John Toner of the Indy reports on the high levels of abuse that one couple receive on a daily basis:
A gay couple have told of their constant struggle with homophobia in Haringey.
Teacher Siobhan Wesley and her partner, charity worker Patricia Macleod, say they are subjected to threatening sexual and homophobic abuse in public on an almost daily basis.
The pair live separately in the Green Lanes area of Haringey but spend a significant amount of time together as a couple in public.
This has exposed them to an escalating level of threatening sexual behaviour from people, predominantly men, and violent threats and abuse purely because they appear together in public as a gay couple.
Ms Wesley, 29, said: “All the time this happens, we’re just walking along the street and we get people yelling sexual insults at us, men shouting what they’d like us to do to them and people just screaming ‘lezzers’ at us.”
Recently the couple were saying goodbye at the end of Siobhan’s street when a man exposed himself to them and began to sexually insult them for no apparent reason.
I'm sure I'm not alone in feeling that it is upsetting to read of this homophobic behaviour in the neighbourhood.
What should be done, as Ms Wesley suggests, to make local people aware that "queer people exist in this area, that it’s completely normal and that the comments they make are offensive and against the law."
UPDATED Sat 11th April
From GayHarrin website
Tags for Forum Posts: homophobia
This news item was a bit of a surprise. Of course, I am not a young woman and I am not gay (although my daughter is both of these) but I have never heard of any incident of this nature and rarely encountered plainly objectionable behaviour in our streets.
That doesn't surprise me. After last week's incident I came to work grumbling the next day. Told a couple of my white, straight male colleagues and they were blown away. Especially when I said it was far from the worst abuse I've encountered (out for a run, guy shouting "run faster, you fat f***ing c***", rep ad nauseum). Or the male colleague (in a previous job) who asked overly personal questions and harassed women in the street (while in uniform too).
Other male friends of mine, once their eyes have opened to this sort of thing, have started noticing it more and more. I almost feel sorry for them as they seem to be a bit exhausted by suddenly seeing the world through a woman's eyes!
I hope your daughter doesn't encounter any abuse (which is, of course, hate crime). I wonder if she would tell you if she did?
I think it's important to talk about it. Because unfortunately, the solution can only come from men.
You seem to have had some pretty horrible experiences and I hope things improve for you.The fact that I rarely witness such things may not be because my eyes have not been opened. It could also be because I don't behave that way myself and perhaps that discourages such behaviour in others in my vicinty. My daughter who lived with me and her gay partner and a gay man felt sufficiently at ease in this neighbourhood that, in the Salisbury quiz, they called our team "Hornigay". Quite a good choice as our house is half way between Hornsey and Harringay stations.
Poor behaviour by drivers I have seen many times while walking our streets although I doubt whether it is a distinguishing feature of Harringay.
I think it is tbh. I used to work in Haringey and live in Camden. In my work I had to drive a white van. Nightmare, people were very rude. But now I work in Camden and live in Haringey, and I can see it's not just the white van effect. Zebra crossings are only a suggestion in Haringey! The driving is frankly scary. Camden feels much safer. Just a bit of horn honking at school run time in Camden Town.
It's the horrible face of what people admiringly call our diverse, vibrant multicultural neighbourhood.
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