LGBTI Celebrate 20 years of Democracy with ….. Fear

freegender's avatarfreegender

On 15/02/2014 last weekend Saturday in Khayelitsha as free gender we where ceabrating life of Zoliswa Nonkonyana.who was brutally murder in Khayelitsha. As lgbti in this 20 of democracy the involvement in codesa discussion about constitution in 1990.we celebrate our constitutional laws that government passed.
 Anti-discrimination law in in 1995
 Disallows discrimination sexual orientation1996
 Anti-discrimination law in provision of goods and services in 1997
 Anti-discrimination law in all other areas e.g. hate speech, indirect discrimination in 1997.
 Same-sex activity legal in 1998.
 Homosexual allowed serving openly the military in 1998.
 Recognition of same sex couples as de facto couple in 1999.
 Right to change legal gender in 2003.
 Parenting and adoption of same sex couple in 2002.

 Equal access to IVF and surrogacy for all couples and individual in 2003.
 Recognition of same sex couples in a civil…

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Cape Town Gay Pride belongs to all LGBTI community

We are with you all the way FreeGenders…

freegender's avatarfreegender

Remembering our commitment to the creation of inclusive spaces which speak to the lived realities of black lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender and intersex persons in South Africa. Remembering Zoliswa Nkonyana, Remembering Eudy Simelane, Remembering Duduzile Zozo, Remembering Noxolo Nogwaza , Remembering Sizakele Sigasa. Free Gender has made the decision to continue to suspend its support for the upcoming Cape Town Pride 2015. Remembering that BLACK LGBTI LIVES MATTER!
The events currently tabled for the upcoming Cape Town Pride are exclusionary and do not represent the black lesbian, gay, bisexual, intersex and transgender community. Free Gender with other persons in their personal capacities has attempted to negotiate with the current planners of Cape Town Pride for the creation of an inclusive space which recognizes and speaks to the struggles of ALL LGBTIQ persons in South Africa. However the current organizers have responded with blatant racism and bigotry.
In pursuance of inclusive…

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2015 Mar.3: A Letter to my Mother

by Sicka ‘Shaz’ Mthunzi

Imbokodo is what she is, a mother that I love and respect more than anything in the world.

She has the strength of 10 men and a heart full of life and love. She is my mother, my pillar of strength, my best friend and my sense of direction. Words cannot describe the list of everything that she is, what I know is that she is my everything.‬

‪Mama this is a thank you letter from me to you.
A token of my appreciation just to thank you for everything you have done for me.
Many didn’t get this chance to thank their mothers.

 

Shaz 'Sicka' Mthunzi & her mother...

Shaz ‘Sicka’ Mthunzi & her mother…

You carried me for 9 months and screamed during birth but you never threw me in the street. You raised us with love and tender care, even with no food and shelter, you sacrificed your skin and protected us from rains and high temperatures.

I still bear emotional scars inside me from seeing my father hit you in front of us, you still stood up with pride and protected us from the monster he became. You raised us single handed with out the help of a man in your life. I bow to you and say “Uyimbokodo”.

At the age of 16 things changed for the worst with no father and me getting sick my family disappeared as if they we not there. Stress clouded your well being, when you watched sicknesses take over my body. I was told I have a calling, a calling in which will haunt me until I leave this earth and bring suffering in my home.

I suffered various chronic diseases very torturing and tormenting in my soul and body. I remember crying each and everyday asking myself what I did to deserve such misery and heartache.
You were still there when friends became strangers, family became critics.

I used to see things which no one could see, I used to do things not any ordinary person can. Things changed in a blink of an eye. Although you didn’t understand, you still stood beside me all the time.‬

‪I sat down and took a huge decision that involves saving my family from poverty. My greatest fear was when my ancestors said they would take my intelligence since I use it a lot. I told you about the decision I had taken, and also went and told my father’s family but they ignored me.

Mom you helped me through the process with the help of my late uncle, whom I still miss and know you do all the time. When I told you about my sexuality you didn’t disown me. Instead you hugged me and told me you support me all the way, the LGBTI community and the world needs women like you.

You are always there when I need you, even when I have made you angry you are still there for me. I love you mom, as much as I don’t have anything to give you now, I promise that through my hard work, I will give you the best gift a child can ever give a parent.‬

 

Shaz 'Sicka' Mthunzi  & her mother II

Shaz ‘Sicka’ Mthunzi & her mother II

A little poem to you mom‬
‪She has a success formula
Her endeavors are limitless
She is tops in the art of friendship
She has an endearing smile
She is able to use her intellect wisely
Her laughter is contagious
She has the qualities of a pearl
She’s been known to show who’s the boss
Prefers the path less traveled by lots of love,
I love you mom.‬

 

Related link

2014 Oct. 15: A letter to my Mom by Siba Nkumbi

 

 

 

 

 

 

Posted in Another Approach Is Possible, Archived memories, Creating awareness, Existence, Experience, Exploration, Exposure, Expression, Facilitation, Facing You, Faith, Families and Friends, Family, Homosexuality, Human Beings, Human rights, I Am, I am Somebody, I love photography, I was (T)here, Knowledge, Power of the Voice, Powerful, Queer visibility, question of history., Reality, Realization, Recognition, Recording, Records and histories, Reflections, Relationships, relative, Representation, Representing, Respect, Respect & Recognition from our community, Response, revolution, Self love, Self portraits, Self recognition, Sexual orientation, Sexuality, Sharing, Sharing information, Sharing knowledge, Sharing thoughts, Social responsibility, South Africa, Speaking for ourselves, Stories, Strength, Textualizing Our Own Lives, Together we can, Togetherness, Touch, Touching, Treasure, Voice, Warmth, We Are You, We Care, We love each other, We love photographs, We Love Photography, We Still Can with/out Resources, We were (t)here, Writing is a Right, Writing matters | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | 3 Comments

2015 Mar. 1: Same Sex Saturday

Same Sex Saturday ...

Same Sex Saturday …

Special event. For further details contact Andiswa Dlamini via facebook…

Posted in Another Approach Is Possible, Archived memories, Creating awareness, We Care, We Still Can with/out Resources | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

2015 Mar. 1: As I Am… today

Photo of the Day

From Oslo photo files… with love.
Self portrait of a visual activist.
Location: Asker, Oslo. Norway.
Working alone.
Camera used Canon 6d placed on cabinet top…

 

Portrait of a visual activist I

Self Portrait of a visual activist I (2015/03/01. 

 

Work in progress…

 

 

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LGBTQIA History Month: Our Heroes- Zanele Muholi

Visual Activism is an alternative approach to convey black lgbti history in SA and beyond.

Posted in Activism, Activists, Activists Act, Allies, Another Approach Is Possible, Archived memories, Archiving Queer Her/Histories in SA, Art Edutainment, Art Is A Human Right, Art is Queer, Art Solidarity, Articles, Arts, As we are, Beauty, Before You, Black Lesbians, Black Queer & Gifted, Collaborations, Collectivism, Commitment, Community, Connections, Crea(c)tive senses, Creating awareness, Education, Empowerment, Evidence, Experience, Exposure, Expression, Feelings, Homosexuality, Inkanyiso media | Tagged , , , , , | Leave a comment

2015 Feb.28: Norwegian press responses on Muholi’s Art of Activism show

What:  Art of Activism
Where:  Akershus Art Center
On show as from: 21 Feb. – 29 Mar. 2015
Titles: Translated from Norwegian to English by Vibeke Hermanrud, co-founder of Kunstplass 10, Oslo

 

2015 Feb. 28 _ Illustration 1

Source:
Blikk
– a lesbian and gay magazine in Norway – “Activism as art», March nr 3-2015

 

2015 Feb. 28 Illiustration 2

Source:
Dagsavisen
– a large daily newspaper targeting mostly Oslo, Akershus and Eastern part of Norway.
«Activism and poetic touch»

 

2015 Feb. 20 Illustration 3

Source:
Aftenposten
– the largest national daily newspaper in Norway. «Art that is making a difference»
– It says: “Zanele Muholi believes in art’s ability is to make the world a better place.»
by the well known art critics Kjetil Røed

 

2015 Feb. 25 Illustration 4

Source:
Klassekampen – a relatively large, radical daily newspaper targeting people all over Norway.
«The way it actually is» and it says: «I normally do not not give a direct recommendation to see a show, but I am making an exception here», «A damn important exhibition – regardless of whom or how you love»,
by the well known art critics Tommy Olsson.
Related links

 

Bilder fra søndagens omvisning og konsert

 

and

 

2015 Feb. 23:  Paving a new way forward

 

and

 

2015 Feb. 21:  SA Ambassador to Norway opens Muholi’s exhibition

 

and

 

2015 Feb. 19:  Trending with Shaz ‘Sicka’ in Oslo

 

and

 

2015 Feb.15:  “I have won again”

 

and

 

2015 Feb. 13:  From Johannesburg to Oslo

 

and

 

2015 Feb. 11:  Preliminary program for Zanele Muholi

 

and

 

2015 Feb. 10:  Another round for Norway

 

 

 

 

 

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2015 Feb. 25: Self Portrait of the visual activist

Camera used:  iPhone 5S

Location: Foreign Ministry office, Oslo. Norway.

“The true content of a photograph is invisible,
for it derives from a play, not with form, but with time”.

John Berger (Understanding a Photograph)

 

Self Portrait of the visual activist...

Self Portrait of the visual activist…

 

 

 

Posted in Bringing photography to the community, Give children cameras not candies, Motivation, Penetrating mainstream spaces, South African Visible Arts, Speaking for ourselves, Statement, Stylish, Subject of Art, Subjects, Success, Survived, Textualizing Our Own Lives, Visual history is a Right not a luxury, Visual narratives, Visual Power, Visual sense, Visualizing our lives, Visuals, Voice | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | 1 Comment

2015 Feb.27: Announcement – Public Lecture by Zanele Muholi @ UCLAN, London

Visual activist portrait.  Photo credit:  Zanele Muholi, Parktown, Johannesburg  (2014)

Visual activist portrait. Photo credit: Zanele Muholi, Parktown, Johannesburg (2014)

 

Making Histories Visible is pleased to announce a public lecture by award-winning South African photographer Zanele Muholi on Tuesday 17th March at the University of Central Lancashire.

An internationally acclaimed visual activist, Muholi co-founded the Forum for Empowerment of Women (FEW) in 2002, and in 2009 founded Inkanyiso (www.inkanyiso.org), a forum for queer and visual activist media. Her self-proclaimed mission is ‘to re-write a black queer and trans visual history of South Africa for the world to know of our resistance and existence at the height of hate crimes in SA and beyond’. She continues to train and co-facilitate photography workshops for young women in the townships.
Muholi will be joined by Lerato Dumse, writer, journalist and activist passionate about documenting LGBTI’s lives in and outside her South African hometown of Kwa-Thema. Dumse has been editor of Inkanyiso since 2013. She currently works as a publicist for the on-going Faces and Phases project, and is also a participant featured in the recently published, Faces and Phases 2006-14 photography book.

Zanele Muholi was born in Umlazi, Durban, and lives in Johannesburg. She studied Advanced Photography at the Market Photo Workshop in Newtown, Johannesburg, and in 2009 completed an MFA: Documentary Media at Ryerson University, Toronto. She has won numerous awards including the Ryerson Alumni Achievement Award (2015); Fine Prize for an Emerging Artist at the 2013 Carnegie International; Prince Claus Award (2013); Index on Censorship – Freedom of Expression Art Award (2013); Casa Africa Award for Best Female Photographer and a Fondation Blachère Prize at Les Rencontres de Bamako – Biennial of African Photography (2009).
Her Faces and Phases series was shown at, among others, the South African Pavilion at the 55th Venice Biennale (2013), Documenta 13 (2012), and the 29th São Paulo Biennale (2010).
She is shortlisted for the 2015 Deutsche Börse Photography Prize for her publication Faces and Phases: 2006-14(Steidl/The Walther Collection). Muholi is an Honorary Professor of the University of the Arts, Bremen.

Muholi’s visit to UCLan coincides with her participation to the group exhibition Residual: Traces of the Black Body, curated by Christine Eyene at New Art Exchange, Nottingham, as part of FORMAT International Photography Festival 2015. Muholi and Eyene will also be in conversation at New Art Exchange on Thursday 19th March.

Making Histories Visible is an interdisciplinary visual art research project based in the School of Art, Design and Performance at the University of Central Lancashire. The project is led by Lubaina Himid MBE, Professor of Contemporary Art, supported by Susan Walsh, Research Fellow Contemporary Art, and Christine Eyene, Guild Research Fellow Contemporary Art.

Public Lecture by Zanele Muholi
Tuesday 17th March 2015
18.00 – 19.30
University of Central Lancashire
Foster Lecture Theatre 3
Foster Building
Preston PR1 2HE

See map: http://www.uclan.ac.uk/visit/assets/Map2DTravelv7_Aug14north.pdf

Entrance to the lecture is free.

For more information, please contact Making Histories Visible at ADPEvents@uclan.ac.uk.

NB:  This announcement was first published in:  http://eyonart.org/

 

Previous articles

 

 

2014 July 18: Women’s Day Lecture at UFS

 

and

 

2014 June 17: Muholi’s Ryerson University (RIC) Talk

 

and

2014 Mar.21: Photo of the Day from Human Rights and LGBTI in Sub-Saharan Africa class

 

and

 

2014 Mar. 18: Sharing South African Queer Knowledge with students in America

 

and

 

2014 Mar.5: More than an activist

 

and

 

2014 Feb.4: Black Queer Born Frees in South Africa

 

and

 

2013 Nov. 4: From Market Photo Workshop to Bremen University

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Posted in Creative activist, creative artist, Give credits where it is due, International Relations, Interpretation, Intervention, Interviews, Intimate, Introduction, Invisibility, Issues, Issues of sexuality, Know Your SA Queer History, Knowledge, Lack of Resources, Language, Learn, Learning, lectures, Legacies of Existence, Legacies of Violence, Lesbian couple, Lesbian Professionals, LGBT community, LGBT rights activist, Life, Life lived, Life Stories, Living, Living by example, Longing, Loss, Love, Love is Queer, Loved, Lovely words, Lovers, Loving, Mainstream media, Mainstream spaces, Media works, Memories, Memory, Political Art, Political space, Politics of existence, Politics of geography, Recognition, recognized, Recognizing the problem, Recording, Records and histories, Reflection, relative, Remembering, Seeing difference | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | 12 Comments

2015 Feb. 25: I drank again…

by Siba Nkumbi

I acknowledged that I suffered from alcoholism but I never fully accepted that I am the cause of my misery. Little things triggered a relapse. Here is a practical example: I lost two jobs in one month, lost hope in finding anything permanent and was facing the possibility of going back to the Eastern Cape knowing pretty well that I came to Cape Town to get back on my feet again.

Things never really turn out as planned, 25 years later I still have to remind myself about life being unpredictable. I felt my cravings grow everyday, I had to push through each day reminding myself that I don’t have to drink even though everything inside told me to get that one drink and things will get clearer.

 

2013 Siba & friend at Mzoli s place , Gugulethu township, Cape Town.

2013 Siba & Thina at Mzoli s place , Gugulethu township, Cape Town. Photo supplied by the author.

I became a master at fooling myself. December 2014 was the month of my relapse, with Christmas and my Birthday coming up, I convinced myself that I had the ability to control my alcohol intake.

After all, I never went to rehab so maybe I’m not really an alcoholic, those thoughts amongst other thoughts encouraged my relapse. I started drinking again, I moved in with my ex boss and I started having a glass of wine every night and I applauded myself that I was better than before because I had stuck to one glass.

The worst day was yet to come. The morning of the 28th of December was a great one. Waking up to the sun shining, what a great day it was. I knew that before midnight I’d be drinking because when midnight strikes it will be the dawn of my birthday. That’s when my relapse took a serious turn, I started drinking and heavily must I add.

On the 30th of December, I realized that I had become comfortable with drinking again and decided to take a step back. I was successful in entering the new year sober, from the 2nd of January 2015 I drank until the morning of the 4th where I found myself breaking down on my bathroom floor.

I came back to my senses snapping back to reality I realized I was playing a dangerous game with myself and everyone I love and care about.

I had to decide if I want stop or continue! I decided to pull myself together once and for all. This time it was final, but wait… I had let down so many people by letting them believe I had stopped, only to start again.

I knew that I was ready to accept it if people didn’t believe me. The difference this time was that for once in all those times I had tried to stop I was doing it for myself only. The last few times I did it for myself, mother, partner and siblings. This time was different I was doing it for me. It only works when you do it for yourself, that’s what I told myself.

I started on a new leaf knowing that I risked losing a lot of friendships by putting a stop to my lifestyle of drinking for fun and to fill the emptiness and void I tried to cover with alcohol.

I didn’t tell anyone I was planning on going to Alcoholics Anonymous (AA)meetings.
Firstly, before anything I had to forgive. Through all that forgiveness decision I realised that it’s ok to seek help and admitting that I was weak to do it on my own.

Trying to do it alone drove me back to square one at a time where I thought I was making progress. I saw I was drowning and made that call for help, and so my AA journey started.

I found a group in a Church up in Kloof Street and it has been my home since then. I felt alive when I met people that went through the same stuff as me and realised that help is always there when you need it, all I had to do was ask.

I am grateful to the people that stood by me when the addiction was horrible and unbearable. Thank you.

The moral of the story…

We come across every kind of mystery as humans, we need to know that every problem we face is universal and we’re never alone. Accepting that you need help does not mean that you are weak but it means that there is a will to get better in pursuit of a better life and happiness.

As a black butch lesbian woman living in South Africa, life gets hard. One finds themselves constantly fighting against one thing or another (be it family or the whole world). Alcohol is not the answer!

We have voices and abilities to come out of our miseries if we can only breathe and think.

It begins with saying”

“No” To that drink, leave the rest to the universe and put your efforts on being a better person.

 

 

Previous article

 

2015 January 15: Exploring my femininity as a butch

 

 

and

 

 

2014 Oct. 15: A letter to my Mom

 

 

and

 

 

2014 Oct. 10: “I tried to commit suicide…”

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Posted in "I tried to commit suicide...", Another Approach Is Possible, Archived memories, Creating awareness, Expression, Power of the Voice, Powerful, Present, revolution, South Africa, Visibility, Visual activism, Visual Activist, Visual historical initiative, Visual Power, Visual power by ordinary people, Visual sense, Visual Voices, Visualizing our lives, Visualizing public spaces, We Are You, We Care, We love photographs, We Still Can with/out Resources, We were (t)here, Witnesses, Women suffering, Women who love women, Women's power, Women's struggles, Women; Voices; Writings; Education; Traditions; Struggles; Cultures, Words, Work, Writing is a Right, Years, Young black lesbian traditional healer, young black queer and gifted, Young Black Women and Photography, Young female writer, Young talent, Young Women and Visual Activism, Youth, Youth voices | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | 2 Comments