A-Z Blogging Challenge
This is an open letter to Anita Hill:
Dear Professor Hill,
As I watched your interview this morning on The Today Show, I
was struck anew by your contribution to my life and the lives of women across
the United States. You became the voice for sexual harassment happening across the country; your conversations with Clarence Thomas replicated water cooler talk everywhere. In 1991,
I was a 22-year old secretary working in a commercial real estate firm in
Southern California. And I was you.
|
At 22 when I left work. Circa 1991 |
Because of you, my age group is likely to be the last to remember flagrant and unrestrained sexual harassment in the workplace. The
daily remarks about my walk, my skirt, my legs, my smile, and my hair did not faze
me because they were commonplace. We accepted our environment of cat calls and propositions
as easily as offices with thermostats set too low and lunch hours that seemed
too short. Being “hit on” was simply part of the job.
One supervisor asked me repeatedly to meet him in a hotel
room. My response was always a gentle laugh, downcast of my eyes, and a wave of
my hand to pretend I thought it was a joke. It was never a joke. But I was able
to maneuver away from his proposal without any repercussions.
Others stood at my office door commenting on how I smelled or
how I looked. Most women love compliments when delivered sincerely and without ulterior
motives, but these daily comments seemed always tinged with the hope of going
further.
Did it prevent me from doing my job?
No. Am I irreparably
damaged by being pursued in the
workplace?
No. But when I hear anyone question
whether or not we can “ever really know the truth” about sexual harassment in
the workplace, I am irritated. I believe those questions must originate from one of two
parties: Men who did it, or women younger than 46 who, because of you, will
never know the mundane, daily action of thwarting unwanted advances in the
workplace.
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Anita Hill, testifying at Senate hearings, 1991 |
So today when I listened to replayed portions of your testimony
during the Clarence Thomas hearings, and I heard you explain why you never
spoke up before then—until the FBI specifically asked you about your
experiences with Judge Thomas—I got it. I understood completely. Because in
1991, sexual comments in the workplace were no different than requests to complete
reports or attend meetings: routine. What would you have said and to whom?
As the interview ended and Savannah was thanking you for
your time, my husband of 27 years looked over at me and said, “You never told me any of
that was happening.”
“It would have done no good,” I said. We’d been married only
a short time, and I knew he would have wanted to confront those men. “It was
just a part of the job.”
After the Senate hearings, things started changing. Companies
began to implement sexual harassment training and policies, and employers
started paying attention to conversations in the workplace.
We have you to thank for that. Entirely. I have not
forgotten how you were treated during and after those hearings, the subtle (or
blatant) suggestions that you were making up stories. We knew you were telling the
truth. Judge Thomas knew it, too. But that was a time when such behavior was accepted. He probably thought nothing of it, so when he had to defend himself, he got, well... defensive. We lived in a culture at the time where we (even women) accepted his actions as the norm.
You changed that.
Labels: A-Z Blogging Challenge '16