Teaching English in Europe: A Word to Women
Women who travel to Eastern Europe should expect to be treated more like women were treated fifty or one hundred years ago in the United States.
Though it is true that more Eastern European women, especially younger ones, are pursuing an education and a career rather than choosing to marry young and start a family, women traveling in Eastern Europe are still often subject to sexual prejudice or harassment. Although this type of behavior is usually relatively harmless, obvious stares or catcalls when walking down the sidewalk are not uncommon. The same type of common sense should be exercised on the streets of Eastern Europe as in any other part of the world. If you look like you know where you're going and make an effort to avoid risky or unpredictable situations, you shouldn't have any problem. Alone on a stroll around Old Town Square in Prague, a late twenty-something American woman traveler explained:
"I have been traveling alone from the very beginning. I enjoy not having to compromise with someone else all the time. But it has its downsides, too. I don't go out at night by myself very often, and when I do, I make damn sure I look like I know where I'm going. Most of my paranoia probably comes from living in the States, though. It seems pretty safe here, maybe just an occasional stare, and I don't ever go into pubs by myself if they look like they're full of drunk Czech men."
Feminism in Eastern Europe is a dirty word, not that it isn't on this side of the pond!



