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Protecting female protesters during Egypt’s Arab Spring revolution

Egyptian journalist Yasmin El-Rifae is a founding member of Operation Anti-Sexual Harassment and Assault (known as Opantish), which sought to protect women from sexual violence during the Arab Spring revolution in Egypt in the early 2010s. In “Radius: A Story of Feminist Revolution,” Ms. Rifae shares moving – and often graphic but never gratuitous – stories about the group’s efforts to rescue female protesters caught in mobs of largely male demonstrators. Opantish sought not only to assist women who had been sexually assaulted but also to empower them to continue protesting safely. She spoke recently with the Monitor. 

What does the title “Radius” refer to? 

The title alludes to the very concrete physical action of these intervention teams that Opantish deployed, which would essentially cut a line through the mob to get to the woman at the center and then come back out that same way. It’s also on a metaphorical level referring to the need to break the ways that conversation around sexual violence often gets circled off or separated away from other kinds of political or social problems.

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