The actor said those criticising the women, who have come forward against Harvey Weinstein, for not speaking up earlier should understand that it takes courage to open up like that.
"I can say I am so happy that I have two kids, two girls, and they are born in this period of time. It's important that women now come out and have the courage to talk and to say things that surpass the fear, because our fear is something that is in our DNA," Bellucci told the Hollywood Reporter.
Bellucci, who started working in her teens as a model and actor, said she also experienced harassment. The actor believes every woman faces harassment in a some form or the other.
"Of course. I don't think there is one woman in the world who hasn't experienced this to some degree. So I think when you are a woman, you know from a very young age how to deal with those attitudes. In some cases, you think that it is almost normal because it happens so often. But it's not normal. What we have to teach our children is that it's not normal."
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"When we were kids, sometimes they didn't explain enough to us that it is not our fault. Because they teach us how to dress or how to behave in order not to provoke. But we have to explain to men that they can't act like that.
"It's not on women that we have to cover ourselves, or we have to avoid creating a situation that can provoke men. The men have to learn how to stay in their place."
Bellucci, 53, worked on several Miramax films over the years including "The Brothers Grimm" and "Malena" but said she did not "have to deal with those kinds of situations" because she already knew how to handle them.
The actor, however, is hopeful about the future as she feels there is already a shift in the way people perceive women.
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