https://www.rt.com/news/425945-slutwalk-israel-metoo-demonstration/?froisappinstalled=0/
‘Not your toy’: 5,000 feminists go on topless SlutWalk in Tel Aviv in
spirit of #MeToo (PHOTOS)

Published time: 5 May, 2018 21:45 Edited time: 6 May, 2018 09:37

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[image: ‘Not your toy’: 5,000 feminists go on topless SlutWalk in Tel Aviv
in spirit of #MeToo (PHOTOS)]© Corinna Kern / Reuters

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SlutWalk demonstrators in Israel have taken to the streets to demand
freedom from sexual harassment and shaming based on dress and behavior, and
also for a justice system that better serves the needs of harassment
victims.

*"The word ‘slut’ is not just degrading to women, but it is also used by
society and the system to justify rape,"*said
<https://www.ynetnews.com/articles/0,7340,L-5250838,00.html> Bracha Barad
of the Kulan group, which organized Saturday’s SlutWalk through central Tel
Aviv, explaining the provocative name and outfits of the participants. *“There
is no connection whatsoever between sex and sexual violence and there is no
connection between the victim's clothing or her sexual past and the attack
she has undergone.”*

© Jack Guez / AFP

The mostly female crowd, estimated at between 2,000 and 5,000 by Israeli
media outlets, brandished posters of public figures implicated in sexual
assault allegations, such as ex-president Moshe Katsav, and chanted slogans
like *“No means no”, “Silence doesn’t mean consent*”, *“Not your toy”*
and “*Polite
women don’t make history.”*

The movement began in 2011, after a Toronto police official urged women not
to *“dress like sluts*” in order to lessen the risk of sexual assaults,
which many interpreted as victim-blaming, before resolving to reclaim the
word 'slut' by making it a centerpiece of their protest.

© Jack Guez / AFP

Since then, dozens of similar walks have taken place all over the world,
but the movement has been reinvigorated by the #MeToo scandal, which has
once again brought focus not only on stories of abuse, but also how they
were subsequently dealt with by those in power.

*“We demand justice and radical and systematic change,”* Barad explained. *“The
law-enforcement authorities are quick to give a pass to rapists, but for
the victims an impossible criminal bar is set by the establishment. Women
are overwhelmingly abandoned by the establishment, and it starts in the
police and continues up to the State Attorney’s office and the courts.”*

© Jack Guez / AFP

While the #MeToo movement has largely been hailed as empowering to women,
others say it has simply gone too far. One of those people is French
actress Catherine Deneuve, who along with 99 other prominent French women
signed
<https://www.rt.com/news/415423-french-deneuve-letter-meetoo-campaign/> an
open letter in January which said the movement allows for men to be seen as
sex offenders based on simple accusations, with no chance to defend
themselves.

Condoleezza Rice, who served as US Secretary of State under George W. Bush,
also warned that the #MeToo movement risks *“infantilizing”* women.

*“I do think we have to be a little bit careful. Let’s not turn women into
snowflakes. Let’s not infantilize women,”* Rice said
<https://www.rt.com/usa/416011-rice-metoo-movement-interview/>. She
expressed concern that the movement might *“get to a place that men start
to think, ‘Well, maybe it’s just better not to have women around...’ I’ve
heard a little bit of that, and it worries me.”*

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