Confronting Gendered Violence in the Civil Society Sector
Fatima Vally and Christopher Rutledge 22 November 2018.
“When
I first reported my case (of sexual harassment), I was told that he was too politically important to fire”.
“There
seems to be an institutionalised elite in this sector (civil society) that
cannot be held accountable.”
‘’The
media, funders, organisations and society in general have a particular idea of
what a victim looks like. Karabo Mokoena’s murder made national headlines while
most South African’s have no idea that Lerato Moloi, a black lesbian woman from
the townships, was gruesomely murdered just a few days after Karabo.”
These were just some of the
harrowing comments and experiences shared at a public discussion hosted by
ActionAid South Africa this week. The discussion was aimed at examining and confronting the hidden culture
of violence, discrimination, harassment, and oppression that pervades civil
society spaces and keeps women who organise and work in these spaces, in
constant fear.
In a room filled with a broad
spectrum of society, ranging from community activists who might not speak the
language of feminism, but who are at the coal face of an unequal, patriarchal,
racist and classist society, to seasoned feminists who are well versed in the
rhetoric of feminism and have spent most of their lives in the struggle towards realising women’s
emancipation, from donors and men who often wield unchallenged power, to academics
and queer activists, the participants wrestled with the enormous complexity of
patriarchal networks and deeply entrenched cultural and societal constructs.
As can be expected when such a
diverse gathering contemplates contentious issues, sharp differences emerge. The
role of men, as allies to women in the feminist movements, proved to be the
most contentious issue with some women maintaining an uncomfortable fury about
the involvement of men in the discussion while others, including men and women
felt that it was necessary to start thinking of more inclusive discourses and
processes if we are to dismantle the house of Patriarchy.
Differences notwithstanding, there
was broad agreement that the networks of patriarchy are deeply rooted and
continue to maintain power within the sector and that the very architecture of civil
society is fraught with a patriarchal bias. Civil Society, it was agreed, is unmistakably
laden with deep gender race and class contradictions. NGO’s often purport to
seek justice in a grossly unjust world, leveraging the face of the poor black
women, yet the sector continues to maintain and concentrate power, in varied
ways, in the hands of men. To add insult
to injury these perpetrators are protected and vindicated, through a myriad of
old boys’ clubs and influential donor and funder networks.
The Oxfam sexual exploitation scandal in Haiti followed
by sexual abuse and harassment cases at Equal Education and the Legal Resource
Centre made some media headlines, but for most part, cases of harassment
experienced by community and labour activists have remained hidden from public
scrutiny.
Even in instances where the media
has focused some of its attention on the sector, albeit it briefly, the
powerful men who dominate and control access to resources, like Doron Isaacs,
of Equal Education who was accused of serial abuse, are shielded from taking
responsibility by powerful networks.
High profile personalities like Zackie
Achmat came out publicly and defended Doron as one of the best activists he has
come across, or in the case of Henk Smith, who was similarly accused of serial
abuse at the LRC, was publicly defended by another high profile public interest
attorney, Richard Spoor.
These prominent individuals who
failed to take responsibility for their actions remain either employed through
their networks or are still provided with public platforms,while their victims remain in the wilderness, their offenses
against women simply overlooked and male privilege reaffirmed.
These cases show that men like Doron
and Henk are supported by a range of networks that continue to not only provide
them with legitimacy, but that also deliberately ensures that their power and
dominance in the sector continues unchallenged, exposing women to their
predation.
During the debates, which comprised
of panels made up exclusively of women and where women`s voices were
prioritised, there were honest reflections on the anxiety and uncertainty in
navigating complex personal relationships within the sector. This web of
personal complexity it was argued, inhibits any clear policy or practise of
dealing with perpetrators from emerging. Thus, the question of whether we should
shun perpetrators or embrace them was held up as an irreconcilable
contradiction.
Our own view on this complexity
is that while personal relationships are naturally part of any social
endeavour, and while the feminist struggle is about undoing the model of
domination and exclusion that is inherent in patriarchy, and while we are of
the view that people are not static individuals who cannot grow , learn and
unlearn socially constructed pathologies, the act of embracing perpetrators can
only really be done if the perpetrators have taken responsibility for their
actions.
As we have learnt from the
painful failures of the Truth and Reconciliation process, there can be no
reconciliation without justice. As things stand, none of the perpetrators who
continue to enjoy privilege and access to black women’s bodies, have not taken
any responsibility for their actions.
Their continued employment and access to the
sector, funded and supported by some of the most critical organisations in the
sector, stands as a bloody stain on the fabric of the good work of the sector and
this insult to the victims of gendered violence cannot continue to go
unchallenged.
Another area of sharp divergence
which emerged during the debates and which was graphically captured in the
closing exchanges of the day, is the question of what a feminist movement is,
what it should be and what role men can play in such movements.
In setting up the debate, ActionAid
spent three days prior to the public event, unpacking the questions of patriarchy
with communities across Africa that are marginalised and affected by mining.
Men and women, most of whom are from communities where patriarchy is practised
and celebrated, were engaged separately, and taken through an intensive
personal exploration of their own attitudes, understanding and complicity in Patriarchy
and Gender Based Violence.
In our opinion, the personal work
which must inform our political work must appreciate that the personal
consciousness of both men and women are shaped by the structural pillars of
domination and exclusion. Our opinion is further informed by the understanding
that Patriarchy is not a biological truth, it is as bell hooks and other
feminists argue, an ideological system, which holds that men are dominant and
superior to women, that can be believed and acted upon by either men or women.
Indeed, the rise of fascism and
ultra-right politics which are premised on Patriarchy and which is gaining
momentum across the world, is actively been supported by women and men across
the world, and South Africa is no exception.
If our analysis were to remain
rooted in biological binaries which seeks to replace women for men, while using
the same tools of Patriarchy, such as aggressive silencing and exclusions, then
again as a sector we are culpable of reproducing the repertoires of subjugation
and oppression which is inherent to patriarchal systems.
While the feminist movement has
made great strides in working towards building a critical mass within society
that can shift social constructs that underpin patriarchy and GBV, the
#TotalShutDown Movement being an inspiring example, the brutal reality of
township and community life, has unfortunately not shifted in the ways that is
necessary to overcome the brutality of Patriarchy.
The deeply held patriarchal views
which continue to spur on the violence against women, remains a
compartmentalised challenge which is continually separated out from the
political practises of social movements in ways that hinders the broader
project of total emancipation.
Unless we are able to bring
feminist leadership and feminist practises into the praxis of social movements,
the challenge to obtain the critical mass which can shift society will remain
elusive.
Fatima Vally and Christopher
Rutledge are part of the Natural Resources Unit at ActionAid South Africa and
write in their personal capacities.




Such a rich and substantive report, thanks Fatima and Chris... Profound work. A rotating platform on this topic is crucial...Action Aid you have started and I humbly ask that a roadshow of this dialogue is imperative.
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