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Swara Bhasker has revealed she was sexually harassed by a director but it took her nearly six to eight years to realize what had happened as the culture doesn't teach women to recognize predatory behaviour. Swara, without taking any names, said the harassment happened at workplace and the director was being "predatory.""It took me 6-8 years to realise when I heard someone else talk about their experience of harassment at a panel discussion like this. I was like God, what happened to me 3 years ago was actually sexual harassment at work place! I never realized it because like you said, I escaped. Because the person did not touch me and I managed to ward it off," Swara said."I would just tell myself that this director is being... whatever, but that is not the full truth. The director was not being an idiot or an ass, he was being a predator," she added. Swara was speaking at an event where Dia Mirza and Anand Patwardhan were also present.The actor said she wasn't able to recognize that pattern or behaviour because as a culture "we do not teach our girl children to recognize predatory behaviour for what it is.""There is so much of culture of silence, around sexuality in India, around the issue of sexual harassment, actually not just In India, everywhere around the world that we are just going through are lives without recognizing it properly. We just recognize the discomfort."Before moving to Mumbai, Swara lived with her parents in Delhi, who had a university background, and so was very aware of things, but said "the real world is the world."She said she came to the film industry thinking if someone dares to proposition her, she will show them her "upbringing and values" but nothing of this sort had happened."It is really sad, because then slowly I began to realize that I am just not recognizing it. Because we are so endured to handle and manage things. Since childhood, if anything happens there is no one to tell you that this is sexual harassment," she said.The 'Veere Di Wedding" actor said women avoid taking legal route because they face a hostile society."First of these things is completely inhospitable and hostile society and a culture that actively or sub-consciously enables predators... We should use this moment to not just talk about the one predator that got caught and got glamourized."But we should also talk about the culture that enables these predators to reach the position of power they do. So, it's also a question of making ourselves aware of many things that go into legitimizing predatory behaviour," she added.