For De Record
In the Interest of Women

Since I am penning my 50th blog post I was compelled to write a blog in the interest of women in my country though many of the issues I touch on are applicable to women everywhere. I now address my sisters no matter where you are, but especially the women I live among.

At this time in the history of our country, we are all looking forward to a new Guyana. We are hopeful for a new political culture and political system that must evolve into a cooperative, integrated one. We hear, discuss (if at all) and read about the each of the parties’ vision for the country including economic and social development. But what about women’s development, what about their vision for us?

The 2012 budget debates offer a unique opportunity to scrutinize their respective agendas and disappointingly, we have hardly featured. What is interesting is that the parliament of itself is not an extract portrait, in miniature of our society at large, because we are underrepresented. The fact that we are represented, to an extent, also does not automatically translate into the issues which affect us appearing on the legislative agenda, which leads me to an important question. How then can they think, reason, feel and act in our interest?

I identify as a feminist not because I believe in crusading against men, but because I was born into a patriarchal society. This acknowledgment affects my psyche so seriously that I am unable to absorb what is happening around me without accepting that male domination is aggressively  pronounced at all levels of our society (everywhere).That said I am concerned about the political leadership in our country and their treatment of women.

We need to know their positions on specific issues which are of interest to us. We need to know their positions on issues such as rape, domestic violence, child abuse, teenage pregnancy, abortion, sexual harassment, women’s rights, gay rights, child care, domestic work and HIV/AIDS. We also need to know what programmes they have designed to help grassroots/working class women who struggle with decisions such as whether to send their children to school or put food on the table. We need to know whether they have reviewed the Women of Worth (WOW) programme to determine if it has offered women across our country any real benefits.

More directly, we need to know their positions on domestic violence and when they will accept that calling on women to empower themselves is only part of the solution. But that the greater issue is in recognizing gender and power is central to the problem, as is a growing culture which seems to condone it. By normalizing the problem as a “man and woman” issue and or “a private issue” we have reached a troubling point where wife beating, women hitting and sexual assault is widespread in our society.

For some time now, I have recognized that women in our country are in trouble simply by taking note of the women who have been murdered at the hands of their partners. Also by the minimal number of women who courageously appear in court to publicly state how they were beaten, choked, burnt and slapped in the face with irons etc. I have heard the voices of those who say women enjoy playing the victim card and that women like me, feminists, fail to realize that men are also abused at the hands of female partners. I say to them that domestic violence is situated within a patriarchal explanation, a product of patriarchal traditions of men’s right to control “their” women.

The statistics confirm how many of us are murdered, wounded, stalked and are living in fear and therefore, we do not need to play victims; we are. There are men among us who systematically control women not only through violence, but threats, subordination and other control tactics. It is what some researchers have defined as “patriarchal terrorism”. What I have found troubling is that the state and by extension our leaders, appears to be a sponsor of this terrorism.

Is domestic violence acceptable to some, even legitimate? Should domestic work be valued? Will the participation of women in Parliament increase? These are critical questions which our leaders need to be addressing. By failing to outline any sensible plans addressing the issues which are important to us, they have failed us, which is why I have said earlier that we need to know. It is in our interest to know their positions, but importantly where do we fit in their vision of a new Guyana?

Finally, we need to know our government’s position on the Commissioner of Police abuse of his office. Whether the victim in the case lied about being rape is not the issue, we need to know whether it is safe for us women to approach this office in the future. In failing to say what their position is the President and his Cabinet- aside from Minister Priya Manickchand- stand indicted for sponsoring the patriarchal terrorism we are fighting to be free of.

These two are so cute together!!

These two are so cute together!!

This is awesome!!

Mike Stilkey in front of his giant book sculpture.
http://www.mikestilkey.com/#home

This is awesome!!

Mike Stilkey in front of his giant book sculpture.

http://www.mikestilkey.com/#home

Ballerina Aesha Ash was recommended to leave the corps of the New York City Ballet because the master in chief basically said she had accomplished all she could as a Black dancer. After the decision to leave, Ash joined Alonzo King’s Lines Ballet, a company based in San Francisco, where she soared. Ash has been featured in Pointe Magazine, Dance Magazine, New York Times, and San Francisco Chronicle. She also started a blog, The Black Swan Diaries, for all those following in her footsteps to learn from her story as well as other Black dancers that share their experiences.
If you recognize her slender and poise physique, it’s because she was also the dance double for Zoe Saldana in Center Stage.

Keep Soaring Aesha!! The story of being Black in America or perhaps more accurately, being black anywhere. Still, we remember the words of MLK and never lose hope not even for a day. #Iana

Ballerina Aesha Ash was recommended to leave the corps of the New York City Ballet because the master in chief basically said she had accomplished all she could as a Black dancer. After the decision to leave, Ash joined Alonzo King’s Lines Ballet, a company based in San Francisco, where she soared. Ash has been featured in Pointe Magazine, Dance Magazine, New York Times, and San Francisco Chronicle. She also started a blog, The Black Swan Diaries, for all those following in her footsteps to learn from her story as well as other Black dancers that share their experiences.

If you recognize her slender and poise physique, it’s because she was also the dance double for Zoe Saldana in Center Stage.

Keep Soaring Aesha!! The story of being Black in America or perhaps more accurately, being black anywhere. Still, we remember the words of MLK and never lose hope not even for a day. #Iana

beatsnrants


 Spike Lee

Recently celebrated his 55th Birthday. Love his work! 

the-girl-behind-the-eyes:

This is too cute.

the-girl-behind-the-eyes:

This is too cute.

darksilenceinsuburbia:

Alexey Kurbatov.
http://www.kurbatov.net

I stumbled upon this incredible video of Dr. King’s dream and how it has been shaped since his death. What I have always liked about the ”I have a dream” speech is that the message was universal and also, important.

The video, which is shared here, brings to the fore so many relevant issues about Dr. King’s dream in present day America. Again, his dream is our dream; the dreams of young men and women living in Guyana, in the northern states of Nigeria and or in the slums of Sao Paulo, Brazil etc.

Today the conversation on equality, prejudice and integration remains relevant when examining policies across societies. Singer/actor, Tyrese Gibson delivers, in my humble opinion, a solid and praiseworthy performance as Dr. King (I had no idea it was him) and Jill Scott was equally strong as Mrs. Coretta Scott.

fuckyeahfamousblackgirls:
Blue Ivy looks like her mom when she was born…how cute! She’s got her mom’s hand and her grandma’s side eye.

fuckyeahfamousblackgirls:

Blue Ivy looks like her mom when she was born…how cute! She’s got her mom’s hand and her grandma’s side eye.