A myth holds that Jews went passively "
like sheep to the slaughter" during
The Holocaust, which is considered by many writers, including
Emil Fackenheim, to be a form of victim blaming.
Secondary antisemitism is a type of
antisemitism caused by non-Jewish Europeans' attempts to shift
blame for the Holocaust onto the Jews, often summed up by the claim that "The Germans will never forgive the Jews for
Auschwitz." In recent years, the issue of victim blaming has gained notoriety and become widely recognized in the media, particularly in the context of feminism, as women have often been blamed for behaving in ways that are claimed to encourage harassment.
Australia Leigh Leigh, born Leigh Rennea Mears, was a 14-year-old girl from
Fern Bay,
New South Wales, Australia, who was murdered on 3 November 1989. While attending a 16-year-old boy's birthday party at
Stockton Beach, Leigh was assaulted by a group of boys after she returned distressed from a sexual encounter on the beach that a reviewing judge later called non-consensual. After being kicked and spat on by the group, Leigh left the party. Her
naked body was found in the sand dunes nearby the following morning, with severe genital damage and a crushed skull. Leigh's murder received considerable attention in the media. Initially focusing on her sexual assault and murder, media attention later concentrated more on the lack of parental supervision and the drugs and alcohol at the party, and on Leigh's sexuality. The media coverage of the murder has been cited as an example of victim blaming. In 1997, the
Sydney Daily Telegraph, a conservative tabloid opposition to the
Sydney Morning Herald and
The Australian, interviewed anti-LGBT+ school bullies who claimed their gay student victims 'were asking for it' with their
camp behaviour, insinuating that they were
bringing upon themselves mistreatment at the hands of students and staff at their schools. The Telegraph devoted its entire front page to the
Christopher Tsakalos lawsuit, with the
imperative headline "Walk Like a Man". Reporters from the Daily Telegraph also pursued the Tsakalos story in an article titled "Gay boy asked for it — students" (Trute & Angelo, 1997). Anning also stated that the massacre "highlights...the growing fear within our community...of the increasing Muslim presence". The comments received international attention and were overwhelmingly criticised as being insensitive and racist, and sympathetic to the views of the perpetrator. In some
Common Law jurisdictions such as the UK, Canada, and several Australian states, the defense of provocation is only available against a charge of murder and only acts to reduce the conviction to manslaughter. Until recently criminal courts have regarded sexual infidelity such as
adultery and
fornication as sufficiently grave provocation as to provide a warrant, indeed a 'moral warrant', for reducing murder to manslaughter. While the warrant has spilled over into diminished responsibility defences, wounding, grievous bodily harm and attempted murder cases, it is provocation cases that have provided the precedents enshrining a defendant's impassioned homicidal sexual infidelity tale as excusatory. Periodically, judges and law reformers attempt to rein in provocation defences, most recently in England and Wales where provocation has been replaced by a loss of control defence that, most controversially, specifically excludes sexual infidelity as a trigger for loss of control.
Germany The
New Year's Eve sexual assaults in Germany took place in 2016 where large groups of men assaulted multiple women,
mayor of Cologne Henriette Reker came under heavy criticism, as her response appeared to blame the victims. She called for women to follow a "
code of conduct," including staying at an "arm's length" from strangers. By the evening of 5 January,
# () became one of Germany's top-trending hashtags on
Twitter. Reker called a crisis meeting with the police in response to the incidents. Reker called it "completely improper" to link the perpetrators to refugees.
Italy Coverage of the 2016
Murder of Ashley Ann Olsen, an American murdered in Italy during a sexual encounter with a Senegalese immigrant, focused on the victim blaming in cross-cultural encounters.
India In a case that attracted worldwide coverage, when
a woman was raped and killed in Delhi in December 2012, some Indian government officials and political leaders blamed the victim for various things, mostly based on conjecture. Many of the people involved later apologized. In August 2017, the hashtag #AintNoCinderella trended on social media in India, in response to a high-profile instance of victim-blaming. After Varnika Kundu was stalked and harassed by two men on her way home late at night,
Bharatiya Janata Party Vice President Ramveer Bhatti addressed the incident with a claim that Kundu was somehow at fault for being out late by herself. Social media users took to Twitter and Instagram to challenge the claim that women should not be out late at night, and if they are, they are somehow "asking for it". Hundreds of women shared photos of themselves staying out past midnight, dressing boldly, and behaving in (harmless) ways that tend to be condemned in old-fashioned, anti-feminist ideology.
Jordan Women in Jordan have been victim-blamed for
sexual harassment for not wearing a
hijab. The victim's mother's "resentment against the boy who killed her" was said to be softened upon learning that her daughter drank alcohol and "went on a
petting party when she was supposed to be spending the night with girl friends".
In a 2010 case, an 11-year-old female rape victim who suffered repeated
gang rapes in
Cleveland, Texas, was accused by a defense attorney of being a seductress who lured men to their doom. "Like
the spider and the fly. Wasn't she saying, 'Come into my parlor', said the spider to the fly?", he asked a witness. == Urban planning and road safety ==