November 10, 2019

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The Controversy Around Virginity Testing

NPR’s Michel Martin talks with Sophia Jones, senior editor for The Fuller Project, about the controversy surrounding virginity testing.



MICHEL MARTIN, HOST:

We’re going to turn now to a story that made all kinds of waves on social media last week. And here is where I feel I should say we’re going to get into a level of detail about anatomy that some may find uncomfortable.

The story is this. The rapper and producer T.I. said in an interview with the host of the “Ladies Like Us” podcast that he has been taking his now 18-year-old daughter to her annual visit with her gynecologist every year to confirm that she’s not sexually active. How would he confirm this? By insisting that the doctor determine whether her hymen is intact. It’s a practice known as virginity testing, and it’s a practice that has been widely condemned by medical professionals around the world, including the World Health Organization, as unscientific, medically meaningless and even abusive.

We wanted to learn more about this, including how widespread this practice remains, so we’ve called Sophia Jones. She’s a senior editor and journalist with the Fuller Project. That’s a nonprofit journalist organization reporting on global issues affecting women. She’s written widely about this. And she’s with us now from Istanbul, Turkey.

Sophia Jones, thank you so much for talking with us.

SOPHIA JONES: Thank you for having me.

MARTIN: So, first of all, how widespread is this practice?

JONES: So that’s a good question, and most people don’t really know. So I started reporting on this about a year ago, when I was planning a trip to Afghanistan, where – virginity testing is widespread there. And I started asking researchers and physicians in the United States if they had ever heard of this happening in the U.S. And so I started asking that question – how common is this? Have you heard of this?

And it took a few months for people to really start to get back to me and to talk about this. They said that they were routinely asked to perform hymen exams to determine virginity, which is not scientific, and that they had occasionally actually performed the exams themselves or they had heard of colleagues performing them.

MARTIN: And, just to clarify for people who may not know, what exactly is the hymen? What function does it serve? Does it serve any biological function that we know?

JONES: The hymen is a thin piece of mucous membrane that can be found near the entrance of the vagina. It has no proven purpose whatsoever. Doctors and experts really don’t know why the hymen exists. Some baby girls are born without a hymen. Many are born with a hymen. But it comes in many different shapes and sizes.

MARTIN: What in your reporting have you indicated has been the consequence of these kinds of tests on women? I mean, one of the things that you wrote about is that there are a number of women who have been subjected to these tests who have found it extremely traumatic for years afterwards. Could you just talk a little bit about what your reporting indicated around this?

JONES: It was really difficult to get women to open up and talk about this issue because it’s incredibly private. And of the women that I did interview, there was a handful that had undergone this procedure as children, in their teen years around puberty. And all of them said that they found it incredibly traumatizing. And some said that they considered it to be sexual assault or rape.

MARTIN: One of the things that intrigued me is the fact that a doctor would participate in this when you’ve told us that there is no medical purpose to it. I mean, there is no medical purpose to it. So why would a doctor perform this test on a healthy person?

JONES: That’s a really good question, and that’s a question I’ve asked several dozen physicians and nurses and sexual assault nurses. And they say – they have a variety of different answers. Some just don’t want to talk about the fact that they’re performing these exams because it might be due to ignorance. Even in medical school, the hymen is not widely studied, and even among doctors that I interviewed in the States, there was sort of a lack of understanding around the hymen and the role that it plays or does not play in the female anatomy.

MARTIN: So before we let you go, I noted that this story about T.I., who’s, you know, a very well-known figure – and I know a lot of people reacted with kind of horror and disgust when he was discussing this issue in this way – you know, so freely on a public forum. And I just wondered, how did you react to this as a person who’s reported on this?

JONES: So I wasn’t totally surprised. I was just surprised that about a week after I published this year-long investigation about virginity testing, and it was so difficult to find women and medical professionals to come forward and talk about this issue, that this story popped up in my news feed that T.I. was bringing his daughter to get her hymen checked. And it sort of blew up the story in a much bigger way and gave it a platform where people were actually discussing this issue – where before, before this investigation, I had not ever read a story about virginity testing in the U.S.

MARTIN: That was Sophia Jones, senior editor and journalist with the Fuller Project. It’s a project that reports on issues affecting women and girls around the world.

Sophia Jones, thank you so much for talking to us today.

JONES: Thank you.

Copyright © 2019 NPR. All rights reserved. Visit our website terms of use and permissions pages at www.npr.org for further information.

NPR transcripts are created on a rush deadline by Verb8tm, Inc., an NPR contractor, and produced using a proprietary transcription process developed with NPR. This text may not be in its final form and may be updated or revised in the future. Accuracy and availability may vary. The authoritative record of NPR’s programming is the audio record.

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#MeToo Hits High-End Wine Industry

NPR’s Michel Martin talks with Bon Appetit wine editor Marissa Ross about sexual harassment in the high-end wine industry.



MICHEL MARTIN, HOST:

In recent years, the phrase #MeToo has become a hashtag and a movement that’s helped survivors of sexual violence feel more connected and less alone. That movement has also forced many industries to reckon with patterns of sexual misbehavior that were ignored or tolerated for years.

A similar conversation is now taking place in the wine industry, which is dominated by mostly male winemakers and influential sommeliers. Last week, The New York Times wrote about a rising star in that world, a sommelier who was accused by four women of assaulting them or trying to do so. That sommelier has since resigned. But we wanted to hear more about the environment for women and wine, so we’ve called Marissa Ross, who’s a columnist and wine editor for Bon Appetit. Marissa Ross is with us now.

Welcome. Thank you so much for joining us.

MARISSA ROSS: Thank you for having me, Michel.

MARTIN: When you first got into the industry, did it seem like a very male space to you? I mean, I know that sometimes, you know, people walk into certain rooms, and they look around and go, gee, this is a pretty male environment. Did it feel that way to you when you got into the business?

ROSS: Absolutely. Even before I got into the business, I was going to a lot of tastings to learn about wine. And I remember there was always so many men there. And this one man in particular – like, I’ll never forget this. I do curse from time to time. I’m a human (laughter). And I remember this man that was next to me that I hadn’t even been talking to turning to me and being, like, ladies can’t talk that way. And if you can’t be a lady, you shouldn’t be in here. You know, it just felt, like, woah – like, I can’t be in this space and be myself.

And I was one of the only women in there at the time. And then, once I became a part of the business, it became very clear to me very quickly that I was always going to be one of the few women in the room. Luckily, things have changed over the last five years, but there’s still a lot more room to grow and change.

MARTIN: And in terms of the behavior that has been exposed, has been written about, have you experienced that as well? Because, as I mentioned, The New York Times published an article by Julia Moskin which detailed allegations against a particular person. But it also talked about people feeling like they can touch you, groping…

ROSS: Oh, absolutely.

MARTIN: …And worse. I mean, is that something that you and other women in the industry have experienced?

ROSS: That is something that I experience on a regular basis. I was at a wine-tasting festival just this past spring, and a winemaker came up to me and, like, grabbed me from behind and grabbed my breasts and, like, whispered in my ear that, like, one day he’d have me and then, like, kissed my neck. And I’m, like, what are you doing? And those behaviors get excused because, oh, they’re French. You just don’t understand their culture. You know, I do my best to try to leave events early, and I monitor how much I drink.

And, you know, there’s so much that women have to do to protect themselves in these environments, and that’s why it’s really scary for younger women that are entering this industry – because they possibly don’t have those skills yet. They don’t have that knowledge of, like, oh, I have to be consciously aware of how much I’m consuming, how much everyone around me is consuming, what everyone around me is doing, and where am I, like, fitting into all that? And it’s a lot of mental work.

MARTIN: And I say that because you also wrote a piece about this for Bon Appetit, and the title of which is, “To Make The Wine Industry Less Toxic, We Need To Get Loud.” And one of the things that you point out in your piece is that drinking is part of the job. You know, in a lot of workplaces, you know, right before a holiday party, for example, the company will issue guidelines saying…

ROSS: Yeah.

MARTIN: …Watch how much you drink, and, you know, don’t drink if you have to drive and things like that, and – but drinking is, in fact, part of your job. And I wanted to ask – when you are at these events, is there any effort made to watch the behavior of people, to – are there any steps taken to ensure people’s safety? Is there anything like that?

ROSS: I don’t think that there really has been yet. There really isn’t even any, like, self-policing. But now, we’re going to have to do something about it. If we can’t rely on people to take it upon themselves to act appropriately, then I believe that it is the leaders in our community’s job to start making sure that they do. And I don’t think – a lot of it too is it’s, like, well, that’s not very fun to make rules. Well, you know what’s not really fun? When you don’t feel safe in a space. And something has to change.

MARTIN: So how – what has been – the reaction been? I understand that you actually – you helped gather some of the accusations about this particular sommelier who, as we said, has since resigned, that were published in The New York Times piece. And I know that you wrote about the fact that people have been sharing stories with you. I mean, this has all happened within the last week. What reaction have you been seeing to the fact that something that apparently you all have been talking about privately has now become public?

ROSS: The response has been actually really quite wonderful in terms of the way that the community has come together to spread the word and to get people to come to me. I’m still having survivors that are coming to me, which is incredible. And people are – have been overall very supportive. Of course, there are the same sort of detractors that all stories like this get, where they blame it on a generational thing or, you know, whatever. But it’s not a generational thing, I don’t personally believe. I think it’s a systemic problem.

And overall, I’m very, very, very happy that it’s resonating with so many people and that they can see that if it’s happening in this industry, it’s all industries. It’s all walks of life where this is happening, and we have to keep talking about it in order to make sure that it stops happening in all of our lives.

MARTIN: That is Marissa Ross, wine editor for Bon Appetit magazine. You can read her piece “To Make The Wine Industry Less Toxic, We Need To Get Loud” at the Bon Appetit site.

Marissa Ross, thanks so much for talking to us.

ROSS: Thank you so much, Michel.

Copyright © 2019 NPR. All rights reserved. Visit our website terms of use and permissions pages at www.npr.org for further information.

NPR transcripts are created on a rush deadline by Verb8tm, Inc., an NPR contractor, and produced using a proprietary transcription process developed with NPR. This text may not be in its final form and may be updated or revised in the future. Accuracy and availability may vary. The authoritative record of NPR’s programming is the audio record.

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