Yahoo – AFP,
Brian KNOWLTON, 1 January 2018
More than 300 top women in Hollywood -- from Meryl Streep and Jennifer Lawrence to Emma Thompson and Cate Blanchett -- unveiled an initiative Monday to tackle pervasive sexual harassment in workplaces, calling special attention to their "sisters" in less than glamorous blue-collar jobs.
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| Actress Jennifer Lawrence, seen in December 2017, joined more than 300 other top women in Hollywood in an initiative to tackle pervasive sexual harassment in workplaces |
More than 300 top women in Hollywood -- from Meryl Streep and Jennifer Lawrence to Emma Thompson and Cate Blanchett -- unveiled an initiative Monday to tackle pervasive sexual harassment in workplaces, calling special attention to their "sisters" in less than glamorous blue-collar jobs.
The
initiative, dubbed Time's Up, caps a year in which the Harvey Weinstein sexual
misconduct scandal touched off a deluge of allegations that brought down
powerful men in entertainment, politics and the media, prompting companies,
government agencies and even the US federal court system to re-examine harassment
policies.
But in an
open letter printed in The New York Times, the new initiative lends the star
power of its A-list members to the cause of women in less prominent fields,
urging support and respect for farmworkers and others whose humble positions
leave them vulnerable and voiceless.
"We
fervently urge the media covering the disclosures by people in Hollywood to
spend equal time on the myriad experiences of individuals working in less
glamorized and valorized trades," the group says in its full-page ad.
"To
every woman employed in agriculture who has had to fend off unwanted sexual
advances from her boss, every housekeeper who has tried to escape an assaultive
guest, every janitor trapped nightly in a building with a predatory supervisor,
every waitress grabbed by a customer and expected to take it with a smile... we
stand with you. We support you."
$15 mn
goal
Last month,
the head of Ford Motor Company apologized to employees at two factories in
Chicago and promised changes, after a scathing expose by the Times detailed
pervasive harassment and mistreatment of women at the plants dating back to the
1990s. It was one of the first major media investigations into sexual
harassment in blue-collar workplaces.
Among the
specific steps it announced, Time's Up has established a legal defense fund
that, in just 12 days, has raised $13.4 million toward a $15 million goal aimed
at providing legal aid for women and men who were sexually harassed, assaulted
or abused in the workplace.
It has
vowed to push for legislation to strengthen laws on workplace harassment and
discrimination.
The group
insists that more women must be brought into positions of power and leadership,
while every woman should have equal benefits, opportunities, pay and
representation.
As for
Hollywood, it wants "swift and effective change to make the entertainment
industry a safe and equitable place for everyone."
And it
called on women to wear black at Sunday's Golden Globes as a statement against
gender and racial inequality, and to raise awareness about the group's efforts.
'Dear
Sisters'
The open
letter in the Times, which also appears in the Spanish-language La Opinion,
opens with the words "Dear Sisters" in large, bold type, and closes
with the words "in solidarity," followed by the names of the 300
women.
Several of
Weinstein's accusers signed the open letter. They include Ashley Judd, Gwyneth
Paltrow and Kate Beckinsale, as well as Salma Hayek, whose lengthy account of
mistreatment by Weinstein -- "my monster," she called him -- was
widely circulated on social media after appearing last month in The New York
Times.
Weinstein
has denied some of the allegations, including Hayek's assertion that he
pressured her to do a nude sex scene in one movie.
Other
prominent women lending their names to the Time's Up cause are actresses
Natalie Portman, America Ferrera, Amy Schumer, Halle Berry, Julianne Moore,
Keira Knightley, Nicole Kidman, Penelope Cruz, Reese Witherspoon, Scarlett
Johansson, Susan Sarandon, Uma Thurman and Viola Davis; producer Shonda Rhimes;
Universal Pictures chair Donna Langley; feminist activist Gloria Steinem;
lawyer and ex-Michelle Obama chief of staff Tina Tchen and Nike Foundation
co-chair Maria Eitel.

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