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A French rape victim goes public. She makes ‘shame change sides.’

Most often in France, a woman bringing a charge of rape will exercise her right to remain anonymous. But not Gisèle Pelicot.

She is at the center of an extraordinary court case that opened last month in which her husband is on trial for allegedly drugging and raping her repeatedly over a decade, and for soliciting 50 other men to engage in sexual acts with her while she was unconscious.

Why We Wrote This

Gisèle Pelicot, a French rape victim, has turned down her legal right to anonymity and demanded her name be published. She is asking that rapists, not those raped, carry the burden of shame.

By revealing her face to society and forcing the French to face up to what happened to her, Ms. Pelicot is changing public perceptions of what it means to be a victim. Many people here are calling her a feminist icon.

“By showing her face … she’s asking people to look at what’s going on and make shame change sides,” says Elsa Labouret, a women’s rights activist. “She portrays someone who no longer has to carry that shame.”

She is turning the tables in other ways, too. “Mr. Pelicot had to drug his wife to make her submissive. But by taking her case public, she is no longer submissive,” says Caroline Legendre, a Paris-based psychologist who has worked with both victims and perpetrators of sexual assault. “She is active and the principal actor in her story.”

As Gisèle Pelicot enters the Avignon courtroom where her husband and dozens of co-defendants are on trial for raping her, she is often welcomed by applause from crowds outside. A woman of a certain age, Ms. Pelicot stands tall, sporting a stylish bob and sunglasses. She is not afraid to look her alleged rapists in the eye.

Ms. Pelicot is not a typical rape victim. On Sept. 2, her husband, Dominique Pelicot, went on trial over charges of drugging and raping her repeatedly over a decade, and for soliciting 50 other men to engage in sexual acts with her while she was unconscious.

The violence and scale of the crimes have shocked France. But instead of remaining anonymous – a right that French victims of rape typically exercise – Ms. Pelicot has opened her trial to the public and the press, asking reporters to publish her full name.

Why We Wrote This

Gisèle Pelicot, a French rape victim, has turned down her legal right to anonymity and demanded her name be published. She is asking that rapists, not those raped, carry the burden of shame.

In revealing her face and forcing people to confront her husband’s acts, Ms. Pelicot is changing public perceptions of what it means to be a victim. Many here are calling her a feminist icon.

But the larger question is just how much influence Ms. Pelicot’s daring act will have on France. Does she herald a sea change in how rape and rape victims are treated in French society? Or will the specifics of her story prove too narrow to have a lasting effect?

“Gisèle Pelicot has become a figurehead of what we hope is a turning point in sexual violence cases,” says Elsa Labouret, a spokesperson for the women’s rights group Osez le Féminisme. “By showing her face and refusing a closed trial, she’s asking people to look at what’s going on and make shame change sides. She portrays someone who no longer has to carry that shame.”

Manon Cruz/Reuters

Demonstrators attend a silent march to support Gisèle Pelicot, whose insistence on identifying herself breaks a long-standing taboo among rape victims.

“We are all Gisèle”

French police first investigated Mr. Pelicot in 2020, when he was arrested for allegedly filming up women’s skirts in a supermarket. When the police opened his computer hard drive, they found more than 20,000 images and videos of apparent sexual assaults he and others had committed against Ms. Pelicot between July 2011 and October 2020 while she lay listless.

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