Something that just happens
Apparently groping schoolgirls is a big thing on Tokyo subway trains.
Tamaka Ogawa was about 10 years old when she was sexually assaulted for the first time. It was a public holiday and she was on the subway. A man standing behind her pulled down the band of her culottes and underwear, touched her bare bottom, then pressed himself against her. She recalls feeling shocked and physically sickened. When she reached home, she repeatedly washed the spot where he had pressed himself against her, although she was conscious of not spending too long in the toilet, in case her family noticed that something was wrong.
Apparently she didn’t feel able to tell her family it had happened, which is sad.
A few years later it became a regular thing.
the groping and sexual assaults – men would often stick their hands inside her underwear – became a regular occurrence as she made her way to or from school in her uniform. Each time, she would run away, unsure of what to do.
“I thought of myself as a child,” she reflects. “I could not understand that adults were excited by touching me.”
It would be improper to express anger towards an adult, she thought, and she worried about attracting attention. Besides, her parents had never spoken to her about such things and how she ought to handle them.
She recalls one incident particularly clearly. She was about 15 and on her way to school. A man began to touch her, putting his hand inside her underwear. He was aggressive and it hurt, she remembers. When the train stopped, she got off. But he grabbed her hand and told her: “Follow me.” Ogawa ran away. She believes that people saw what was going on, but nobody helped.
How do people – men – manage to give themselves permission to do things like that? Shoving your hand into the underwear of a child on the subway? The very thought of it makes me flinch.
[E]xperts say Japanese society remains willfully oblivious or unaware of how widespread this problem is and how often girls are assaulted.
Hiroko Goto, a feminist, professor of criminal law at Chiba University and vice president of Japan-headquartered NGO Human Rights Now, believes many people do not consider groping to be a crime. “[For] society at large, it’s not a big problem; that’s the kind of double standard [between] the victims’ viewpoint and the social viewpoint.”
In Ogawa’s opinion, society normalises groping as something that just happens.
That’s interesting, given the strong emphasis on politeness and formality in Japanese culture. There are elaborate rules on how to address people, but grown men assaulting girls on the subway is just ho hum, everybody does it.
According to Ogawa, groping-related violations are too often downplayed by society as a “nuisance”. It was only when she started writing about these crimes, she says, that she discovered that what she had experienced was sexual assault. “What was shocking me the most is that I didn’t realise that I was experiencing indecent assault,” Ogawa says.
Japanese society focuses on telling women to be careful, how to dress and to travel in women-only carriages – which are mainly available during peak hours on weekday mornings – Ogawa says. “They are telling women to protect themselves, to be careful, but no one tells the men not to do it,” she says.
Even the rail authorities’ anti-groping posters are too cute and miss the point, Ogawa argues.
Yeah cuteness isn’t the right response.
Mousetrap in underwear?
How many publically reported incidents would it take to dissuade such abominable atrocities?
Makes some heavy-duty tabloid headlines.
Not about children, but related to the issue https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3Atb0LWa67w
(What Japanese Think of Sexual Harassment)
I’m thinking of all the fetishized ‘schoolgirl’ images that seem to flood from Japan. Still can’t get around the idea that there is a substantial body of Japanese men who DO this. Who are they? How did they get like that?
A stilted, formal, culture of politeness and inoffensiveness is actually abetting the outrage by making it unmentionable.
@John:
Yeah, the mainstreaming of that particular fetish surely has to be a part of this. It’s by no means only Japan, though. The US also seems to mainstream this schoolgirl trope and I have no doubt that other cultures will follow suit. It’s like people are being given permission to do unspeakable things to other people. It’s in fact *exactly* like that.
I have a hard time understanding why the porn industry exists at all, given how easy it is to find people who want to show you their hairy bits for free. But here we are, it exists and it hurts people in ways we don’t necessarily expect. Let’s be fair, though: we can’t pretend to be surprised when it happens. Fetishising young girls leads to young girls being attacked and a horrific air of respectability being erected around that abuse. The fantasy is used to justify the abuse, surely, how else could this be happening?
It’s not as though we don’t already know that the standard porn 123 of blowjob, penetration and cumming on someone’s tits is harmful. We can’t pretend that people’s notions about sex aren’t tainted by that idea, over and above the harm that’s very often done to performers.
Sorry, @John. My rant comes across as being against you but it’s not. Day by day, step by step, we find out more and more reasons why porn as an industry is a terrible thing. Especially, as I said, because there is absolutely no shortage of people who want you to watch them fucking. Again, not necessarily you personally, @John. I’m sure people want people other than you to watch them fucking. I’ve inadvertently created an entire genre of @John porn. You see how this fucking thing works?
Well said.