Creating
Sacred Spaces: Addressing Sexual Harassment and Assault
Parshat Miketz, Shabbat
Chanukah
December 16, 2017
Rabbi Antine:
Maharat Fruchter and I spent a lot of time
thinking about whether to discuss the issue of Sexual harassment and assault in
the shul and if so how should it be done. While it is a complex discussion and
we went back and forth on the particulars, we came to two conclusions: First,
that we must speak about it and bring the conversation here. Part of
being a Kehila Kedosha (a holy community) means that we provide support
and strength for people who are struggling and in pain on an entire range of
issues including victims of sexual harassment and assault. We must also be
prepared to bring the most challenging conversations into our shul. Second, we
have decided to give this sermon together, to model what conversations on this
topic can look like between men and women. So I am going to begin the
conversation by sitting down and listening to Maharat Fruchter. I will then get
back up and offer some words and then she will close with an explanation of
what we will do in the breakout sessions.
Maharat Fruchter:
Thank you, Rabbi Antine, for your partnership and support as we explore these difficult issues. I want to begin by telling you about the first broadway show I ever saw---Joseph and the Amazing Technicolor dreamcoat. As a seven year old just opening up to the world of studying Chumash, seeing saga of Yosef HaTzaddik depicted on stage was truly incredible. The colors, music, and costumes were enthralling, but I was struck by the seeming absence of women in the story. Who are the women, aside from the wife of Potifar, in the story of Yosef? If we really pay attention to this week’s parsha, we meet an important player: Yosef’s wife Osnat.
Thank you, Rabbi Antine, for your partnership and support as we explore these difficult issues. I want to begin by telling you about the first broadway show I ever saw---Joseph and the Amazing Technicolor dreamcoat. As a seven year old just opening up to the world of studying Chumash, seeing saga of Yosef HaTzaddik depicted on stage was truly incredible. The colors, music, and costumes were enthralling, but I was struck by the seeming absence of women in the story. Who are the women, aside from the wife of Potifar, in the story of Yosef? If we really pay attention to this week’s parsha, we meet an important player: Yosef’s wife Osnat.
Pharaoh honors Yosef by giving him Osnat, “the
daughter of Potiphera, priest from the city of On” as his wife (Gen 41:45).
Ultimately, she becomes the mother of Menashe and Efraim. Chazal are puzzled by
Osnat’s origins and her name. Who is this seemingly foreign addition to the
family, Osnat Bat Potifera?
One approach from the Midrash is that Osnat is
actually Dinah’s daughter, conceived after the rape of Dinah by Shechem. After
her birth, her family was so ashamed of her origins, that according to one
tradition, Yaakov deserts her. Midrash
Talpiyot teaches he places a
golden plate around her neck to indicate that she is the product of a shameful
rape, and the name “Osnat,” comes from the word “Sneh”, or shrubbery, that
Yaakov leaves her in. She is found later by the house of Potifar, lying between
the thorns in the bush and is ultimately raised there. Another approach? That
she is named “Osnat” on account of the “Ason,” the disaster, that occurs in Shechem on account of Dinah’s
rape.
You may wonder about the disturbing idea that
Yaakov could desert his own granddaughter. Until not long ago, however, women
were actually encouraged to give up their children conceived through rape for
adoption so they wouldn’t have to deal with the stigma and shame. In Andrew
Solomon’s book, Far From the Tree, a book of stories of parents who deal
with having exceptional children, he discusses the example of women who
conceive through rape. Those who choose to keep their children often face
stigma and disgrace. Furthermore, they have to constantly struggle to engage
with these children without blaming them for the trauma that happened to them.
One woman promises that she loves her child, but “when she touches me, it feels
like hundreds of razor blades scraping across my skin, like I'm going to die.”
In some ways, Osnat perhaps represents what it
feels like to carry around a sexual assault with you, like a golden plate
around your neck, for your whole life--and beyond. Understanding that there is
a huge spectrum of harassment and assault--ranging from inappropriate
comments to physical assault, I believe it is safe to say that just about the
entire women’s section today is carrying some Osnat with them at all times.
Walking around as a woman in this world means always being aware of that
identity. We learn to “be nice” in the face of inappropriate comments, to shrug
off lewd catcalls or withstand unwanted touch that can make you shudder. We
learn how to walk home at night alone looking over your shoulder, even if there
is no immediate threat of danger.
I have many stories that lead to my identity as
an Osnat. I’d like to share one of them with you today. To be totally
honest, I hesitated greatly to share. The reasons I hesitated sheds light on
why victims in general are afraid to share their stories. First, I worry about
the shame that I’ll carry in the revealing of the story. Many women report
shame just in sharing. Just like Dinah. Just like Osnat. Second, I know that
when women speak up about these issues, they can easily be viewed, by both men
and women, as one of these many lovely qualities: cold, “asking for it”,
politically motivated, need to get over it, or too sensitive. But I will share.
Not because my story is unique, but because it is not. To
assume that people are making these stories up is painful and incorrect. And
because unless it happens to someone you know or to you, you can’t imagine what
it really is.
It was some years ago, on the way home from a
friend’s wedding. The wedding was your typical wedding, from the shmorg all the
way to the sheva brachos at the end, with spirited dancing and a
glowing chattan and kallah. After a long and beautiful evening, I
hitched a ride with a friend and her husband. She was the driver, and another
friend of ours sat in the front. In the back was the couple’s baby, the husband
of the driver, and me. In the middle of the trip, black velvet kippah on his
head and wedding ring on his hand, he assaulted me. As the car continued to
drive and he didn’t stop, and the baby continued to scream, there was nothing I
could do, I sat there, unable to move. I toyed with opening the car door at a
red light. I played with opening the car door at 15 miles per hour and rolling
out, braving the injury that would ensue. I wished I could scream like the baby
was screaming, but as his wife sat chatting with a friend about the front seat
about the wonderful chasuna, and he had me locked in and silenced, the
best I could do was just imagine that I was the one screaming, not the baby.
Being a victim of sexual violence can change you
forever. Andrew Solomon quotes Marina James, another rape victim, who says she related
to veterans returning from Iraq. "They've seen horrific things that they
could never express. They come home and they don't know how to use their
bodies; they're different. Nobody understands and they return to a community
that has all these expectations that no longer make sense. That is exactly how
I feel,” says James.
So, yes it can change you.
But I can’t help to to be reminded of another
baby who is deserted and encounters a “Sneh”--Moshe Rabbenu, who while he
started in the darkest, loneliest place, ultimately encounters God at a burning
bush and becomes the shepherd of the Jewish people. My deep hope is that
victims can emerge from the thorns in the way that is most healing for them.
Whether by telling their story, finding deep and nurturing support, or by
advocating for others, may we always find the presence of God burning brightly
from the place we felt first deserted or silenced. Though we reject the trauma
and try to prevent it, when it happens, may it be transformed into spiritual grit,
and into our ability to radiate the Divine.
My hope is that for those of us who have gone
through some version of this story, your stories are welcome here, in this
shul. I want to communicate that we want to have this conversation and it
belongs here just as much as anywhere else. While the halachot around sexual
boundaries and touch (yichud and negiyah) are absolutely not a silver
bullet that will solve sexual violence (since it is primarily about an abuse of
power), they acknowledge that we are human and can give into abuses of power.
They are amazing tools within which we can have a conversation around
boundaries openly. Furthermore, In a halachic culture that cares so much about
the boundaries around touch, it only makes sense that our language
should reflect the way we relate to those boundaries.
Finally, this is only the beginning of a
conversation. I know that these issues are complex, and my deep hope is
that anyone who wants to ask hard questions can feel like they can. Therefore,
we are providing the types of spaces that can model what asking hard questions
in a patient, gentle, and curious way can look like.
Rabbi Antine and I have thought very deeply and
for many hours about this Shabbat morning. While it is just the beginning of a
much longer conversation, I look forward to being in partnership with my holy
community in thinking about these issues.
Rabbi Antine:
Maharat Fruchter: Thank you for your courage in sharing those words. You have opened up our hearts, souls and minds to really think about these difficult and painful issues. I would like to respond with 3 brief points:The first is something that I have come to learn over the last month or so in conversations with Maharat Fruchter, with my wife Sarah, and with other female relatives and friends. I am speaking for myself but I am sure this will resonate with many other men.
I always understood the terrible nature of sexual assault and the permanent scars and trauma it could leave on its victims. But I think that when it comes to inappropriate comments and what might be called borderline cases of sexual harassment, I did not understand the enormity of its impact. This is because, I, as a man, have never in my life been afraid while walking to my car at night. I have never tried to figure out how fast the man behind me is walking and what are his intentions and if something happens what is my exit strategy. But for women, especially if they have been victims (but even if not), this is a major part of their existence. A catcall or even an inappropriate comment can trigger deep fear. A lewd joke can make her question someone's intentions and whether she is safe. In addition, every time, we as men, make inappropriate comments about and towards women we are diminishing their Tzelem Elokim (their Godliness). Instead of encountering women as human being whom we should learn from and share ideas with, we are objectifying them. This is point #1.
The second point is that when we think about all of the accusations and those forced to resign, it could seem like it is "out there." It is out in Media, in Hollywood and in Politics. Well I am here to say that the issue is also "in here." It is in our larger Jewish community and it is even in our shul community. In the last few weeks, I have heard from women who have experienced inappropriate words and touching in our shul. This should never happen. How could it happen in a kehillah kedosha. It is unacceptable and will not be tolerated. I know sometimes men feel like they have to make a joke or a comment but please remember that you don't have to be the funniest guy in the room. Please err on the side of boundaries, respect, and dignity. Inappropriate comments and touch will not be tolerated in our shul.
The final point is directed to Maharat Fruchter. I am so sorry you lost your voice in the back of that car on the way home from that wedding. But I’m so glad that you found it today. I am so glad that you have found your voice in so many ways and are are a spiritual leader of this shul. Thank you for your courage. It was so important for all of us to hear because your story is the story of so many victims.
You spoke before about Osnat. The Medrash tells us the "rest of the story." After Osnat suffered so much, after she was kicked out of her house and adopted by the Potiphars, she was present at another case of sexual abuse. She was there when Yosef was sexually harassed (quid pro quo) by Potiphar’s wife. When Potiphar was about to kill Yosef, she spoke up. She protected the victim. I know that so many Osnats have been completely silenced. I pray that everyone here (on both sides of the mechitzah) regain their voices. We need our voices to protect ourselves and to protect others who might suffer in the future. We need our collective voice to strengthen our Kehillah Kedoshah.
Maharat Fruchter:
Thank you, Rabbi Antine, for starting this
process while modeling what an engaging, supportive communal and professional
relationship looks like. After Kiddush, there will be three breakout sessions.
Please proceed to to either the men’s group, the women’s group, or the JCADA
information session. Each session will be facilitated by a mental health
professional. Shabbat Shalom and please rise for Kiddush.
Resources from JCADA
What is sexual harassment?
- Uninvited or unwelcome verbal or physical
behavior of a sexual nature, or requests for sexual favors,
especially by a person in authority toward a
subordinate (such as an employee or student).
- Sexual harassment can be physical, verbal, or
non-verbal
Unwelcome: sexual conduct is unwelcome whenever
the person subjected to it considers it unwelcome.
Sexual harassment includes many things:
- Inappropriate touching, invasion of privacy
(leaning over, cornering)
- Obscene gestures/jokes/comments/sexual
looks/whistling
- Unwelcomed phone calls, texts, emails
- Pressure for sexual favors
- Pressure for dates
- Turning work discussions into sexual topics
- Personal questions about social or sexual life
Examples:
- When an employment decision, such as a
promotion or assignment, is dependent upon submission to the sexual harassment
- When a work environment feels intimidating,
hostile, or offensive and unreasonably interferes with an employee’s work
performance
Resources:
Montgomery County Victim Assistance and Sexual
Assault Program (VASAP)
24 hour crisis line: (240)777-HELP (4357)
Main Phone: (240)777-1355
Montgomery County Commission for Women
Counseling and Career Center
(240)777-8300
JCADA Jewish Coalition Against Domestic Abuse
(301)315-8041 – confidential helpline
(301)315-8040 – Main office line
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