Fortune | FORTUNE 2024年10月25日
Mass rape survivor Gisele Pelicot urges victims not to be ashamed—and hopes her case will change society for generations of women
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72岁的Gisele Pelicot控诉其丈夫Dominique Pelicot在长达10年的时间里对她进行药物控制和性侵,并邀请了50名来自网络聊天室的男性参与性侵。Dominique Pelicot承认了这些行为,部分被告否认了强奸指控,声称他们认为自己参与的是一种双方自愿的性幻想,或者Gisele Pelicot假装睡着了,甚至认为她丈夫的同意就足够了。Gisele Pelicot选择公开审判,她认为应该让罪犯感到羞愧,而不是受害者。她的勇敢行为引发了法国社会对性侵问题的关注,并促使法国政府加强对性侵的法律和司法体系的处理。

🇫🇷 Gisele Pelicot控诉其丈夫Dominique Pelicot在长达10年的时间里对她进行药物控制和性侵,并邀请了50名来自网络聊天室的男性参与性侵。Dominique Pelicot承认了这些行为,部分被告否认了强奸指控,声称他们认为自己参与的是一种双方自愿的性幻想,或者Gisele Pelicot假装睡着了,甚至认为她丈夫的同意就足够了。

💪 Gisele Pelicot选择公开审判,她认为应该让罪犯感到羞愧,而不是受害者。她表示,她的行为不是因为勇敢,而是为了改变社会。她的勇敢行为引发了法国社会对性侵问题的关注,并促使法国政府加强对性侵的法律和司法体系的处理。

🔎 Dominique Pelicot在2020年因偷拍女性裙底被警方逮捕,警方搜查了他的住所后发现了他性侵Gisele Pelicot的视频。这起案件也反映出法国社会对性侵问题的重视程度,以及法律和司法体系的进步。

⚖️ 这起案件预计将在12月底结束,其结果将对法国社会产生深远的影响。

😔 Gisele Pelicot表示,她被彻底摧毁了,不知道如何重建自己,也不确定她的生命是否足够长来从这次事件中恢复过来。

🙏 她希望她的经历能够鼓励其他性侵受害者勇敢站出来,并告诉她们:“佩里科特夫人做到了,我们也可以做到。当你被强奸时,会有羞耻感,但这不是我们应该感到羞耻,而是他们应该感到羞耻。”

Pelicot, 72, discovered that her husband of 50 years had over a period of 10 years drugged her and raped her—and invited 50 other men he met in an online chatroom to their house to do the same. He filmed the encounters, which was how police and Pelicot discovered what had happened. Dominique Pelicot has admitted to those actions; some of his co-defendants have denied allegations of rape, saying they thought they were participating in a consensual sexual fantasy or that Gisele Pelicot was pretending to be asleep—or even that her husband’s consent was enough. Typically, a victim in this kind of case would be anonymous—but Pelicot asked for the trial to be public. And when she spoke to the court this week, she explained why. “I’ve decided not to be ashamed, I’ve done nothing wrong,” she said. “They [rapists] are the ones who must be ashamed,” she added. To the people who call her brave for that choice, she said that bravery is not behind her decision. “It’s will and determination to change society,” she said. Gisele Pelicot, whose case has stoked outrage across France, urges other survivors of rape not to be ashamed. Christophe Simon/AFP—Getty ImagesAnd changing society, she is. France never fully reckoned with the #MeToo movement, with many dismissing it as an American feminist phenomenon at the time. But now, thousands have protested across France to tighten rape laws and improve how such cases are handled by the judicial system. Pelicot’s case has made clear that “rapists could be everyone,” as one expert told NPR. Not only did Dominique Pelicot deceive his wife—it was easy for him to find dozens of other men to participate near their home in southeastern France. The men ranged in age from 26 to 74, and included a nurse, a journalist, farmworkers, a soldier, and a local councillor, the Guardian reports. Pelicot has expressed sympathy for the wives and mothers of the other 50 co-defendants in this case who must also reckon with these men’s actions. The trial is expected to run through late December. Societal changes that came before this case, too, were crucial in catching these predators. A 2018 law cracked down on sexual harassment and made taking “upskirt” photos illegal; police caught Dominique Pelicot taking photos up women’s skirts in 2020 and searched his home afterward, where they found videos of these rapes. No matter how much Pelicot changes society, the case is still devastating. “I am a woman who is totally destroyed,” she told the court. “I don’t know how I’m going to rebuild myself. I’m 72 soon and I’m not sure my life will be long enough to recover from this.” Yet she will likely have a lasting impact on generations of women. She said: “I wanted all woman victims of rape…I want those women to say: Mrs. Pelicot did it, we can do it too. When you’re raped there is shame, and it’s not for us to have shame, it’s for them.”Emma Hinchliffeemma.hinchliffe@fortune.comThe Most Powerful Women Daily newsletter is Fortune’s daily briefing for and about the women leading the business world. Today’s edition was curated by Nina Ajemian. Subscribe here.ALSO IN THE HEADLINES- Not in the bag. A federal judge blocked Tapestry’s proposed acquisition of Capri, granting the Federal Trade Commission’s request for a preliminary injunction. Tapestry is led by CEO Joanne Crevoiserat; the merger would have combined the company behind Coach and Kate Spade with Capri’s Versace and Michael Kors. CNBC- Team effort. Earlier this year, the workwear brand M.M. LaFleur was in danger of collapse when its lender hit financial struggles; founder Sarah LaFleur needed to find $3 million quickly. A group of 25 women investors all put in capital to save the brand. Fast Company- Billionaire backers. Vice President Kamala Harris has more billionaire backers than Donald Trump: 81 billionaires support the Democratic candidate, while 50 support the Republican. Among Harris’ backers is Melinda French Gates, who reportedly made one of the largest individual donations this election cycle with $13 million in support of Harris. Forbes- Only in theaters. Margot Robbie’s production company LuckyChap chose Warner Bros. over Netflix for its adaptation of Emily Brontë’s Wuthering Heights. Robbie, who will star in and produce the film, turned down the streaming platform’s $150 million offer in preference of a theater release. Warner Bros. has an existing first-look deal with LuckyChap and offered around $80 million, plus more for marketing. New York TimesMOVERS AND SHAKERSLos Angeles Times editorials editor Mariel Garza stepped down in protest of the paper’s owner’s decision to block a presidential endorsement. Kristina Campbell stepped down as CFO at women’s health unicorn Maven Clinic after a year; she is now CFO at payroll platform Wrapbook.  Patterson Companies, a services and solutions provider for the dental and animal health sectors, appointed Kristin Dietzler as Patterson Dental’s North American president. Most recently, she served as president of Carestream Health’s Americas Region.Red Lobster named Nichole Robillard chief marketing officer. She most recently served as CMO at Smokey Bones.Billtrust, a B2B order-to-cash and digital payments platform, named Rebecca Carr CMO. Most recently, she was CMO at Tangoe.The Coalition for Community Solar Access, a national trade association for the community solar industry, appointed Erica Brinker and Julia Bell to its board of directors. Brinker is chief commercial and sustainability officer at Chaberton Energy. Bell is chief investment officer at CleanCapital.Adept Urban, a real estate service provider, appointed Nadine Watt to its board of directors. Watt is CEO of Watt Capital Partners.Building Hope, a charter schools nonprofit, appointed Nina Rees to its board of directors. She is a senior fellow at the George W. Bush Institute and the founder and CEO of Nina Rees Consulting.ON MY RADARWhat is Usha Vance thinking? The CutBeing CEO of the household is weighing women down Washington PostStevie Nicks: ‘I believe in the church of Stevie’ Rolling StonePARTING WORDS“I would rather have it be more of a reflection of my lived experience, and what I imagine many women’s lived experiences are.”— Anna Kendrick, star and director of Woman of the Hour, on not needing male producers or viewers to fully understand every moment of the movieThis is the web version of the MPW Daily, a daily newsletter for and about the world’s most powerful women. Sign up to get it delivered free to your inbox.

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性侵 法国 MeToo 司法 社会
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