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Being A Genius Does Not Excuse Raping A Child

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Roman Polanski is a genius. No doubt about it. He's even pretty charming, really. It does not change the fact that he entered a plea of GUILTY to "unlawful sex with a child", and can, at least in my mind, be legitimately be called a child-rapist.

That is not charming.

To be very clear here, this was not statutory rape, this was not an 17 year-old having sex with their teacher.  This was a grown man who groomed a 13 year-old, got her drunk on champagne, gave her quaaludes, fondled her, had vaginal sex with her and then anal sex with her. And entered a guilty plea to charge, though did say she was "not unresponsive." Oh, well that excuses it.

If you have the stomach for it, you can read the filing papers on The Smoking Gun. It's not a fun read, but it is worth it so that we can all snap out of our "but he's Roman Polanski" and "it was 32 years ago" haze.

As the Guardian explains it:

Polanski was 44 and already a twice-Oscar-nominated director in March 1977 when he had sex with Samantha Gailey, a 13-year-old model he had hired for a photoshoot, at Jack Nicholson's house in Los Angeles. He has argued that the sex was consensual, saying the girl was "not unresponsive", though Gailey said he drugged her with painkillers and champagne before carrying out a "very scary" assault.

The director pleaded guilty to unlawful sexual intercourse in a deal with prosecutors that saw them drop charges of rape, drugging and sodomy, which could have carried a life sentence, but fled the country in February 1978 when it became apparent that he was likely to serve time in prison.

Samantha Gailey, who was 13 when the events took place, has since said that she's happy with the "settlement" that they came to and she does not think that any further action is necessary against him.

She does not have the right to say that because child rape is a criminal matter, not a civil matter. I hope that she is happy and has healed, but the fact remains that he entered a guilty plea to a criminal charge and then fled the country in 1978 when it became clear that he was going to have to serve prison time.

Here's the thing. 13 year-olds really cannot consent to sex. They can barely handle peer pressure, much less the pressure of a famous and much older man who they believe has control over their potential career.

As a society, we have to protect our children. You don't get to run away from punishment.

Granted, as a rape-survivor, this one hits close to home. (I was 16, not 13, but still.....) We need to take a zero tolerance stand here.

It's never too late for him to pay for his crime, because it is never okay for him to get away with it.

But this is also a great opportunity for us all to talk to our own kids about rape. It's not easy, but I wrote a quick guide about Talking To Kids About Rape when someone I know was accused of raping a teen at a local youth theater, and it's worth checking out now.

In the grand scheme of conversations we have with our kids, this is probably one of the hardest, but we have to do it, and here's why:

  • things we don't talk about are assumed to be shameful and there should be NO SHAME in being raped
  • kids need to know how to define rape
  • people of all ages need to know the difference between sex and rape, and have to be comfortable talking about it
  • we have to come together to say that we know it is wrong and we're willing to do something about it

I agree with others who have said that who Roman Polanski is as a person shouldn't taint the lens through which we look at his art. However, his art cannot taint how we look at him as a person either. He raped a child, he admitted it, and he fled the country - after paying her off - rather than serving his punishment.

Justice here may be delayed, but it should not be denied.

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Elisa Camahort 5 pts

Thanks for those posts Melissa.

This quote attributed to Luc Besson by one of yourcommenters really got me:

Luc Besson said, “This is a man who I love a lot and know a little bit. Our daughters are good friends. But there is one justice, and that should be the same for everyone. I will let justice happen… I don’t have any opinion on this, but I have a daughter, 13 years old. And if she was violated, nothing would be the same, even 30 years later.”

Exactly.

Elisa Camahort Page BlogHer elisa@blogher.com My BlogHer profile ( http://www.blogher.com/haystackprofile/viewprofile... ) truly shows you everything I do online...Check it out!!

raisedqueer 5 pts

Woody signing that actually helps to make the petition laughable. Except that it's not. Why anyone would support this horrific behavior is beyond my comprehension and I won't even try to understand.

http://raisedqueer.squarespace.com ( http://raisedqueer.squarespace.com/ )

Suzanne 5 pts

Anyone else shocked - shocked! - that Woody Allen signed that petition?

Just saying...

Suzanne Reisman ( http://www.blogher.com/member/suzanne-reisman ), Contributing Editor - Feminism & Gender ( http://blogher.org/topic/feminism-gender ) Campaign for Unshaved Snatch (CUSS) & Oth ( http://cussandotherrants.com/ )

Suzanne 5 pts

GREAT POST!  I feel terrible for Samantha, and I understand why she wants this dropped, but he cannot get away with his crime.  Really, he victimized her when he committed the crime, then when he fled from his punishment.  It's HIS fault that the case gets dragged up over and over again.  If there was a miscarriage of justice during the trial, as has been charged, the appropriate response is to file an appeal, not flee the country.

Let's also not kid ourselves that this is a race and class issue.  If Roman Polanski was not a rich, talented, white man (with his own tragic back story), how many people who signed that petition still think that the case should be dropped?  My guess is not many. 

Unlike Polanksi, I take responsibility for my actions, and I will join Elisa's boycott of his work.

Suzanne Reisman ( http://www.blogher.com/member/suzanne-reisman ), Contributing Editor - Feminism & Gender ( http://blogher.org/topic/feminism-gender ) Campaign for Unshaved Snatch (CUSS) & Other Rants ( http://cussandotherrants.com/ )

zchamu 5 pts

I am truly baffled by the people who believe he should simply be free to go. Absolutely, he should face justice. I do believe that both the prosecution and Polanski would be wise to make a deal at this point, for the sake of the victim as well as to have the matter just finished.

As to whether his art is worthy given his status as rapist? That's far more murky. Was Ted Kennedy's senate career worthy after he left a woman to die in a pond? Of course it was. He was a flawed man who did both good and bad things. To me, the world is simply not black and white. People are both good and bad, noble and flawed.  Should the good be cast aside because of the presence of the bad?

Visit my blogs at ThreeSeven ( http://www.threeseven.ca ) (all that's irrelevant and amusing) and ecochick ( http://www.ecochick.ca ) (all that's green, cool and Canadian).

Shannon Des Roches Rosa 5 pts

Jessica Grose wrote another detailed one, on how Polanski's arrest is his own damn fault, and how celebrity entitlement warps the law. ( http://www.doublex.com/section/news-politics/roman... )

I keep looking at the list Liz cites above, and can't believe how many women signed it.

Polanski broke the law, pleaded guilty, then went on the lam. Really, how tough is that to argue against? Even if his victim does want the whole thing to go away, justice has not been served.

Shannon Des Roches Rosa
Squidalicious.com ( http://www.squidalicious.com ) parenting first, autism second
CanISitWithYou.org ( http://www.canisitwithyou.org ) real tales of schoolyard terror and triumph

alyssaroyse 5 pts

oddly enough, i hadn't thought of it that way. i think that when i made the comment about holding art responsible for the behavior of the artist, i was thinking of people like Picasso who was, by all accounts, an alcoholic womanizing bastard. but i love his art......   i had neglected to think about the artists who are currently working, and whose income may INCREASE from their notoriety.

as someone who believes that consumers are the only real way to shift markets, it does pose an interesting question about our own responsibility in supporting the art, artist, studios etc....  that profit from the behavior of monsters. no clear answer for me, but damn, that's gonna be fun to ponder for a while.

for what it's worth, my response to the whole thing is brewing in my head.....  be prepared for a petition that says that we, as a nation, to to abolish rape laws altogether and admit that we have no problem with, in fact clearly support, violence against women and the sexualization of children.

yup, i know how to make friends. :)

____________

Alyssa Royse

Just Cause It: ( http://www.justcauseit.com )A Web Site To Save The World

READ the magazine http://www.zinio.com/justcause ( http://www.startherup.com )

schmutzie 5 pts

Elisa, I agree with you. If he financially benifits from my watching his films, then I would prefer not to hand my money over to him.

I can be found at Schmutzie.com ( http://www.schmutzie.com ), Grace in Small Things ( http://graceinsmallthings.ning.com ), and Five Star Friday ( http://www.fivestarfriday.com ). ( http://reviews.schmutzie.com )

Elisa Camahort 5 pts

I cannot stomach these people who think it's a crime that he should finally pay for his crime. Let's ask them what they'd think if it was *their* 13 year old daughter or sister or niece.

And actually, if our principles determine how we spend money on products, why not art? There is plenty of art in the world, great art. Most is not created by perfect people, no doubt, but most is also not created by pedophiles.

Elisa Camahort Page BlogHer elisa@blogher.com My BlogHer profile ( http://www.blogher.com/haystackprofile/viewprofile... ) truly shows you everything I do online...Check it out!!

Liz Henry 5 pts

Yeah it's hard to see what would even help as a direct action. So I just keep on doing what I do and speaking out and supporting other women However, I recommend a hearty reading out loud of lizzard@bookmaniac.net

alyssaroyse 5 pts

Speechless - thinking on how to counteract this.

____________

Alyssa Royse

Just Cause It: ( http://www.justcauseit.com )A Web Site To Save The World

READ the magazine http://www.zinio.com/justcause ( http://www.startherup.com )

Liz Henry 5 pts

Take a look at this:

http://community.livejournal.com/ohnotheydidnt/396...

The Oh No They Didn't LJ community listed out the Hollywood signers of a "Free Polanski" petition, and over 2000 people are commenting on the post.

I'm through with everyone on that list. How can they!?

---------------
Liz Henry ( http://www.blogher.com/haystackprofile/viewprofile... )
Composite: Tech & Poetics ( http://liz-henry.blogspot.com/ )
lizzard@bookmaniac.net

alyssaroyse 5 pts

That is the point entirely! By not prosecuting him, we send the message that people can get away with it. By brushing it under the rug we say that it is so shameful and painful to talk about that it is somehow better to just let it keep happening. It makes no sense to me.

The victim of rape should feel no shame. She has done nothing wrong. We need to take the shame away from victims and put the blame on rapists.

Much of the shame, I fear, has to do with the fact that people have "sexualized" rape. Even calling it a "sex crime" makes something sexual out of it. The simple truth is that rape is a crime of violence, not of sex. Rape is about violence, not sex. It is about power, not sex.

Sex is an act of love, joy, pleasure, fun. Rape is an act of violence.

When someone is a victim of some other kind of violence - one that does not invovle genitals - we do not hush it up as much, hide from it, feel somehow as if they cause it. Using my vagina as a weapon against me does not make ME guilty any more than if someone used a gun against me.

And it doesn't make rape any less of a crime.

He is a rapist and a violent criminal. That's not sex. And it's not okay.

____________

Alyssa Royse

Just Cause It: ( http://www.justcauseit.com )A Web Site To Save The World

READ the magazine http://www.zinio.com/justcause ( http://www.startherup.com )

Liz Henry 5 pts

Fabulous writeup of the issues, thank you!

Shannon Rosa pointed this other article in broadsheet:

lizzard@bookmaniac.net

alyssaroyse 5 pts

Kate Harding at Salon.com ( http://letters.salon.com/mwt/broadsheet/feature/20... ) really nailed this.

____________

Alyssa Royse

Just Cause It: ( http://www.justcauseit.com )A Web Site To Save The World

READ the magazine http://www.zinio.com/justcause ( http://www.startherup.com )

melsil 5 pts

Hi bloghers.

I wrote two posts about this and it seems I am the only woman they could get to go on the record.  So who knows if I will get another gig, ever.

http://womenandhollywood.com/2009/09/29/does-being... ( http://womenandhollywood.com/2009/09/29/does-being... )

http://womenandhollywood.com/2009/09/30/the-silenc...

We must speak out!

Melissa Silverstein

Women & Hollywood

www.womenandhollywood.com ( http://www.womenandhollywood.com )