“I thought rape was not something that happened to men”
Alex Feis-Bryce had 18 years when he was raped by a stranger at a party.
He had just come out as gay and moved from his small town to Manchester, England, to study.
“I think it was the second time I went to a gay bar or pub. My friend and I ran into some people who invited us to a party at a house, “he says.
” I was desperately naive and wanted to make friends and be open with people. I accepted, but my friend changed his mind at the last minute. ”
Alex was taken to a property where he thinks he was drugged.
“The owner of the house poured me a drink and I started to feel drowsy. He took me into a bedroom and shortly after he came there and raped me. I felt like I was nailed to the bed. ”
The next day,“ the survival instinct kicked in. ”
Alex agreed to let the man take him back to college and tried to bury what had happened.
“Actually, I thought rape is not something that happens to men, so maybe it wasn’t something that happened to me. ”
“ I was programmed to think that It happens to women, and that made it much more difficult to prosecute or report to the police, because I didn’t think they would believe me, “he says.
No representation
Alex is now CEO of Survivors UK, a charity that provides support to men, boys and non-binary people who have been raped, sexually assaulted or abused.
While victims of sexual violence are much more likely to be women, the England and Wales Crime Survey estimates that one in 100 mens experienced any form of sexual assault or attempted assault in the year through March of 2020.
Last year, Reynhard Sinaga, “the most prolific rapist in British legal history”, was found guilty of luring to 73 men out of Manchester clubs to his apartment, not far from the bar where Alex was approached.
Sinaga drugged and assaulted the men, filming the attacks .