Danielle Berrin slams Ari Shavit for not apologizing for ‘committing sexual assault’

“I am glad Ari Shavit has at least acknowledged an encounter took place. … But Ari Shavit has yet to apologize for what he actually did; he did not apologize for committing sexual assault.”

Ari Shavit (photo credit: YOUTUBE SCREENSHOT)
Ari Shavit
(photo credit: YOUTUBE SCREENSHOT)
Jewish-American reporter Danielle Berrin slammed prominent Israeli journalist Ari Shavit for not admitting and apologizing for allegedly sexually assaulting her.
“As recounted in my article, he engaged in physically aggressive behavior — grabbing the back of my head, lurching at me for a kiss, pulling and pawing at me, and pressuring me to enter his hotel room,” she wrote in a response published Friday in the Jewish Journal of Los Angeles.
She added, “Throughout our interaction, he touched me in ways I did not want to be touched and he caused me to fear for my safety.”
Shavit issued a statement Thursday in response to Berrin’s account last week confirming that the two met in 2014, but saying he had thought of their interaction as constituting “courtship” or “flirtation” but not sexual assault.
“I apologize from the depths of my heart for this misunderstanding,” he said.
Berrin slammed Shavit’s statement.
“That Shavit would claim it was ‘flirtation’ is not only misguided, it suggests I was participating in his scheme when, indeed, I was the victim; I was afraid he’d further assault me if I did not escape,” she wrote.
She continued, “I am glad Ari Shavit has at least acknowledged an encounter took place. … But Ari Shavit has yet to apologize for what he actually did; he did not apologize for committing sexual assault.”
Meanwhile Haaretz, the news paper that Shavit wrote for, reported that Shavit would be taking time off as a journalist.
Haaretz released a statement on the incident, saying, "Haaretz is vehemently opposed to any form of sexual harassment. Such behavior is utterly unacceptable and must be thoroughly rooted out. Haaretz expects all of its employees to behave in a professional manner."
"Ari Shavit is a senior journalist with many achievements over the past 20 years of working for Haaretz. Today he informed us that, in light of recent publications, he has decided to take a time out from his journalistic work."
Berrin did not identify Shavit by name in her original account, but her descriptions of the person she accused of assaulting her as “an accomplished journalist from Israel” with dark hair and eyes who had recently published an influential book led to widespread speculation that it was about Shavit.
Jpost.com staff contributed to this article.