美国国家公共电台 NPR Opinion: Christine Blasey Ford's Moving Testimony(在线收听

 

SCOTT SIMON, HOST:

I think a lot of people might have felt a jolt in their souls when Dr. Christine Blasey Ford told the Senate Judiciary Committee that one of the most vivid, indelible memories she has of the night she says she was sexually assaulted at 15 by a 17-year-old Brett Kavanaugh behind a closed door, while his friend looked on, was what she recalled as the uproarious laughter between the two - and they're having fun at my expense. Judge Kavanaugh denies the allegations.

It is hard not to be chilled and sickened to hear a woman recall how she heard cruel laughter from two older boys as they stumbled drunk back to the party after they had pinned her to a bed and tried to strip off her clothes, sexually assault her and made her fear for her life by clapping a hand over her mouth to stop her screams. It was a story of cold, brute male force followed by uncaring laughter - demeaning and dismissive laughter that, in a way, is its own kind of assault. Many women have heard that kind of laughter.

It is always a little precarious when a specific human story with many moving parts becomes a social or political symbol. Christine Blasey Ford's moving testimony unlocked a heavy door in America this week. Her pointed, painful memories helped inspire many women to unearth their own, often for the first time - to talk about the times they have been assaulted, pawed, groped, humiliated or raped. These are stories many women have locked away just to keep going. They need to be heard now, both out in the open and in the privacy of families. All of those stories from so many women don't necessarily prove that 17-year-old Brett Kavanaugh attacked 15-year-old Christine Blasey in the summer of 1982, just as middle-age Brett Kavanaugh's record of promoting women or coaching a girls basketball team doesn't prove that he didn't.

That door Christine Blasey Ford and so many other women have opened, often at great personal cost, could throw more light onto the darkness of sexual assault. But will events of this week encourage more women and men to trust they will be heard if they have the courage to come forward? Or do they have to fear they will be met with disbelief, indifference and even the cold, derisive laughter that Christine Blasey Ford made so many people remember?

(SOUNDBITE OF ZOE KEATING'S "FLYING AND FLOCKING")

  原文地址:http://www.tingroom.com/lesson/npr2018/9/452007.html