Thursday, December 1, 2011

Gynocentric Women, Androcentric Men: The Liberian Self Divided

After the recent October elections, a self-identified Liberian feminist woman said in an interview, “They say a vote is a secret but I am openly saying here that I voted for every woman that was on the ballot, because I believe that if you say you are a feminist there should be no if and no but. I voted across the line for women.”

Ovaries in political ascendency. I think of Condoleezza Rice. African American woman. Point person and defender of the Bush, Cheney, Rumsfeld triumvirate: the U.S. regime most analogous to a fascist power structure than any other in American history. At abbreviated speed think heightened surveillance and wiretapping. Stripping civil liberties. Wall Street deregulation.  Torture. Military occupation worldwide. And the original “Iron Lady,” Margaret Thatcher, so dubbed for her steely coldness, her ruthless decimation of economic safety nets, implicated in corruption scandal after scandal enriching the rich, openly defending cruelties of the empire faulted for some of the greatest suffering and domination of majority world peoples from the Americas to the Caribbean to Asia to bloodstained carved Africa.

Vote for women for political office solely on gender? "[N]o if and no but"? Support full gender dominance – when the yes man for nefarious designs is a yes woman? 

The view that women are Übermensch (over-human, above-human, superhuman) is no less extremist than the belief that women are inferior creatures compared to men.

Definitions.

Gynocentrism (gyno, "woman, female"): “a belief system whereby the perceptions, needs and desires of women have primacy.”

Androcentrism (andro-, "man, male"): “the practice, conscious or otherwise, of placing male human beings or the masculine point of view at the center of one's view of the world and its culture and history.”

Distinctions.

Womanism (noun); Womanist (adjective): “A black feminist or feminist of color; someone who is committed to the wholeness and well-being of all of humanity, male and female.” To which I must add: and to the wholeness and well-being of the natural world, the environment, and all living creatures.

I remember the roaring abuse when while confronting sexual violence, sexism and misogyny, a handful of us dared to use the word feminism and call ourselves feminists in the 80s. Redefining ourselves as womanists in the 90s, we sought to harmonize womanity and masculinity in political struggle and discourse to articulate our condition and effect social transformation. That movement has since been co-opted, overrun by powerful front women indistinguishable from the powerful “mimic men” they’ve replaced.  This is Haitian writer-scholar Roger Dorsinville’s brilliant term for the elite collusionists with rapacious global power whose “mimicry” produces disastrous effects that permeate throughout the body politic and economy to stain the social consciousness.

PR coup or psych ops (PSYOP), there’s essentially no difference: we are at war within ourselves/against us.

Come to me in a vivid daytime dream, here’s a story I've written derived from a well-known wisdom folktale of the Kwa.

Once upon a time in the wild eastern forests of Liberia, a powerful healer gave birth to twins, a boy and a girl. To her children the wise healer patiently passed on the curative knowledge of certain leaves, herbs, roots, bark, grasses, seeds and hidden plants. Their father, too, was a learned man; a master hunter steeped in the ways of the natural world. He taught the children how to read the signs of nature with reverence for earth, sky, water, fire and all living creatures. But the boy was born with the gift of the arrow, the girl with the gift of smoke. The boy could fly soaring through the air over any obstacle to trace the flight of his arrow. So, too, could the girl travel airborne, weightless on a trail of smoke blown from her mouth in any direction of the moving wind. These unearned gifts the children valued highly and delighted in far above their parents’ teachings.

Time came when slave raiders shadowed the land. These soulless, vile zombies stalked the children, who had begun wandering further and further away from familiar territory through the vast green expanse to test their gifts. It was not that the children were craftily hunted for their birthright gifts to be exploited, which the gleaming-eyed slave raiders thought to be no more than acrobatics; it was rather the sheen of their skins, the strength of their limbs that drew the slave raiders. These evildoers sniffed profit and believed that the healthy children could survive the manifold tortures of capture.

The slave raiders’ net was thrown, the children ensnared like wild beasts. Each clutched to their breast the deerskin bags they carried around their waists with their gifts inside. The boy, his bow and arrows. The girl, her smoldering coals.  Also in their bags were calabash gourds of water, strips of dried deer meat from their father’s hunt, and various medicines from their mother’s dispensary.

Beaten into submission, the children were carried inside the net between two poles with a man on each end, like animals for slaughter. The group of six men took turns to fast cover the distance to their camp where other captives were. Then began the long march to the coast and the slavers’ ships.

I will let the reader speculate how this retelling of an age-old story ends. Using their gifts and the knowledge passed down by their parents, do boy and girl together, as in their mother’s womb, find their way home to freedom? Will the boy or the girl or both collaborate with the slavers to save their skins and betray the other(s)? Will the boy or the girl decide that even enslavement is far better than the home and life they were forced to leave behind? There are other endings and other possibilities . . .

Saturday, November 19, 2011

Of Sheroes & The Fire Dance

Of sheroes, I may have found one in a political leader. Is such a thing at all possible?  Do politicians today without painted halos exist? Politicians? They are scary for true. Their plasticity. Their shape-shifting toothy lies. Their cold, stern, power-driven philosophies. I'm wondering.  We in Africa have known and seen great freedom fighters, great thinkers, great human beings. Most lived embattled lives until their early deaths (usually by murder). Thinking tonight about this could-be-a-shero and her dance of fire.

Since ancient times, dance in Africa has been a rigorous discipline, artistry indivisible from life’s rhythm. Instruction to learn a dance is a long, long process over years and years of study. A dance draws on the elements; the natural world; the spiritual world; the dancer’s soul divinity. To see a dancer glide is to witness craft honed through arduous dedication.

My could-be-a-shero's name is Manjerngie Cecelia Ndebe. During a peaceful protest vigil Monday last, tear gassed by the new US-trained special security police, she was arrested, dragged to jail, incarcerated without charges for hours. Her dance of fire was in the streets, baptized in the blood of those murdered by the police:  The bony hungry protesters weakened by malnutrition, outraged at their condition. Her dance of fire was in a filthy jail cell.

Said Martin Luther King, Jr., "I am not afraid to go to jail for justice." This is the dance of fire Manjerngie Ndebe danced. She knew the costs. Regardless, she danced to the elements dodging bullets. Sheroic. There may be other deeper reasons, too, why she, the Standard Bearer of a registered political party (the Liberia Reconstruction Party) was manhandled and snatched off the streets. In an open letter, she boldly challenged Ellen Loj, the head of the United Nations Mission in Liberia (UNMIL). 

Her burning words (excerpted): 
Through the war and now in the name of peacekeeping, the international community has created jobs for its member country citizens in various capacities like experts, GEMAP, UNMIL, UNDPD, USAID, International Contact Group, EU, and many others without paying income taxes to Liberia while many Liberians are unemployed.
The international community brought in GEMAP September 2006 and under its continual monitoring and control, Liberia has been rated among the top corrupt countries of the world. The oil wells on the coastlines of Liberia have been given to companies of member countries of GEMAP through corrupt legislative bills written and forced on the Liberian Legislature for passage by the international community that came in to protect us from corruption.
Through the Diamonds for Development bill of 2006, the international community also gained unlawful access to our diamonds, gold, precious metals, precious wood, and other natural resources by corrupt means that the elections has been rigged to protect.
The expenditure on the salaries, benefits, and logistics of UN and other international organizations’ staff in Liberia could carry out domestic agenda development in Liberia for 50 years. It is time you all leave Liberia so we can manage our resources and develop our land. If there is peace for eight years while are you still here while UN in the Ivory Coast is leaving already? Is it not because of our oil, diamonds, and other natural resources that you are expanding your stay in Liberia to exploit?
With your recommendation and control Liberia’s security is under foreign command against our constitution and armed robberies in Monrovia are high while our borders, sea, and resources are exploited by all of you. We are the only democracy in the world without our army defending our cause and a foreign chief of staff against our constitution is in place that Madam Loj has never condemned.
UNMIL continues to be here not for the protection of Liberians or Liberian peace but for the protection of foreign exploitation of our resources and to suppress justice and the rule of law. UNMTL Headquarters are not accessible to Liberians and to enter there, security checks are worse than at international airports.
 Who is this woman, this fire dancer, this modern day Harriet Tubman, Sojourner Truth, Funmilayo Ransome-Kuti? We will see. May the dance not be too arduous. May she not crack a rib, or  lose her life. May her halo prove to be unpainted.

Thursday, November 17, 2011

Painted Halos

Today I'm thinking of painted halos. A metaphor, see? How the crowned are throned and made into angels . . . people with halos painted by other people without.