We do confess, Dear Reader, to occasionally being somewhat impatient with our feminist sisters.
Let’s be clear: we are totally on-side with equality of opportunity. Equal pay. Demolishing the glass ceiling. And freeing women from the need to constantly defend themselves from the appalling ingrained sexism that sees them the victim of unwelcome sexual advances, and worse.
And please note: fruit of one’s loins was sent to learn Taekwondo from the age of 11 to 18. Apart from the fact that Pop Pops will come after you with a machete, we doubt any male would survive assaulting her will leave the scene with their gonads intact.
But women shouldn’t have to become self-defence experts to protect themselves, and anyway, there are some attacks no one could defend themselves against.

Reshma before and after
https://www.indiegogo.com/projects/support-acid-attack-survivor-reshma
Like us, you may want to donate to help provide treatment for a much-loved 18 year old Indian girl hideously disfigured by an acid attack in Mumbai.
Her full story is here:
India’s acid victims still suffer despite new rules.Ā The Indian teenager’s voice trembles as she recalls the day she lost her face when her brother-in-law and his friends pinned her down and doused her with acid.
Amid the horror of the attack, which followed a family dispute, Reshma Qureshi should have received swift state aid after India’s top court ruled that victims were entitled to 100,000 rupees ($1,600) within 15 days.
But, five months later, she is yet to receive a penny.
“One of my eyes is ruined, yet no help is coming,” the 18-year-old told AFP in her family’s cramped Mumbai tenement, as tears ran down her disfigured face, to which her mother applied cream to soothe the burning.
Acid attacks have long plagued India, often targeting women in public places as a form of revenge linked to dowry or land disputes or a man’s advances spurned.

Twenty-year-old Ritu was attacked by her cousin during a dispute over property about two years ago.
Those who survive the attacks face lifelong scars and social stigma. Reshma, once a pretty and outgoing commerce student, no longer socialises with friends but lies quietly on the family bed, saying and eating little.
Despite steps taken last year to help wipe out the scourge and improve financial aid for survivors, activists say little has changed.
“Still there’s no awareness on the issue,” said Alok Dixit of the New Delhi-based Stop Acid Attacks campaign group, accusing authorities of “buying time”.
The Supreme Court in July last year gave Indian states three months to enforce restrictions on the sale of acid, but campaigners say it remains easy to purchase.
The court also said victims should get 300,000 rupees in compensation, a third of it within 15 days of the assault.
Dixit said he knew of nobody who had received this initial sum so quickly, while only two in 100 cases had managed to win the full amount.
“People don’t know how to apply for compensation. The authorities don’t know,” he said.
Even if claims were successful, the figure is “not at all enough” for the costly and multiple plastic surgeries required, Dixit added.

Laxmi was 15 years old when she was attacked by her brother’s 32-year-old friend after she refused his marriage proposal.
Reshma, the adored youngest child of a taxi driver, was attacked in her family’s northern home state of Uttar Pradesh, and the fact that she lives in Mumbai complicates her claim.
Her relatives have clubbed together and taken out loans for her treatment, but doctors have said she may need up to 10 more operations.
Nothing will be alright.
“After that things will be better, but still nothing will be alright,” she said.
Relatives were in tears when the pressĀ visited the family home, reached by a steep ladder down a maze of alleyways.
Reshma’s elder sister Gulshan, whose estranged husband carried out the attack, witnessed the assault and suffered burns on her arms, but wishes she had been the main target.
The family believe Reshma was singled out because of her beauty and popularity.
“Reshma is very emotional and she wants to study,” Gulshan said.
While Gulshan’s husband was arrested and jailed, a juvenile in the gang has been freed on bail and two other accomplices remain at large, according to the family.
“The police don’t say anything, they don’t search anything,” said Reshma.
Last year, acid attacks were made a specific criminal offence in India punishable with at least a decade behind bars. But court cases can drag on for years.
Particularly in northern states, “police are not very cooperative and we have heard of cases where they try to get families to change their statement,” said Bhagirath Iyer, a member of the volunteer network “Make Love Not Scars”, which helps victims.

A fashion photo shoot featuring five acid attack victims is drawing wide attention in India, where open discussions about violence against woman are drawing attention to a long-ignored public scourge.
Crowd funding help
Frustrated with the lack of government aid, activists have meanwhile turned to online crowd funding to help raise funds for acid attack survivors.
“Make Love Not Scars” has set up a campaign on the website Indiegogo for Reshma, who returned to hospital for more treatment on Friday. The immediate target wasĀ $2,200, which has been passed, although her overall costs are expected to be much higher.
Iyer said donations usually came from wealthier Indians living abroad, but they were “bombarding” Indian celebrities on Twitter to spread their message.
“Crowdsourcing is possible but you have to market it really hard,” he said, adding that upper middle-class victims often won more attention in the Indian media than those from poorer social backgrounds.
Reshma, who describes her face today as “so scary”, is desperate to finish her treatment and hopeful that she will bring her attackers to justice.
“I want to tell them that they should not be able to do to other girls what they have done to me.”
The campaign site for Reshma can be found at https://www.indiegogo.com/projects/support-acid-attack-survivor-reshma. Please donate; it takes a few seconds, and even a few dollars will make a huge difference to this poor girl and her family.
And toĀ ourĀ feminist friends, let us say this. Yes, we know terrible attacks happen to women in Western countries too, but in less developed countries they are far more common, more culturally acceptable, and include, in some places, virtually no communal resistance to rape, lynching, spousal violence, casual murder, stoning, whipping, and more. They mean women cannot work for pay, are virtual slaves in their homes, cannot be educated and may be shot if they say they should be, may not leave home unaccompanied, are forced to wear uncomfortable and restrictive dress, are not allowed the same rights as men to a fair and independent trial, and are frequently jailed or executed for their “crime” of being raped and demanding justice.
The women of ALL the world need feminists from ALL OVER THE WORLD to campaign on their behalf. Now.
If you want to know why, watch this:
#itsagirlthing
I have 6 granddaughters, Yolly, and I know what could be in store for any of them. My feelings about this kind of thing, and the bureaucratic and cultural roadblocks to justice, are beyond rage.
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It is, indeed, deeply depressing, and the deep cultural change needed to stop it happening in the first place is a long way off.
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Keep up the struggle Yolly. Liberal International British Group have a Forum on this subject on 3rd November at the National Liberal Club, London, and there was a related piece in interLib 2014-05 which can be found on the LIBG website
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Thank you Stewart I will look it up – good to hear from you š
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Reblogged this on Mark Geoffrey Kirshner.
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shocking, horrific, that this should still go onā¦.each and everyone of us must stand up against such physical and emotional abuse. To do otherwise is to the detriment of all humanity.
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Thanks Janet I heartily agree …
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Reblogged this on My Life as an Artist (2) and commented:
Become aware of the horrific physical and emotional abuse that so many women have to endure at the beginning of the 21st century!
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Its deeply disturbing and horrific that this kind of thing can continue on what is meant to be an enlightened age. I cannot imagine what life holds for these young ladies, or the state of mind of their assailants,.
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My heart is pounding out of my chest after reading your article. I came across it because Janetweightreed10 reblogged it. I feel sick. I would like to see your article featured on Freshly Pressed to reach a greater audience. I don’t know how they choose the posts to be featured, but if there was ever a need to get the word out, it is this.
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Thank you – I don’t have the faintest idea how they choose Freshly Pressed articles, they’ve never chosen one of mine lol I agree it is a story that requires very wide publication.
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This is such an important article but I nearly didn’t read it because of the trite and irrelevant comment about sometimes getting impatient with our feminist friends.
This is about human rights and is of concern to all people irrespective of gender.
The patronising introduction merely enforces negativity toward women who are seeking any kind of rights.
It’s counterproductive to the issue and is in itself sexist; reinforcing the status quo. This does nothing toward changing the prevalent attitude that women don’t deserve humane treatment the same as men.
This article trivialises the struggles for gaining rights by contrasting what a sexist culture decides are “deserving” issues for women.
Women deserve fair treatment at all levels.
The first thing you need to do is stop apologising for, or denigrating other women’s issues or you will set back the cultUral changes instead if progressing.
That said, government needs to invest in cultural change by funding effective programs to reeducate men.
Furthermore by gaining more effective rights and freedoms generally, people will begin to see women as autonomous and independent instead of as chattels. The men who do this act believe they are owed by virtue of being male and see women as being what is owed.
Education and career upward mobility for Women will, in the long run, help to change this attitude.
And that is why it is wrong to belittle what might seem to be trivial I’m terns of feminist struggles.
Meanwhile these violent and narcissistic perpetuaters once convicted by the Indian courts might be punished by having acid thrown in their own the faces as an example to others who think this is okay practice.
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Carlina, the comment you took such offence at related to two issues: first, the idea that the answer to violence against women is for women to become self-defence experts. As said here:
women shouldnāt have to become self-defence experts to protect themselves
Do you disagree with that opinion?
I am tired of hearing some – some – feminists arguing that women becoming more assertive is the solution to assault. It isn’t. The solution is for men to stop assaulting women.
And second: I find Western feminism focuses far too much on the state of Western society – by no means perfect, of course – when other societies are infinitely more violent towards women. If Western feminists turned their attention to those matters more often the world of women would be transformed.
It’s not an either or. It’s a “Hey – fair enough – but when are you going to talk about these issues too?”
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I didn’t take offence. Merely I am expressing what kind of statements perpetuate the kind of sexism that allows one human being to injure another
In that long and descriptive story about terrible persecution, was a whinge against some comments about women asserting themselves is pretty sad.
Personally I have not encountered people advocating “assertiveness” as womens. best defence, so I can’t comment on that. However I have heard incessantly, complaints about “feminists”.
I found it contradictory to advocate for women’s safety but trivialise feminism.
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Well, we obviously did not think the article trivialised feminism at all, but I thank you very much for stopping by and commenting. An interesting perspective and one we will ponder.
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I didn’t take offence. Merely I am expressing what kind of statements perpetuate the kind of sexism that allows one human being to injure another
In that long and descriptive story about terrible persecution, was a whinge against some comments about women asserting themselves is pretty sad.
Personally I have not encountered people advocating “assertiveness” as womens. best defence, so I can’t comment on that. However I have heard incessantly, complaints about “feminists”.
I found it contradictory to advocate for women’s safety but trivialise feminism.
Most people wouId be aware that even a well armed woman is no match for a gang of males. And often a strong man can defeat an armed women.
Assertiveness does not protect facial skin from acid!
But how does acknowledging these facts condone attacking”feminists” as a group?
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