Personal Reflection on QAYN’s 3rd Activism School
By Lola Kamarizah (Cameroon)
I admit that I used to be very violent. On leaving here, I commit to leave violence behind here, in Cotonou, and to be an even more ardent supporter of women’s rights. I have understood that being a man gives me no rights over women simply because they are women.…
E. had not even reached the end of the sentence when a voice piped up, ‘No, do not leave your violence here with us!’, bringing a smile to everybody’s face. It is June 10, 2016. The last day of the QAYN’s 3rd Activism School for and with queer, trans* and feminist activists in French-speaking West Africa. It’s almost 1 p.m. and the air is thick with emotion. Time for the oral evaluation. Seated in a circle, some can be seen trying to hold back tears. What could have happened in Cotonou to bring everybody to such an emotion state?
The thing was that in Cotonou, from 6-10 June, over 30 LBTQ activists met to talk about trans*, queer and feminist activism. It all began with a single thread that each participant attached to her/his/their wrist and passed it across to another person, threading through all the participants until a web was spun. One thread binds us all. Cut it here or anywhere and we all feel it. So, a single word connecting us during our entire stay and to last a lifetime: so.li.da.ri.ty.
‘Mama Awa’ and Mariam, QAYN’s Founder, facilitated the daily workshops. The first two days were spent remembering and analyzing the roots of our activism. Several shared realization emerged – beginning with personal experiences of exclusion, stigmatization and rejection as individuals, either because of being a gender non-conforming person and/or of being a woman who loves other women. The running thread, the essential element that brought us all together is the realization that being a woman, having a gender expression or identity or a way of being and living that does not correspond to society expectations. This awareness had set us on the path of resistance and towards activism, initially under the umbrella of women’s organizations or LGBT organizations primarily led by men. However, through our various engagements in these spaces and subsequent double marginalization and invisibilization, led us to begin to mobilize ourselves and communities to gradually address our own lived realities.
Participants from Côte d’Ivoire
Moving from the personal to the collective is not without its obstacles. Mobilizing ourselves as queer women and/or gender non-confirming groups does not necessarily mean that we are actually a movement. Conflicts of leadership, competition, class, generational issues, and abuse of privilege, etc. often prevent activists within the same cause from working together as a group.
So, over the course of the first two days, we unpacked the nature of our personal and collective engagement. We debated at length the fact that confining ourselves to a single issue won’t free us – on the contrary, we must place our struggles against the oppressive patriarchal system within a larger context of struggles for an equal and just work. Together, we revisited our understanding of feminism, trans* and queer identities; through those analysis, we surfaced certain commonalities between these struggles and analyzed their intersectionalities. If being queer means defining oneself outside of gender binary, being trans* also stems from resisting the same gender tyranny and being feminist is first and foremost rising against the same oppressive patriarchal system. We are all subject to the same form of oppression, as women, trans* and queer – patriarchy and heteronormativity.