Showing posts with label black liberation. Show all posts
Showing posts with label black liberation. Show all posts

Thursday, February 26, 2009

Hatshepsut...and other gendequeer Africans

Tomorrow the kids at my school are having a Black History Month Assembly that I mostly organized. Pray for us!

My kids are reciting A Dream Deferred by Langston Hughes. They've got it down pat! I love it!

I'm listening to Dr. Yosef Ben Jochannan on You Tube. He's really awesome...because he has so much information about ancient African civilizations from field work, though...you guessed it...he's a little homophobic. Which saddens me. But makes me realize that I've got a lot of fucken work to do in terms of attempting to build bridges between the Africentric LGBT community and the Africentric straight community because...we are one people...and Africentricity, if you haven't guessed...is my thing...and I don't like folks tryna shut me out of my own fucken history. I know that since Africa is the source of all humanity, Africa contained the seed for human diversity and that various forms of sexuality and gender expression have existed on the continent since foever. I know it in my heart...now I just gotta back it up with research. Because I refuse to be written out of history. It was European culture which taught us to hate our bodies and our sexualities in general...I would be wholly and completely unsurprised if it was our interaction with European culture which caused us to hate this natural diversity within ourselves. (And you know how us Black folk love to oppress each other even harder than Europeans ever did once we learn how...) Especially since the record shows that contact with European culture caused many peoples to turn their backs on their ancient practices of welcoming "two-spirited" people in their communities. But who knows. Maybe homophobia originated on the African continent, too. I doubt that we were ever homophobic to the level that so many African countries and regions within the Diaspora are today tho. I really do feel like the intense homophobia and hatred within Africa and the Diaspora are symptoms of the colonialism we are still under. Consensual sex, love between any souls...are truly sacred things whether they occur between two women, two men, or a woman/man pair. It's all about energy flowing between two or more bodies. I stand firm in that belief. I trust my body to tell me what's natural to it.

And plus...Hatshepsut...who later dropped the feminine "t" at the end of her name to become Hatshepsu...was a female fucken pharoah...a female fucken pharoah. This chick went all the fucken way tho...put on the beard...wore the clothing of a male pharoah...had statues made of herself portraying her as a pharoah. How...studly.

And now...the research begins...well, after my nap.



From Alicia Banks' website:

Stolen Women: Reclaiming Our Sexuality, Taking Back Our Lives is an excellent book by Dr. Gail Elizabeth Wyatt. Read it today. It expertly examines Black female sexuality. It is afrocentric and candid. It is written so that it may be as valuable to a teenager as it is to the mother of a teenager. Every sister and every person who loves a sister should read this book.

It is because I love this book so that I am so deeply wounded by the following quote taken from it: “[In Africa] There were sexual practices that were not condoned, such as adultery, rape, incest or homosexual relationships.” No true scholar would ever make any blanket statements about any cultural practices in Africa. Africa is a HUGE continent with HUNDREDS of tribes. Each tribe has diverse traditions and practices.

It is true that some African tribes do not condone homosexuality. It is equally true that some African tribes DO condone homosexuality. It is wrong and homophobically cruel to state otherwise, as Wyatt has done.

I LOATHE this special pseudo-African brand of gaybashing. I was especially repulsed to find it tainting the pages of this excellent book. Sex is an expression of love. Homosexual love is just as natural and real as heterosexual love. No true scholar ever equates homosexuality with pathology. In fact, the overwhelming majority of rapists, pedophiles and adulterers globally are HETEROSEXUAL men.

Homosexuality is ancient and universal. Africa is the First World. The first humans were African. Thus, clearly, the first homosexual humans were African also.

I cannot express the EXCRUCIATING emotional pain of being denied my heritage and homeland because I am a lesbian. It is a brutal act of bigotry that stings my very soul. Gaybashers, like homosexuals, are everywhere. Yet, I have NEVER heard a white gaybasher tell a white lesbian that she is not a true European because she is gay.

Many lesbian women and girls will read Stolen Women. The truth about homosexuality in Africa should not be stolen from them as they do so. They should not be omitted from the legacy of African sisterhood simply because they are homosexual.

I REFUSE to EVER allow anyone to imply that Africa was EVER a heterosexist utopia!!! No such world has ever existed. And, it never will. Homosexuals, like heterosexuals, are eternal.

More.

Wednesday, December 24, 2008

Kwanzaa, Kwanzaa, Kwanzaa, Kwanzaa

My kids danced to the cutest Kwanzaa video all last week when we learned about Kwanzaa...they loved it! I just had to share it:



And I read them this description of Africa:

Africa is a huge, beautiful mass of land called a “continent.” Kwanzaa celebrates cooperation, but it also celebrates the land known as Africa. People who came from Africa a really long time ago live all over the world now. They live in places like the United States of America, Puerto Rico, Jamaica, the Dominican Republic, Guyana, Barbados, Mexico, and the Bahamas. All of the Africans who live all over the world now make up the African Diaspora. Some of these people moved out of Africa on their own; many others were stolen from their homeland long ago and sold into slavery. Many people in the African Diaspora still show the greatness of Africa, no matter where in the world they are located. They show it by the music they play, the dances they dance, and the foods they eat. They show it by cooperating with other people!



I mentioned places like the Dominican Republic and Guyana because lots of my kids are of Caribbean descent, and I hoped I could give them info on the Black-Latino connection early on, before they even had time to consider the other BS that they will learn from society...


Speaking of Kwanzaa, look where I'mma be! (From facebook)

Join Us As We Celebrate
The 21st Annual LGBT Community KWANZAA

Saturday Dec 27th 2008

African Market 12:00 pm – 10:00 pm
Cultural Program 6:00 pm – 8:00 pm
Karamu (Community Feast) 8:00 pm – 10:00 pm
(Vegetarian selections also available)

Featuring:

Akoben Drumming Circle and various musical and spoken word artists.

PRESENTED BY:

ADODI/New York
African Ancestral Lesbians United for Societal Change (AALUSC)
The Audre Lorde Project (ALP)
The Black Men’s Exchange – New York
Circle of Voices, Inc. (COV Inc.)
FIERCE
Freedom Train Productions
None on Record: Stories of Queer Africa
Rehoboth Temple CCC
Sistahs in Search of Truth, Alliance & Harmony (SiSTAH)
Sistas of Caribbean Ancestry (SOCA)
The Inner Child Experience (ICE)
-------------------------------------------------------
Tickets $10 (Suggested donation)
No one will be turned away - Tickets will be available at the door.

FOR EVENT INFO: lgbtkwanzaa@gmail.com

VENDORS WANTED: lgbtkwanzaavendors@gmail.com

VOLUNTEERS WANTED: lgbtkwanzaavolunteers@gmail.com

Friday, August 1, 2008

Humbled

Dead Prez:



They schools can't teach us shit
My people need freedom
We tryna get all we could get
All my high school teachers
Could suck my dick
Tellin me white man lies, straight bullshit




What are they teachin our kids in these school buildings...
(stop tellin lies to our babies!!)


I'm humbled. I have completed the first cycle of the teacher program @Hunter...I'm again excited to begin teaching, even though I cried today because I made all these mistakes during a mock lesson plan we had to do...I put a lot of work into it...but I was so exhausted from the intensity of the program all week...and plus there's simply so much shit i don't yet know about being a good teacher...but the folks who run the program are so fuckin supportive...they gave me all this positive feedback...i really love how friggin egalitarian they are...there's all this belief they have in me and the other teachers, no matter what our level of experience...they truly believe that if ur heart is there, good teachers are always made...it takes practice...i see why...i'm very glad that i get to practice teaching for a year since I'll be an assistant teacher for the school I'm with, not the lead. So I can make all my blunders (not the type that would be detrimental to a baby's learning though) from a safe position...there are so many amazing movers and shakers in the world of education that i've been exposed to...i have to send folks emails of thanks because i've been so inspired all week...the only thing i don't completely vibe with...is this intense focus on closing the 'achievement gap' between black kids and white kids...i'm like fuck that, let's go beyond the quote unquote standard...cuz even the standard in this country sucks...but that's radical ole me...but yea, on the other hand, i'm glad that the program does provide some sort of real analysis on the fact that education in this country DOES especially suck for black, brown, and poor people...i'm glad we really touched on race and racism in a lot of our readings...i have to read the remainder of this amazing book

I was exposed (through a video) to this amazing man...if u ever get a chance to hear a lecture by jeff duncan andrade, don't miss it...