2011 May – GDX – SIPD Exchange Programme

Video II
From our video archives

GDX – SIPD Exchange Programme in Kampala, Uganda.

Documented by Inkanyiso… (2011)

Posted in Abantu, Activism, Community Mobilizing, Documentation; Filming; Photography; Community | Tagged | 3 Comments

2011 Nov.: Trans Health & Advocacy conference hosted by GenderDynamix

Inkanyiso video archives:

Trans Health & Advocacy conference hosted by GenderDynamix documented live by Inkanyiso at different sessions and discussions.
Main focus was on Trans activism…

Posted in Abantu, Activism, revolution, Visual history, Women; Voices; Writings; Education; Traditions; Struggles; Cultures | Tagged | 2 Comments

2012 March 2013: The Fact Remains…

I’m not looking for sympathy
or feeling sorry
things happened this way
Nothing anyone can say will change anything
because
The fact remains…
I am now counted in the statistics because
The fact remains…
Don’t tell me I should have never allowed
my story to be published
because….
The fact remains….
You don’t know how I feel
-no one does and the
The fact remains….
Don’t tell me what people might say
or think because
The fact remains….
It’s not going to change anything
Don’t ask me who was my rapist
because it makes me mad
But mad as I can be and
for everyone’s sake and my own
Life goes on and still
The fact remains..
that

I AM INFECTED!!!

© Busi Sigasa
(2006)

____________________
About the author

She died on the 12th March 2007 at the age of 25.
Join us on the 6th April 2013 as we commemorate and celebrate her life with Buhle Msibi.
See full details on Public Announcement below:
https://inkanyiso.org/2013/03/08/2013-march-8-event-announcement/

Her previous poem published here is:
Remember Me When I’m gone
https://inkanyiso.org/2013/03/09/2013-march-8-remember-me-when-im-gone/

Posted in Abantu, Black Lesbians, Documentation; Filming; Photography; Community, Exposure | Tagged | Leave a comment

2013 March 5: Reflections on Lesbian wedding screening


This is a feedback on the ongoing community outreach events that Inkanyiso held as part of visual activism initiatives. We host the screenings at various places especially in the townships and surrounding areas. The previous one was of a Lesbian Wedding that took place in Durban in June 2012. The screening that was held at Kwa-Thema on the 3rd of March 2013.

by Nqobile Nxumalo
There were about 15 people that initially came, but others ended up sitting outside enjoying their refreshments. So there were about 10 of us who watched and participated in the gathering.

We were a diverse group of young and matured, males and females.

Ages ranged from 19 years to 52 years.

The screening started at 2:00pm and it was successful because the main aim was achieved.

We watched a documented wedding between two of our kind, a butch and femme woman. The wedding was beautiful even though I didn’t watch the whole thing. We then talked about the fact that the butch bride (groom in this case) was addressed as a man (sir, Mr, husband).

Most of butch lesbians in the room agreed that they would rather be addressed as women where as some felt they wanted to be addressed as men. We all came to a conclusion that it all comes down to personal preference.

Hate crime was the next topic on the table. Recently there have been more murders and rapes due to hate crimes against homosexuals than there has been in the past years. People use corrective rape to cure or correct homosexuality or turn them heterosexual.

They sometimes murder homosexuals to remove them from society. This act against homosexuals is so demonic and inhuman. I personally think that these perpetrators should be given life sentence, that’s if there’ll ever be justice in South Africa because they always get away with it.

We discussed this topic which is very sensitive to the homosexual community and agreed that we are faced with a huge problem. We need to stand together to protect and fight for our rights to live freely. People need to be educated about sexual orientation and that like heterosexuality no one can choose their sexual orientation. We further spoke about educating each other as we sometimes as homosexuals over do things, Like wanting to compete with men, and you find that in all murder, rape cases the story is the same, the Butch has been murdered/raped by her friends at 2am coming form a tavern.

So we need to educate ourselves and remember that we are still women at the end of the day. Now in the group there were different age groups one of the older gays he said he is 52 years of age, in his time there were no such things because they used to look after each other gays and lesbians. They also respected men and their women, not going to pick fights or show men they are better than them, taking their girlfriends.
Initially referred to as gay community but as time passed , LGBTI was formed. After LGBTI there has been more additions of terminologies to the family. First it was I and A which stand for Intersexual and Asexual respectively, but however, recently Q for Queer was added, which I thought was a term used to insult gay people.
Apparently there is another addition, P for pansexual. Only few people in the room knew or even understood about these additions to our community, they seem a little lost. We as the LGBTSQIA community must take an initiative of educating ourselves and each other, because this is our home, where we feel we belong, where we’ll never be raped, murdered or sworn at.

This meeting was fun and educational at the same time, there was sense of mutual understanding and everyone was free to talk. No ones ‘opinions was ignored or belittled.

Charmain is a good facilitator and made us all feel comfortable to speak our minds, we had so much fun that we asked her to please come back again, so we can unpack the topics we touched on and to watch other documentaries.
Inkanyiso I believe is doing something different and new, we as the young generation we always want to have fun. We did have fun and got educated at the same time.

I learned so much.

_____________________________

About author

I am Nqobile Precious Nxumalo born on the 06th of July 1989.
My names were given to me by my mother, Nqobile which means victory when translated to English She gave me the name Precious because I was her first child, she felt that I was the most important person in her life.
I am a qualified Language Practitioner. I studied at Tshwane University of Technology where I studied Language Practice.  I have both a Diploma which I obtained in 2011 and a BTech which I completed in 2012 in the same course.
I am currently unemployed and still seeking for a job.

Posted in Activism, Archived memories, Arts | Tagged | 1 Comment

2013 March 8: Ndilele

by Tambu Glenda Muzenda
© 10/6/12

I slept and dreamt,

My dreams of a life,

A life I loved, the woman, I loved

I loved being me,

As a little girl I dreamt

I dreamt of the love of my life,

Women I loved and girls I gave love

Woman I loved and I loved them back

And so I slept and dreamt

I slept and dreamt of life

A life, free for me to be a and I was

I was dreaming of my plans of life when I turn, 30

My birthday, I slept more and dreamt,

I will have my family too, live here and move there,

I slept some more and I could see it all,

Loved it and my woman with me, oh how I just dreamt

So I slept and dreamt

I dreamt of a fire in my heart to travel the world one day

One day, I slept and my dream changed-I awoke and I knew it was not my dream

I know you, but you are not in my dream, why did you come,

Why you coward, whilst I slept and dreamt,

I don’t like what your hands in my dream,

I want you to get out of my dream

I am sleeping, and I can’t scream in my dreams

I will tell what you have done, whilst I sleep,

You are a coward to come to into my dream like that

Why are you here, whilst I sleep and dream?

One day, it is all you have done, taken away

Taken away what cherish, my love, my heart, my dreams

You are a coward, I love just like you do and

Yes I love woman and you are a coward,

You are a loveless coward, coward you don’t get my dreams

So now I jut lay here awake, awake from my dreams

You killed my dreams, I don’t dream no more,

Whilst I awake, I will tell them what you did,

You have violated my body whilst I lay there, I dreamt no more

I have stopped dreaming and whilst I awake,
I feel the pain, the tearing of my heart

My heart, my body, my inner self, taken by you a stranger in my dreams

You are a coward,
whilst I sleep you attacked me,

Whilst I awake, I see my body laying
– in our nightmares of hate and violence

I awake to find my body torn, blood, everywhere, my body hurts,

My body hurts and I see no life in my dreams

I once dreamt whilst I slept and now awaken to my fallen dreams,

Whist I slept
I dreamt they will find you, you are a coward,

I lay awake and watch my soul rise above,
I go in my sleep forever

Whilst I slept I dreamt of life and today I lay awake

I want to dream again, the women I loved, I still dream

I dream that you will be safe whilst you sleep and dream

So ndabe ndilele nje, and now my soul rest in peace and pieces,

Again whilst I sleep with no dreams, my heart tears in piece

Ndilele nje!

__________________________

About the author

Glenda is an gender and development research studying African sexualities. She writes widely and seeks to write and read more about people like us. She writes and contributes to our work.
She also loves cats and is passionate about women, vaginas, sex and sexuality- not necessarily in the same order.

Posted in Uncategorized | Tagged , | 3 Comments

2013 March 8: Affirmation – I Am A Lesbian

Well my work involves me interacting with lots and lots of people in different ways, be it by phone, by mail and face to face.

I interact with males and females in different age groups and in different Levels of positions and racial groups.

When I take time out I usually want to be in my comfort zone, the LGBT community.

I went to a beauty pageant recently, it was quite nice just being there until a gay guy asked me “are you a lesbian?”

I was dumb struck but nodded and immediately fell out of place, thinking to myself, what is it that he saw in me for him to ask me that question?
Do I look straight maybe?
Laughed it off with a friend and continued with enjoying myself.

I’m volunteering for an organization and in one of the sessions we had a straight guy that needed some assistant with a project he is working on. He joined the session, we all pitch in with ideas and off he goes.

A week later he calls me says he is having some issues with the guy he is working with so I assist him professionally without meeting with him. The next day I get a call asking me out for drinks and to get to know each other better, mind you this guy has seen me with the person I’m seeing many times.
So I find myself asking myself the same questions again.
Why don’t people acknowledge or don’t see me as a lesbian women?

So I’ve been reading this book titled Rocking the cradle: lesbian mothers: a challenge in family living ·
by Gillian E. Hanscombe, Jackie Forster (1982)

The same lesbian mothers and challenges of being in/ outside their families – either queer or hetero families still persists today. The prejudice that exists within the lesbian community is what we have to endure on daily basis.

The book gives a description of what a lesbian is suppose to look like.

It highlights says:

“the usual idea of a lesbian is of someone you wouldn’t really like to take home to tea with your mother, someone who isn’t quite nice, someone who is possibly mad, or possibly dangerously possibly freakish and pitiable.”

Now the text said that in 1982 and many still stuck in such notions now 2013.
Are we still supposed to look like that in this day and age?

Well

I’m the total opposite

I’m the type of lesbian woman your mother would be happy to have as a daughter in law and invite the whole family to come have tea with.

I am the lesbian woman your brother would envy you and say what a waste, she could be my wife.

I am the type of lesbian woman that walks down the street with pride.

Proud to be a lesbian.

Proud to be your woman.

Proud to be a woman who loves other women

I come out yet again

I am Proudly South African

A, Proud South African Femme Lesbian.

I, am a Proud Lesbian mother

by: Charmain Carrol

_________________

See previous article by Charmain Carrol

https://inkanyiso.org/2013/02/20/2013-feb-8-let-your-voices-be-heard/

Posted in Abantu, Activism, Black Lesbians, Community, Connections, Life Stories | Tagged , | 12 Comments

2012 December 27: on 2012 LGBTI Recognition awards

A personal reflection
by Maureen Velile Majola

It was a hot summer day in October 2012 when I received the news that I was nominated to compete for Best Poet of the year.

Velile could not hold her excitement... Photo by Zanele Muholi

Velile could not hold her excitement…
Photo by Zanele Muholi

I was excited and anxious at the same time, didn’t know what to make of it. While I was at that hype I saw my name pop up in another category. Community builder of the year, now this one excited me even more. It made me realized that my efforts were noticed and people appreciated the things I was doing.

One evening I was scrolling down the group and came across a post that said Special recognition award and my name was amongst great activists that I look up too.
My heart was filled with so much joy I went and shared the news with my mama, she was as excited as I was.
She is a proud mother who supports me in everything I do. I couldn’t wait for the big day to come, the day I was going to receive my Special Recognition award.

The 22nd of December 2012 came and the reality stroke me, ‘the day was finally here.’

My special day started with a killer interview and awesome photos by the great photographer, Zanele Muholi, who won the Best Photographer of the Year at the same awards.

Image

Velile, As I Am (2012).
Photo by Zanele Muholi

We traveled from Heidelburg to Soweto Theatre where the awards were held. Excitement took over. I felt my heart beating so fast I thought I’d faint while receiving my award.

I stepped to the stage and started doing my thing. Seeing all the LGBTI attendees present, smartly dressed with excitement on their faces made me realize how serious the awards were.

Now let me talk about the logistics of the awards. As one of the nominees I have to say I found the voting a little problematic because we were voting on social networks and no one really knows what system was used to determine who wins or not.

Mind you, I was never informed in advance by the organizers of the event that I was nominated for any category.
No transport was arranged to ensure that I was present on the day of the event. I had to find out from people who were part of the 2012 LGBTI Recognition awards group and that would have meant I wouldn’t had known about the nomination if I wasn’t on facebook.

Therefore I think there should be other ways to communicate besides social networks because not everyone subscribes to social networks.

Sent via my BlackBerry from Vodacom – let your email find you!

_______________________________

To find out more about 2012 LGBTI Recognition awards, go to:
http://www.facebook.com/groups/352947938114732/?ref=ts&fref=ts


Extracted from Nob Ody facebook page

The winners are as follows:

Community Builder – Flamboyant TUT

Best Event Organiser – FOC

Social Butterfly – Buxi van Rooien

Best Dancer – Nols Skater

Best Poet – Phophoskie Maqalika

Best Sports Player – Portia Modise

Role Model – Mpho Nefuri

Best Married Couple – Pantsu and Kedibone Matjokane

Best Personality – Kayra Karabo Kau

Best Comedian – Khanyisa Bunu

Best Dresser – Leboo Phume Leptie

Hottest Lesbian – NTK Cheezlez Kolman

Hottest Gay – Nhlanhla Mnembe

LGBTI Top Model – Kedibone Motloutsi

Best Dj – Dj Puggy

LGBTI Activists – Craig Matu

Calvin Boleu Nkoana

Maureen Majola

Deekay Sibanda

Viriginia Setshedi

Bridget Makhonza

Best Photographer – Zanele Muholi

Long Service Achievement Award – Amstel Maboa

LGBTI Supporter – Ntsiki Mazwai

Best Fine Artist – Nols Skater

Congratulations!!

__________________

Please note that photos from the awards will be posted here!!!

Posted in Abantu | Tagged | 16 Comments

2013 March 8: Some of the books with Zanele Muholi’s content

Image

Photo by Amanda Lock Swarr

For all those who are interested in reading.
Please take notes of the books above.
We are looking for individuals to review.
If you know any books; films; documentaries; theatre shows; with South African queer or LGBTI lives – content. Kindly recommend so that we’ll learn from those documents as part of our history.

Thank you!

Posted in Activism, Archived memories, Arts | Tagged | Leave a comment

2013 March 10: “I love women and they love me”

I, Phila Mbanjwa, am one of the craziest people I know!

Thobe & Phila (2012) Photo by Zanele Muholi, to appear as a cover photo in Queer Africa Reader edited by Sokari Ekine & Hakima Abbas

Thobe & Phila (2012)
Photo by Zanele Muholi,
to appear as a cover photo in Queer Africa Reader edited by Sokari Ekine & Hakima Abbas

I am a young black lesbian woman and pride myself in knowing whom I love and who I want to share my life, soul and body with.
Yes I love women and they love me. I believe I have a voice to speak for the coming generation. I’m here to make my mark and believe me I will. I want people to know me as this person who conquered and carried on conquering. I love to believe that I got spunk, a lot of it.
I capture people’s hearts, eyes, and smiles. I’m a very humble and understanding person but when push comes to shove I lose control but I cover that with that mischievous grin and humble smile that has become my facade.

I was born in Dambuza, an informal settlement just outside Pietermaritzburg,

and I was born at home, early hours of the 15th of July in 1990, yes I am a freedom baby.     I live in Edendale, a few kilometres from Dambuza with my 4 sisters, 8 cousins, and 1 brother. My father passed away in 1997 and ten years laterI lost my mother. It was a devastating decade for my family, but we carried on living.

I’m currently working as my informal adoptive father’s Personal Assistant and learning the ropes at a Non-Governmental Organisation (NGO). I am university drop out. I was studying Public Relations and I got bored.    The course didn’t challenge me the way I wanted it to. I’m now thinking of doing Electrical Engineering or I will maybe become a doctor.

I love writing poetry, compiling scripts, short stories, reading, going out and window shopping… not just clothes window shopping! I am talking about window shopping for women…(laughs). I love women. I especially love mature women, women who know what they want in life, love and relationships.

I’m a female – that’s my gender, I’m a lesbian – that’s my sexuality, the fact that I’m a lesbian does not make me less of a woman or trying to be male. Yes, I am a lesbian but I am not my sexuality.
Every time I introduce myself to someone I don’t have to say “Hi I’m Phila I’m a lesbian”. No! that does not define me. Ja ngistabane (yes I am gay) I love women but at the end of the day I’m a woman. I’m a femme lesbian that does not make me bisexual,
I love butch, trans, and femme lesbians with a butch personality. I usually take the female part of the relationships, I don’t mind, I love being pampered and I’m very sensitive and most females I go out with I call them amadoda ami (my lesbian men), then people get confused. I leave them like that because they wouldn’t understand I always say for one to understand homo- sexuality, they first need to understand sexuality and a whole before categorising it to these different aspects then one can understand sexuality as a whole, just as I don’t understand the whole thing when it comes to straight people. And just as lesbian relationships freak them out, I’m also freaked out by theirs.
It’s 50/50, understand me, I will understand you too.

My family knows about my sexual orientation, I first came out to myself in 1998. I was 8 then and it was rather confusing. I didn’t identify my self as a female at that time though. My family has been very understanding towards my sexual orientation and they supported me as I changed from butch to femme. I don’t think, however, that they will support me when I start talking about marriage and kids, but will cross that bridge when I get to it.

I’m currently single and loving it. I’m not really ready for a relationship. Commitment and I are two distant things at the moment. I’ve been through hell and back in my previous relationship so I’m definitely not ready for one now, let alone marriage. I was in an abusive relationship for two years, and it took me two years to get out of that relationship. I got a scar just under my left eye, which was my Christmas present.

I believed she would change but she didn’t, instead it got worse. I was told to- leave her but I couldn’t, I love her even now, but I would never date her again. She was a monster one minute, and the sweetest an- gel the next. I received counselling, advice
from people but I did not want to leave.  I had expected to see her grow and mature. I was willing to put my success on hold for her, that is how much I loved her. She alienated me from my family and friends, but when we were living together she started cheating, and the beatings got worse. Her family knew but they turned a blind eye.

When I finally got her arrested, all the people I thought were my friends took her side, but I did not care it was time I stood up for myself even if it meant standing alone. Even though people say what doesn’t kill you makes you stronger, it doesn’t. It first kills you, then you rise from the ashes and be human again. It takes time.

“I’m a female- that’s my gender, I’m a lesbian – that’s my sexuality, the fact that I’m a lesbian does not make me less of a woman.”

Although I am a victim of domestic violence, I have never experienced any homophobic attacks or name calling, but SA statistics are crazy!
‘Correctional rape’ and homophobic attacks, angers me a lot and the justice system is screwing us over.
Why would a person rape someone while thinking they correcting something??
F**k them!!
How many lesbians have to be raped and killed so the government can see that the justice system needs intervention? This is one of the main reasons I hate about living in South Africa. Even though I have never faced any problems in my township about being a lesbian, I’m always cautious to whom I hang out with, you might never know what people are plotting behind your back. Even though I come from a respected and feared home in Edendale, being a lesbian does not mean I’m not a target.

Given a chance to be a one day leader I would promote sexuality education in schools, churches, prisons and our communities, because if we understand the root of sexuality we can understand the other branches of sexuality such as, asexuality, heterosexuality, bisexuality and homosexuality. I would also focus on tightening the laws against murder and rape, because it does not only start with ‘corrective rape’ or murder of lesbians but its starts with just rape and murders.         I will stand for my people even if I have to stand alone in parliament. I would challenge them until I get the constitution and justice system intervened.

So far, in living my life with the mistakes I have made and all the challenges I am facing, I wouldn’t change anything. I have lived and loved and I’m still young, everything happens for a reason and it tests us and makes us stronger.

Here in South Africa the only time you see a lesbian in a magazine or front-page of a newspaper, is when they are raped, killed/murdered. Why should newspapers and magazines portray homosexuality with misery, violence and brutality?

I want to see a lesbian on the cover of True Love magazine talking about love, sex and relationships in a same sex relationship, portrayed with beauty, serenity and glamour.
If not me, then someone else.
Is that too much to ask for from our society?

First published in Afrikadaa (2012)
The article was part of Zanele Muholi’s interview in which it was articulated clearly that all the participants in the Visual Activist photography have own lives and talent.

http://www.afrikadaa.com/2012/10/afrikadaa-3-visibility.html

Posted in Crea(c)tive senses, Documentation; Filming; Photography; Community, Exposure, Expression, Life Stories, Networking, Organizations, Records and histories | Tagged | 29 Comments

2013 March 8: Remember Me When I’m gone…

by Busi Sigasa

For I…
Wrote stories for the nations to read
Stood without fear and told my story
I smiled and greeted without judging
I influenced positive living to the sick
I planted seeds of hope to the hopeless
I groomed and grew
the younger ones whose parents died
I created artistic designs with my hands
I crafted and drew beautiful pictures
I installed education
l reasoning to some
I taught represented the minority to the majority
I made nations aware
I wronged some and made some happy
I survived against odds
I swallowed my medication even as hard as it was it was sometimes
I did so to remain strong and too
l live my life regardless of my status
I fought for women to be taken into serious consideration
by our government
I wrote and said “my” spoke word
I fought and showed many that there’s nothing wrong with being diabetic, epileptic and HIV
I represented many of the HIV infected lesbian sisters
I told the truth never mind the judgments
I lived and I’m still living
I loved and prayed to my GOD
I prayed without hesitation, for,
I believe/d
I was a big sister to my younger sisters
I listened to my mother’s teachings
I became friends with father
I’D DIE FOR MY FAMILY,
I LOVED THEM SO!
I captured moments with my camera
I brought forth what was unseen to the nations
through the power of image, pen and paper
I struggled to make it life
I was taken for a ride by some whom
I thought were friends
I showed my rapist how strong I was
regardless that he poisoned my blood with his HIV
I believed and prayed
I stood low and respected all regardless of their age,
colour and size
I say along with others
I had a unique voice
I had a message to deliver and a vision to see
I tried,
I fell and I never succeeded sometimes
I was patient while to some
I was strange
I was loved by some and was hated by some,
STILL I did my thing
I loved and appreciated beautiful women
I loved them more than life itself
Some would say…
I am full shit!
but spiritually I was full
I was fed with GOD’s glory that’s why I praised HIM
I praised HIM more than I praised friends
I am my mother’s daughter
I made history and marked historical books of this world
SO………
REMEMBER ME WHEN I’M GONE!
FOR…without no doubt
I’ll and I am in peace with my maker and creator.

© 2006

____________________________

About the author

Busi Sigasa was born in Soweto on the 23 Dec. 1981 and passed on on the 12th March 2007.

Her work featured in Breaking the Silence: positive Survivors – published by POWA as an annual writing competition and she won a prize.

Busisiwe went public about her HIV positive status in 2006, which resulted from a rape incident. She encouraged others to do the same. South Africa has one of the most severe AIDS epidemics in the world and some people have dubbed it the “rape capital” of the word.

She posted poems on her blog about her experience as a person living with HIV, her belief in God and the difficulty of being a lesbian in South Africa.

_____________________________

Join us on the 6th April as we celebrate and commemorate Busi & Buhle s lives.

https://inkanyiso.org/2013/03/08/2013-march-8-event-announcement/

 

Posted in Archived memories, Art Activism in South Africa, Arts | Tagged | 10 Comments