The impact of banga lists: ‘Boys believed I did those things’ | Domestic

The impact of banga lists: ‘Boys believed I did those things’ | Domestic
The impact of banga lists: ‘Boys believed I did those things’ | Domestic
--

Last Friday, a second banga list with personal information of students from Utrecht appeared. Being on such a list can have a big impact on someone. Two women talk about their experiences with banga lists. “I lost confidence in guys.”

Iris* (23) stond als kind op een bangalijst, in haar laatste jaar op de basisschool. Jongens hadden een lijst met “de grootste sletten uit groep 8” gemaakt en verspreidden geruchten dat Iris orale seks had gehad. Daar klopte niets van.

“Maar het leidde wel tot pestgedrag”, zegt Iris. “Ook merkte ik dat jongens anders naar me begonnen te kijken. Steeds meer jongens gingen geloven dat ik dat soort dingen deed en ervoor openstond.”

De pesterijen kon Iris achter zich laten. Maar de lijst had wel effect op haar beeld van seks. “Hierna begon ik te geloven dat wat andere mensen van mij verwachtten belangrijker was dan wat ik zelf wilde. Daar liet ik me in meeslepen. Dat vond ik makkelijker dan er alsmaar tegenin blijven gaan.”

“Ik denk dat de lijst ervoor heeft gezorgd dat ik er eigenlijk niet meer van opkeek dat jongens van alles van mij vonden en van mij verwachtten. Ik kreeg het beeld dat ik maar seksueel dienstbaar moest zijn.”

Begin van meerdere vervelende ervaringen

Iris heeft in haar puberteit meerdere vervelende seksuele ervaringen gehad. “Ik heb dingen gedaan waarvan ik toen dacht dat ik het prima vond. Maar achteraf zie ik dat ik toch grotendeels erin ben gepraat. De bangalijst is een start geweest van een hele lange reeks aan verkeerde verwachtingen rondom seks.”

Ze denkt dat de bangalijst daar een belangrijke rol in heeft gespeeld. “Over de bangalijst werd op dat moment weinig gepraat. Mijn ouders heb ik er ook niet over verteld, thuis praatten we niet over seks.” Het is een van de redenen dat Iris niet met haar eigen naam in het artikel wil.

“Ik had er denk ik veel aan gehad als iemand had gezegd: wat hier gebeurt is niet oké. Dan had ik later misschien sneller mijn twijfels gehad bij avances of voorstellen van mannen.”

No more trust in boys

Femke* (23) was on a banga list when she was fifteen years old. She was mentioned in a Telegram group, along with thirty other girls from her school. In that group, they were judged based on their bodies and how “easy they were.” They were also described with humiliating texts.

Because Femke’s contact details were shared in the group, she received messages on social media for months. “I was afraid to look at my phone because people were threatening me with rape in the messages.”

Because of the banga list, Femke lost confidence in the boys at school. She thought any boy could have made the list, and that influenced her behavior. “I no longer wanted to be in class when a boy sat next to me.” Ultimately, Femke benefited from therapy. “I didn’t want to let what happened affect my education.”

The event also had an impact outside school. “For example, when I went out in my hometown, I was more reluctant to flirt or initiate contact at all. I didn’t want people to think that anything written in that group was true. Everything that was written there, I had never done before. .”

After high school, Femke managed to put it behind her. “When I went to secondary vocational education, things had already improved considerably.” When she met her current boyfriend, she no longer felt distrust. “Because he was from another province, I knew he couldn’t have had anything to do with this.”

‘It makes you an outlaw’

Krista Schram recognizes the distrust of women who have been on a banga list. She is an associate lecturer in Public Trust and Safety at Inholland University of Applied Sciences and has conducted research into the consequences of sexting and exhibiting young people in Rotterdam.

“Such lists invite sexual harassment,” says Schram. “Guys think: that’s a cheap girl. It actually makes you a kind of outlaw.”

“Such a list damages women’s confidence,” says Schram. “Because of the betrayed trust, it is important that women dare to talk about it with someone.” This can be with friends, but there are also agencies you can go to. “It’s important to share it and not just walk around with it.”

*The names of Iris and Femke have been fictitious. Their real names are known to the editors.

Om een vraag te kunnen stellen dien je in te loggen. Log in of maak binnen 1 minuut jouw gratis account aan.

Direct inloggen

Gratis account aanmaken

The article is in Dutch

Netherlands

Tags: impact banga lists Boys believed Domestic

-

PREV Old Westerbork water treatment plant defaced with Nazi slogans
NEXT Dozens of Dutch soldiers march through the streets: ‘Something is really going on’