LIVE BLOGGING from a POST-WAM World, We B(e)lo(ng): Womyn of Color and Online Feminism

It’s like my very own infomercial.

I’m selling a priceless gem – the hope and creative energy that fills a room with history, respect, love, and vision.

If you haven’t caught on by now, I’m really trying to organize my life right now – writing, deadlines, travels – and still get my posts up about this weekend at WAM. There’s an incredible amount of conversation that took place this weekend and I’m working on a long post about that.

Until then, let this whet your beak a bit – I made a little snippet of the session I led with Nadia, Lex, and BA – We B(e)lo(n)g: Womyn of Color and Online Feminism. In honor of the amazing voices that shared so much, from the bottom of my Pinay feminist heart, Thank You. In our session each womyn spoke a wish, a wish for a world in where She could see herself live, flourish, speak, dance, be angry, in love, and witness justice. These wishes were honored and some even came true right in that room!

I tell ya – the power of radical wishing…

See the flick here on YouTube or here at Fem Watch.

Contigo,
Sudy

LIVE BLOGGING FROM POST-WAM WORLD

I just dropped off Nadia at the airport and have so much to blog about this weekend, I’m jotting down my notes so I don’t forget everything.

I’m going for a long walk right now with Adonis for some much needed exercise and quality time with beloved. The weekend was inspiring and energizing and thought-provoking.

SO much more to come…

Contigo.

LIVE Blogging from WAM: Say Thank You

It’s not easy hosting brilliant feminist thinkers in one apartment. Adonis and I welcomed BFP, Nadia, Lex, and Jess Hoffman from Make/Shift into our humble abode and are trying to keep up with everyone’s energy.

This morning, we were cutting it a bit close as I drove like a mad womyn through the crowded streets of Boston to get BFP to her 11am session. We arrived at 10:54am and I ran through the parking lot to make it in time for the opening talks. The speech BFP gave can be found on her blog. There’s no way to sum up the injustices that are happening on our borders and how womyn are being abused, beated, mocked, and torn away from their children. But, the panel was really terrific and shed light on an issue that cannot be denied as a womyn’s issue. Including myself in this vow, for those who ignore the violence at the border done to migrant womyn, it is erroneous to claim one is a feminist or engages in feminist discourse. These continuous infractures of human rights on US soil is a feminist issue. Period.

The Radical Womyn of Color Bloggers’ Caucus had a few bumpy spots, to say the least. Our room was double booked and we got booted to another building. By the time we got settled and going, we only had 30 minutes left of a one hours session. Nonetheless, those 30 minutes were filled with question, passion, and struggle. What amazes me most about deep conversations with womyn of color is how different we are, how contrasting our opinions can be, but somehow it stays streamlined and flows with the utmost respect and understanding.

The second session was the one I originally proposed, “We B(e)lo(n)g: Womyn of Color and Online Feminism. The space that we created was filled with incredible voices and generous minds who spoke gratitude, wishes, and vision for a world of healing, belief, and justice. I wasn’t sure how the session was going to go, but I know that there was one moment that I will never forget for the rest of my life.

After the session, I was catching up with Adele Nieves about her rocking book proposal for which she has worked her patooty off. A young womyn, maybe 19 or 20, stood quietly behind me and tapped me on the shoulder. I turned and recognized her fresh eyes and smile – a radiant participant in the session I just helped convene. She threw her arms around me and whispered into my ear, “Thank you. I have to go, but thank you.” When I pulled back to see her face, she skittered off and left before I could ask her name.

That moment will likely fill me for many days to come. A simple, conventional gesture turned miraculous offering, an embrace of thanksgiving gave me a clarity that can only come with such a young person. What I helped create helped someone else. I don’t know how, why, or to what depth. But, a stranger’s embrace healed any pain I had felt that week and any anxiety I had about the presentation. I touched one.

And she thanked me.

I was left to ponder Gloria Anzaldua. This young womyn and her fierce Thank You reminded me exaclty how I felt when I read Gloria Anzaldua for the first time. I was overcome not only by her power, but what came out of me because of her honesty. I became a better human because of her work.

I’d like to think that perhaps, in a small way, I helped someone else today too.

Contigo,
Sudy

LIVE Blogging from WAM: The Truth Out About Feminism

Reflections at the beginning of WAM – my peminist (Pinay feminism) daydreaming.

The truth is about feminism is the same truth about media: we trap ourselves when we soley focus on our individual liberation. Feminism is not a concept or an assumption I make because a few womyn say so. Feminism is the question, the deepest question of all curiosities that rises and falls to the beat of the unanswered, “Are we free?”

This Pinay, this peminist says No.

We will never be free if we continue along a capitalist ideology that exhorts a pro-wealth, mass production/distribution model of media. We will never be able to hear anything beyond the roar of machinery and the sound wind of money. Freedom has been distorted so that womyn and men alike believe that telling two separate, engendered stories on the same page is equality. Or that once we are paid for our labor as media makers, our work has been brought full circle. The growth and immediate gratification model plagues every social ill we can name and every significant corporate mongor.

The truth about feminism is that we cannot imagine the road to change if it comes back in exclusive dividends. It is meant for the freedom of others who are not here, who have died in vain, in violence, in secrecy, in the dark, and in fear. Feminism, until it thwarts itself from the clutches of materialistic greed, will never liberate anyone. It will succeed in a half-mast victory for a few handfuls of women who’ll erroneously assume the battle was well-fought and won.

Preparing for WAM

This weekend is the WAM conference. I will be there along with a lot of other great bloggers, activists, writers, and journalists. My session will be tucked somewhere in the middle of the conference with other radical womyn of color and I’m pumped to share a session with these brilliant minds.

Most likely I will be lightly blogging until the conference, where I’ll be documenting the entire thing and forming it into a special edition of Fem Watch for the future.

The best thing is actually not the conference, but the party that will take place under MY roof when I have the dream sleepover for the weekend. The invitees are some of the most exciting and intelligent womyn I have ever known.

And if you can help out another sister, head over to Donna’s place, where she is fundraising to get to this conference. Help her out if you can. All help is appreciated!

An Open Letter to ALL Feminists: Statement of Solidarity with Palestinian, Arab, and Muslim Women Facing War and Occupation

H/T to Sylvia

If you’ve got reading skills, you don’t want to skim this. READ THIS.

Open Letter to All Feminists
Piya Chatterjee, University of California-Riverside
Sunaina Maira, University of California-Davis
Campaign of Solidarity with Women Resisting U.S. Wars and Occupation
South Asians for the Liberation of Falastin

As feminists and people of conscience, we call for solidarity with Palestinian women in Gaza suffering due to the escalating military attacks that Israel turned into an open war on civilians. This war has targeted women and children, and all those who live under Israeli occupation in the West Bank, and are also denied the right to freedom of movement, health, and education.

We stand in solidarity with Iraqi women whose daughters, sisters, brothers, or sons have been abused, tortured, and raped in U.S. prisons such as Abu Ghraib. Women in Iraq continue to live under a U.S. occupation that has devastated families and homes, and are experiencing a rise in religious extremism and restrictions on their freedom that were unheard of before the U.S. invasion, “Operation Iraqi Freedom,” in 2003.

At this moment in Afghanistan, women are living with the return of the Taliban and other misogynistic groups such as the Northern Alliance, a U.S. ally, and with the violence of continuing U.S. and NATO attacks on civilians, despite the U.S. war to “liberate” Afghan women in 2001.

As of March 6, 2008, over 120 Palestinians, including 39 children and 6 women (more than a third of the victims), in Gaza were killed by Israeli air strikes and escalated attacks on civilians over a period of five days, according to human rights groups.1 Hospitals have been struggling to treat 370 injured children, as reported by medical officials. Homes have been destroyed as well as civilian facilities including the headquarters of the General Federation of Palestinian Trade Unions.2 On February 29, 2008, Israel ‘s Deputy Defense Minister, Matan Valnai, threatened Palestinians in Gaza with a “bigger Shoah,” the Hebrew word usually used only for the Holocaust.3 What does it mean that the international community is standing by while this is happening?

Valnai’s threat of a Holocaust against Palestinians was not just a slip of the tongue, for the war on Gaza is a continuation of genocidal activities against the indigenous population. Israel has controlled the land and sea borders and airspace of Gaza for more than a year and a half, confining 1.5 million Palestinians to a giant prison. Supported by the U.S., Israel has imposed a near total blockade on Gaza since June 2007 which has led to a breakdown in basic services, including water and sanitation, lack of electricity, fuel, and medical supplies. As a result of these sanctions, 30% of children under 5 years suffer from stunted growth and malnutrition. Over 80% of the population cannot afford a balanced meal.4

Is this humanitarian crisis going to approach a situation similar to that of the sanctions against Iraq from 1991-2003, when an estimated 500,000 Iraqi children died due to lack of nutrition and medical supplies, and the woman who was then Secretary of State, Madeline Albright, proclaimed that the death of a half million Iraqi children was worth the price of U.S. national security?

As feminists and anti-imperialist people of conscience, we oppose direct and indirect policies of ethnic cleansing and decimation of native populations by all nation-states.

In the current climate of U.S.-initiated or U.S.-backed assaults on women in Palestine, Iraq, and Afghanistan, we are deeply troubled by one kind of hypocritical Western feminist discourse that continues to be preoccupied with particular kinds of violence against Muslim or Middle Eastern women, while choosing to remain silent on the lethal violence inflicted on women and families by military occupation, F-16s, Apache helicopters, and missiles paid for by U.S. tax payers. This is a moment when U.S. imperialism brazenly uses direct colonial occupation, masked in a civilizational discourse of bringing Western “freedom” and “democracy.” Such acts echo the language of Manifest Destiny that was used to justify U.S. colonization of the Philippines and Pacific territories in the 19th century, not to mention the genocide of Native Americans. U.S. covert, and not so covert, interventions in Central, South America, Africa, Asia, and the Caribbean have devastated the lives of countless indigenous peoples, and other civilians, in this region throughout the 20th century. The U.S., as well its proxy militias or client regimes, has inflicted violence on women and girls from Vietnam, Okinawa, and Pakistan to Chile, El Salvador, and Somalia and has avenged the deaths of its soldiers by its own “honor killings” that lay siege to entire towns, such as Fallujah in Iraq.

It is appalling that in these catastrophic times, many U.S. liberal feminists are focused only on misogynistic practices associated with particular local cultures, as if these exist in capsules, far from the arena of imperial occupation. Indeed, imperial violence has given fuel to some of these patriarchal practices of misogyny and sexism. They should also know that such a narrow vision furthers a much older tradition of feminist mobilizing in the service of colonialism — “saving brown, or black women, from brown men,” as observed by Gayatri Spivak.

While we too oppose abuses including domestic violence, “honor killings,” forced marriage, and brutal punishment, we are disturbed that some U.S. feminists — as well as Muslim or Middle Eastern women who claim to be “authorities” on Islam and are employed by right-wing think tanks — are participating in a selective discourse of universal women’s rights that ignores U.S. war crimes and abuses of human rights.

While some progressive U.S. feminists claim to oppose the hijacking of women’s rights to justify U.S. invasions, they simultaneously evade any mention about the plight of women in Palestine, Iraq, or Afghanistan. Their statements continue to focus only on female genital mutilation or dowry deaths under the guise of breaking the “politically correct” silence on abuses of women in the “Muslim world” that the Right disingenuously laments.5

Some progressives may support such statements with good intentions, but these critiques ignore the fact that Palestinian, Arab, and Muslim feminists have been working on these issues for generations, focusing on the intersections of gender, sexuality, race, class, and nationalism. Their work is ignored by North American feminists who claim to advocate for a “global sisterhood” but are disillusioned to discover that women in the U.S. military participated in the acts of torture at Abu Ghraib.

We are concerned about these silences and selective condemnations given that the U.S. mainstream media bolsters this imperialist feminism by using an (often liberal) Orientalist approach to covering the Middle East or South Asia. For example, on March 5, 2008, as the death toll due to Israeli attacks in Gaza was mounting, the New York Times chose to publish an article just below its report on the Israeli military incursions that focused on the sentencing of a Palestinian man in Israel for an honor killing; the report was deemed worthy of international coverage because the Palestinian women had broken “the code of silence” by resorting to Israeli courts.6

The implications of this juxtaposition of two unrelated events are that Palestinians belong to a backward, patriarchal culture that, rightly or wrongly, is under attack by a modern, “democratic” state with a legal apparatus that supports women’s rights. Others have shown that the New York Times gave disproportionate attention to the Human Rights Watch report in 2006 on domestic violence against Palestinian women relative to its scant mention of the 76 reports of Israeli abuses of Palestinian rights by Human Rights Watch, Amnesty International, and the Israeli organization, B’Tselem.7

Similar coverage exists of women from other countries outside the U.S. that are portrayed as victims only of their own cultural traditions, rather than also of the ravages of Western imperialism and predatory global capitalism. No attention is paid in the mainstream U.S. media to reports such as that in Haaretz documenting that Palestinian women citizens of Israel are the most exploited group in the Israeli workforce, making only 47% of the wages earned by their Jewish counterparts in Israel, and with double the rate of unemployment of Jewish women.8 Little is known in the U.S. about what the lives of Iraqi women are really like now that they are pressured to cover themselves in public or not work outside the house, nor of Afghani women whose homes are still being bombed in a war that was supposed to have liberated them many years ago.

We stand in solidarity with feminist and liberatory movements that are opposing U.S. imperialism, U.S.-backed occupation, militarism, and economic exploitation as well as resisting religious and secular fundamentalisms.

We also support the struggles of those within the U.S. opposing the War on Terror and racist practices of detention, deportation, surveillance, and torture linked to the military-industrial-prison complex that selectively targets immigrants, minorities, and youth of color. We are grateful for the courageous scholarship of academics who are at risk of not getting tenure or employment because they do research related to settler colonialism or taboo topics such as Palestinian rights and expose controversial aspects of U.S. policies here and abroad.

At a moment when U.S. military interventions have made “democracy” a dirty word in much of the world, we strive for true democracy and for freedom and justice for all our sisters and brothers.

Piya Chatterjee, University of California-Riverside
Sunaina Maira, University of California-Davis
Campaign of Solidarity with Women Resisting U.S. Wars and Occupation
South Asians for the Liberation of Falastin

1 “The Tragedy in Gaza,” Kinder USA, <kinderusa.org/>, March 5, 2008.

2 “Wide-Scale Israeli Military Operations Against the Gaza Strip,” Weekly Report on Israeli Human Rights Violations in the Occupied Palestinian Territory, Palestinian Centre for Human Rights, <pchrgaza.org/>, March 6, 2008.

3 Rory McCarthy, “Israeli Minister Warns of Holocaust for Gaza If Violence Continues,” The Guardian, <guardian.co.uk/>, March 1, 2008.

4 “The Tragedy in Gaza,” op. cit.

5 For example, Katha Pollitt’s petition, “An Open Letter from American Feminists,” posted at: <motherjones.com/mojoblog/archives/2008/01/6901_an_open_letter.html>. See also: Debra Dickerson, “What NOW? Feminist Fatigue and the Global Quest for Women’s Rights,” Mother Jones, <motherjones.com/mojoblog/archives/2007/12/6609_western_feminis.html>, December 18, 2007.

6 “16-Year Sentence in Honor Killing,” The New York Times, <nytimes.com/2008/03/05/world/middleeast/05honor.html>, March 5, 2008.

7 Patrick O’Connor and Rachel Roberts, “The New York Times Marginalizes Palestinian Women and Palestinian Rights,” The Electronic Intifada <electronicintifada.net/v2/article6061.shtml>, November 17, 2006.

8 Ruth Sinai, “Arab Women — the Most Exploited Group in Israeli Workforce,” Haaretz, <haaretz.com/>, January 2, 2008.

I Can’t Watch CNN Right Now

…this Spitzer mess is out of control. Yes, I understand it’s a journalist’s dream to cover a governor’s resignation due to sex scandal. But on CNN, they interviewed a FORMER PIMP to ask about the rates of high price prostitutes and how he felt about his “former life.” This guy comments that he “made people happy; helped girls in their twenties live the Manhattan life with good money…”

I just screamed and literally slammed the tv off.

Do people think this is a modern day version of Pretty Woman?

I can’t believe big media right now.

::disgusted::

I can’t make up my mind with what I am more appalled by: the dem race or the Spitzer scandal.