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‘I let my young self down when I let the rapist off’

- ELI ROSENBERG

PRESIDENT Donald Trump’s tweet questionin­g why Christine Blasey Ford didn’t immediatel­y report being sexually assaulted in the 1980s, inspired the hashtag #WhyIDidntR­eport on social media, as woman shared the many reasons they didn’t come forward with earlier abuse.

An author and the host of Top Chef, Padma Lakshmi was one of those who came forward with a harrowing tale of her own sexual abuse. Writing in the New York Times on Tuesday, Lakshmi expanded on the conversati­on about her own past that she began after Trump’s tweet.

“I have been turning that incident over in my head throughout the past week, as two women have come forward to detail accusation­s against the Supreme Court nominee Brett Kavanaugh,” she wrote.

“On Friday, President Trump tweeted that if what Dr Blasey said was true, she would have filed a police report years ago. But I understand why both women would keep this informatio­n to themselves for so many years without involving the police.”

Lakshmi said she was raped on New Year’s eve at the age of 16 when she was still a virgin, by the 23-year-old man she was dating. After a night at a couple of parties, she had fallen asleep at the apartment of the man, who she did not name.

She said the next thing she remembered was waking up to a very sharp stabbing pain like a knife blade between her legs. He was on top of her.

I asked, “What are you doing?” He said, “It will only hurt for a while.”

“Please don’t do this,” I screamed. “The pain was excruciati­ng, and as he continued, my tears felt like fear.

“Afterwards, he said: ‘I thought it would hurt less if you were asleep.’

“Then he drove me home.” She said she did not report the incident to the police or tell her mother, as she had not fully understood the experience, despite the trauma inflicted.

“We had no language in the 1980s for date rape. I imagined that adults would say: ‘What the hell were you doing in his apartment? Why were you dating someone so much older?’” she wrote.

“I don’t think I classified it as rape – or even sex – in my head. I’d always thought that when I lost my virginity, it would be a big deal – or at least a conscious decision. The loss of control was disorienti­ng.”

She also described another incident of sexual abuse, when she was 7 years old and a relative of her stepfather touched her between her legs and put her hand on his penis, she said.

Her mother and stepfather had sent her to India to live with her grandparen­ts after she told them, giving another reason why she was perhaps reluctant to speak out in the future.

“The lesson was: if you speak up, you will be cast out. These experience­s have affected me and my ability to trust.”

Still, she says the decision to try to suppress these incidents was not the right one for her mental health.

“I think if I had at the time named what happened to me as rape – and told others – I might have suffered less,” she wrote.

“Looking back, I now think I let my rapist off the hook and I let my 16-yearold self down.”

Lakshmi said she’s been telling her 8-year-old daughter to yell if anyone ever does something to make her physically uncomforta­ble, and tell someone about it later.

“I have nothing to gain by talking about this,” she wrote.

“But we all have a lot to lose if we put a time limit on telling the truth about sexual assault and if we hold on to the codes of silence that for generation­s have allowed men to hurt women with impunity.”

 ?? PICTURE: AP/ AFRICAN NEWS AGENCY (ANA) ?? In this file picture Padma Lakshmi is seen arriving at night two of the Creative Arts Emmy Awards in Los Angeles last month.
PICTURE: AP/ AFRICAN NEWS AGENCY (ANA) In this file picture Padma Lakshmi is seen arriving at night two of the Creative Arts Emmy Awards in Los Angeles last month.

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