|
Back to Index
Of minis, mores and misogyny
Fungai Machirori
November 24, 2008
When South Africa-s
King Goodwill Zwelithini reportedly asked his tribe-s young
women to cover up their behinds at this year-s annual reed
dance, the statement caused much uproar and dissent. As leader of
a proud line of Zulus, many traditionalists viewed his request as
a modernist agenda to dilute their culture and its accompanying
practices.
The reed dance is performed
annually by thousands of Zulu maidens in celebration of the girls-
sexual purity. As part of the ritual, the young women parade before
the king bare-breasted and adorned in short colourful beaded skirts.
These skirts are designed to show flashes of flesh as the girls
walk past - a happening that is not intended to create any
sexual innuendo, but rather celebrate the beauty of the female body
in its chaste and supple form.
But the king, now aged
60 and husband to six wives, sees the ceremony a little more differently
these days. Addressing maidens present at this year-s reed
dance, King Zwelithini reinforced his opposition to the current
practice, stating that he was urging the young women to cover up
in the natural interests of demonstrating respect for their elders.
Traditionally, the young women involved in this ceremony do not
wear any underwear beneath their beaded skirts. As such, any vigorous
movements of their skirts can allow for more than just a peak at
a portion of harmless flesh. It is this scenario that has apparently
been the king-s greatest cause for concern.
As one reporter,
who staunchly called for the practice to remain unchanged, observed:
"After years of feasting his eyes the king now argues that
nude buttocks could decrease the credibility of the reed dance and
make the maidens vulnerable to exploitation . . . This order to
cover up is an infringement of Zulu culture, which belongs to the
people and not solely to the king."
Other commentators saw
the move as being geared towards ending the observation of an important
cultural practice, even stating that any modifications made to the
practice would signify the beginning of the demise of the Zulu culture.
But if we were to relocate
this argument and put these same young women in an urban environment
- replacing the rustling beads of their traditional skirts with
a figure-hugging micro-mini, would the defence of culture still
apply? Probably not. Within the urban setting, wearing revealing
clothing is usually frowned upon and those who choose to dress in
this way are often labelled 'loose- or sexually provocative.
The irony is that these urban women are often seen to be in breach
of cultural codes which promote respectful behaviour, yet dressing
in equally short garments is somehow justifiable within a traditional
setting.
To prove this irony is
the example of the sexual assault of a 25-year-old South African
woman, earlier in the year, which led to widespread protests. The
woman allegedly had her mini skirt torn off by a group of male taxi
drivers and hawkers who proceeded to touch her private parts and
douse her in alcohol. This brutal behaviour was apparently conducted
to teach the young woman a lesson for wearing such provocative clothing.
The backlash from outraged South African women was unforgettable
with many of them - proudly clad in their own mini skirts - organising
protest marches along Johannesburg-s streets to condemn the
incident.
But like it or not, there
is a general sentiment among men that women who wear revealing clothes
- within the urban environment, at least - are looking for
trouble. In other words, a woman should not look for sympathy if
she is raped or abused while dressed in a mini skirt or tight jeans.
She asked for it, so the thinking goes. In Uganda, the Ethics and
Integrity Minister, Nsaba Buturo, is said to have called for the
wearing of mini skirts to be declared an indecent act punishable
under the national law. Buturo added that the wearing of mini-skirts
was the cause of many road accidents as drivers concentrated more
on the curves on the women than the curves on the roads.
What all this seems to
suggest is that women, rather than men themselves, are responsible
for male sexuality and responses. In other words, men use the defence
of the sexually stimulating nature of the female form to justify
their aggressive or even fatal responses to it. And so rather than
men learning to control their sexual energies, women must be forced
to perpetuate an age-old pattern in which they defer their social
autonomy to the demands of a male-driven world. The remedy, therefore,
to incidents of sexual crime, is for women to cover up their bodies
and to avoid re-enacting the 'temptress- role played
by Eve in the Biblical Garden of Eden.
The double standard -
and point of ideological contestation - remains though the subjective
application of the defence of culture, as and when it suits the
environment. Why is a bare breasted woman in the rural plains of
her traditional village celebrated by her male peers and regarded
as reverent, while a woman similarly clad in the urban setting is
heckled and ordered to "go and put on some real clothes"?
Is it not high time that we accepted that with urbanisation and
mass rural-to-urban migration, a new culture - adapted from
traditional mores and values - has emerged? A woman should
not have to live in fear of her body and the different ways that
she chooses to celebrate it.
A mini skirt, they say,
is like a good speech, or article, for that matter - long
enough to cover the essential details, but short enough to keep
you interested. Allow me to end here, in the hope that I have fulfilled
these two criteria.
Please credit www.kubatana.net if you make use of material from this website.
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons License unless stated otherwise.
TOP
|