail youth
pass). Many women travel by train alone in Europe. I only saw one
incident of harrassment, which was pretty minor (guy pestering gal on
an overnight train -- we talked to him and it stopped).
During the winter Olympics in Yugoslavia, a reporter for All Things
Considered asked a local woman (more or less) how she could stand
to live in a repressive country that censors its newspapers. She
replied that she "could walk on the streets at night," so she had
some freedoms that were lacking in the United States.
Martin.
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204.5 | I Dunno... | NRLABS::TATISTCHEFF | | Wed Mar 04 1987 23:32 | 9 |
| My grandmother (Russian) keeps telling me she doesn't understand
the "feminist revolution." She says women have always been treated
equally in Slavic cultures, so what's all the brouhaha?
I always assumed she was too set in her ways to realize the treatment
women got in her country was as bad as it had been everywhere.
Maybe she has a point after all?
Lee
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204.6 | Slavic women | ULTRA::ZURKO | Security is not pretty | Thu Mar 05 1987 08:14 | 9 |
| I've been to Russia, and I worked with a bunch of Russian emigrees at
my last job. What I noticed when I was there, and what I was told by
the folks I worked with was that: women in Russia have plenty of
opportunity to get any sort of job they want, as long as they work hard,
and don't ever expect to get on the management ladder. We saw crews
of women working on buildings and streets, under male supervision.
Anyone else know much about this?
Mez
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204.7 | Net, tam est' kak i zdes' | VIKING::TARBET | Margaret Mairhi | Thu Mar 05 1987 09:55 | 17 |
| <--(.5,.6)
There is a small but increasingly vocal feminist movement in the USSR
pointing out that yes, women can get jobs in the Soviet Union that are
restricted to men in other countries...but the culture still makes
women take care of all the traditional "women's work" too, which
makes the touted "equality" a sham: women are simply forced into
doing twice as much as men.
And the categories of jobs open (in practice) to soviet women are
rather like those here: the low ones in the hierarchy. The great
majority of the prestigous postions go, there as here, to men by
default.
=maggie
(who used to watch the soviet union
more closely than they liked)
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204.8 | More on Russian women | YAZOO::B_REINKE | the fire and the rose are one | Thu Mar 05 1987 11:21 | 5 |
| re .7
One example of what Maggie was talking about. In Russia most of
the doctors are women (a very high prestige job here in America.
In Russia, however, medicine is considered "women's work" and
doctors do not have high status.
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204.9 | | COOKIE::ZANE | Shattering Reality | Sat Mar 14 1987 02:10 | 42 |
|
I'm going to generalize a bit here based on my own experiences and the
stories/attitudes related by my ex-husband. He is Russian. He was
born and raised in Moscow and emigrated when he was 28. His parents
emigrated when they were 70, and lived with us during our marriage.
My ex is very chauvinistic. So were his friends that I was able to
meet or hear about. At the time, he told me that there were more women
doctors in the Soviet Union than in the United States. But, he
emphatically explained, they were not researchers, merely practitioners.
It's not just doctors. That's every profession. Clearly, only those
who do research have any value and the overwhelming majority of researchers
are men, so where does that leave women? They are obviously not as
intelligent as the men are.
By the way, he wanted me to become a professional. But, his idea of
being progressive was that, in addition to taking care of him, his
parents, the housework, going to school, later taking of two small
children. He gave me permission to try! Needless to say, I bought all of
this at the time.
I remember my first business trip very well. He demanded, "Who's going
to take care of the children and the house?" I was shocked. I never
mentioned anything when he took his trips! I patiently explained that
I expected him to take care of things in all fairness -- after all,
we were both professionals. I then received a *long* lecture about
his profession (he's a mathematics professor who actually does research
(!)) being so much more important than mine (I am an engineer who just
takes orders, I don't do research, nothing creative you understand).
It's not that my mother-in-law took sides, actually she took mine, it's
that she didn't understand at all. It was his attitude I so strongly
objected to -- the fact that I had to defend my job against his!
Sorry for the bitter diatribe. But I don't believe for a moment that
women on the other side of curtain are treated better than women are
treated over here. I think it's much worse over there.
Terza
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204.10 | oops | COOKIE::ZANE | Shattering Reality | Sat Mar 14 1987 02:13 | 8 |
|
That was off the topic! I'm sorry. I wouldn't be comfortable traveling
around Europe alone, Russians or no Russians! :^)
Terza
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204.12 | dont mind at all! | JACUZI::DAUGHAN | fight individualism | Sun Mar 15 1987 12:12 | 15 |
| i went to to middle east in 1985 a month after that twa inccident,in
fact i flew twa. i felt very safe in egypt and isreal,in fact
statistics say i AM safer in egypt than in boston. egypt has one
of the lowest crime rates in the world.
i went alone and would not have any problem with going back there
alone.i wish i had the money*sigh*
i think it depends on what i am going on vacation for as to whether
i would prefer to travel alone. bermuda no,egypt yes.
kelly
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204.13 | | SWSNOD::RPGDOC | Dennis (the Menace) Ahern 223-5882 | Mon Mar 16 1987 08:33 | 14 |
| RE: .11 "out of the closet"
Suzanne,
When I was your son's age (16) I spent the summer in Scotland and
England, travelling alone and staying in youth hostels and with
families of some pen pals that I had corresponded with. When we're
young we feel more confidence in such things but as a parent I feel
the same way (almost). If my son wanted to take off and wander
around in foreign lands I would probably threaten to lock him in
the closet too. Maybe it's just that we know more of the dangers,
having been around longer. Maybe we're just parents.
Dinny Dimwit
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204.15 | What about Greece? | RDGCSS::WATKINS | Un oeuff is un oeuff !! | Thu Oct 15 1987 08:37 | 46 |
|
I am allowed to bring Greece into the conversation here? If not,
ignore the rest of this!
This summer I went out to a small island which I know quite well
haivng been there several times previously. Each year I go there,
I get less harassment because more and more of the men know me.
I spoke to a greek friend of mine this year and asked him why they
all stare and whistle and beep and generally embarass (I never could
spell that word!) foreign women as they do (NB that they never do
it to their own women).
He replied in all honesty that nothing was meant by it; they were
simply a warm friendly people. He went on to say that he thought
the English very cold (how true) - and (get this!) that it was probably
caused by the cold weather over here1
Anyway, having listened to this guy harping on about warmthand
friendliness, I decided from henceforth not to just stick my head
in the air and stalk off, but to smile and nod back and chat to
the guys.
This really worked and consequently the 'heckling' either stopped
or perhaps I just didn't notice it, but I tell you, I have never
had such a good time there before and met so many new people -of
all nationalities, just by being not cold.
I think that we expect that all strange men who eye us up ( especially
foreigners) are after you, and I'd just like to say that this isn't
necessarily true.
Maybe it helped that I was working in a taverna out there and they
got to know my face, but it really is worthwhile, especially when
travelling (I was with a girlfriend , both of us are 20) not to
ignore people but to acknowledge them. It'll either shut them up
and make them disappear rapid-like, or encourage them to be friendly
to you back.
And lets face it, when you're travelling abroad, you need all the
help you can get.
Thanks for reading this
Suzy.
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204.16 | loosen up :-) | CIRCUS::KOLLING | Karen, Sweetie, Holly; in Calif. | Fri Dec 11 1987 20:12 | 15 |
| I vote for .15. Often something that looks vaguely suspicious is
just someone trying to be friendly. I've traveled by myself to
Denmark, England, and Algeria, and the most trouble of this sort
that I've ever had traveling was in the Boston subway.
Traveling by yourself is a very good way to meet people who live
in the country. Often just opening a map is enough to materialize
someone helpful. I suspect that people would not be so likely to
approach a group of tourists as they are to approach an individual.
Besides, if you go by yourself, you get to do what _you_ want, _when_
you want to, and so forth.
Of course, none of the above should be taken to mean being foolhardy.
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