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Women
asking the hard questions
Prespone
Matawira
April 02, 2009
This is the
ninth article in the Chii
Chirikuita (What-s Up?) series
Now is the time to question
the terms on which we organise our struggles and wage our battles.
Now is the time to claim our citizenship.
Now is the time to do the work that ensures our lasting freedom.
In this time of 'transition- in Zimbabwe, we need to
be asking the hard questions of ourselves and each other. We need
to organise, hold our structures accountable, make our demands and
claim our visions and dreams. Now.
For if not now, when?
As women we have already
lived through many empty promises and betrayals by men: be they
located within our homes, communities, nationalist movements, newly
found states, emerging political parties or that unwieldy, amorphous
civil society.
Our lives as women have
deteriorated dramatically in the last decade in Zimbabwe, by now
we all know why. This deterioration has impacted on how we organise.
It has made things harder and more challenging. It has eroded our
sense of humanity and community. The regime has damaged us all,
in one way or another.
But now is the time to
be creative in order to do the necessary radical change work. It-s
difficult but not impossible. One starting point is articulating
the vision of our struggle as women and finding ways to unite around
its realisation. This unity has to cut through the partisan politics,
the suspicion, the political jockeying, the donor stangle hold and
the organisational forms of this time.
For women in Zimbabwe,
the horizon of liberation that was intimately connected to our early
feminist agendas in the 1980s and 1990s was gradually left behind,
as many of us started operating with a horizon of the law, policy,
of governance and gender. Some argue that this was a strategic discursive
move but it was at the expense of losing a destabilising power,
and women-s organising losing its beating heart.
Feminist consciousness
refers to the political consciousness that the gender roles prescribed
by societies all over the world for women are rooted in deep prejudices
that put the women at social, political and economic disadvantages.
It is the desire to counter and stamp out, through collective action
and a broad ongoing cultural conversation, such restrictions imposed
upon women. Feminist consciousness might have different roots for
different women but the vision is the same.
Feminist consciousness
challenges many of our deep-held assumptions which, if are not often
noticed, is because they are pervasive like gravity. Its complexity
helps us understand other related oppressions based on race, class,
age, sexual orientation, and disability amongst others.
Gender consciousness
is the realization that gender is a socio-cultural construction
and society has roles, not rooted in biology, specifically designed
for those born into the male and female sexes. But challenging and
changing roles is not enough.
Ultimately, gender consciousness
and feminist consciousness are related but different concepts. (But
I don-t want to get tangled in words. Many women around Zimbabwe
are engaging in acts of resistence that are feminist, even though
they may have never heard of the word. As long as we share the same
commitment to our freedom, to confronting oppression wherever it
may be found, let-s move ahead.)
Surely we, including
our non-governmental organisations (NGOs) have learnt that gender
policies alone do not equal an end to violence, to discrimination,
to the bridging of the divides between the public and the private,
to a redefinition of our relationships and re-organisation of society
where all women can enjoy the fruits of freedom. Almost always legislative,
these policies have lacked financial resources and political will.
They have not altered the foundations of our oppression. What they
have done however, is help to conceal or assuage some of the most
detrimental effects of our inequality.
What the so-called gender
perspective hides is a total lack of perspective. It-s a convenient
myth that a depoliticised gender perspective will lead to equality
and overcome sexism.
Now is the time to be
critical. To get to the heart of the matter. To think differently.
To confront, unpick, challenge patriarchal and capitalist power
in order to make lasting change real for women.
What vehicle
is going to allow us to do this? If our organisational forms are
not going to allow us to get where we want to be, then we must be
bold enough to say so. To step out of the shell of the old and into
the possibility of the new.
And of course
it-s going to be dangerous. You tamper with power, you feel
the effects.
I know. This
is a rant. It comes from the belief that the gender perspective
is not going to get us as far as we need to go.
I don-t
have all the answers but my experience tells me that women-s
organising in Zimbabwe and the Southern African region needs to
politicise. Politicisation is the (im)pulse running through our
organising. 'The personal is the political- is a continuous
process, a process of transformation which demands time and time
again personal engagement, reflection and action. To put it another
way. Opening spaces, to gather what I call feminist forces is a
start.
This can be done anywhere
and everywhere.
It is literally the process
of women getting together, telling each other the stories of the
conditions of our lives, and crafting collective visions and practices
of resistance out of them. Channelling this into action.
These autonomous dynamic
spaces can ground our actions, visions and desires, thereby providing
a basis to craft common ground, and create, rather than presume,
a basis for collectivity and alliances. This is a start.
The sustainability and
radical democracy of this process relies precisely on creating new
ways of relating to each other that undermine existing hierarchies
and the depoliticisation of power inequalities. Also central to
this strategy is the need to practice and nurture alliances between
different struggles; the linking of scattered resistances cannot
be underestimated.
Much lip-service has
been paid to these alliances, often skirting over the hard work
they demand in practice. Alliances are about engaging with others,
and hence also about dealing with positions invested with power.
These alliances are inevitably based on the involvement of our subjectivities;
they are about working with differences and working through conflicts.
Perhaps they are about love. About humanism. In any case, we cannot
render them into abstract models. But we can find words of inspiration
for the yearnings that push us to engage in them.
Feminism is about a shared
engagement, in anger but more importantly in joy, in laughter, in
desire, in solidarity. Right now with constitutionalism looming
large in Zimbabwe, what we need to refuse, is performing 'the
woman-s question- within a larger civic or nationalist
movement, that can be raised in certain moments of goodwill, only
to be dropped later on when it-s time to get back to 'the
real business- or to have women-s rights relegated to
a toothless policy.
When Audre Lorde asks
women 'to see from the centre-, she does so precisely
in the context of refusing to be 'the woman-s question-
or the empty policy. 'We are not the "woman-s
question" asked by someone else- she comments, 'we
are the women who ask the questions.-
Women need to ask the
questions that disrupt, contaminate and create. However we name
them, our struggles are [should be] about nothing less.
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