Archive for the 'polygamy' Category

Healing in Africa

Had two fascinating conversations yesterday on the plane with the two gentlemen I was sitting next to.

 

The first man, an Indian who has lived in South Africa for twenty years, introduced himself by asking me if I’m French. I told him, “Non.”

“Funny,” he said, “you look French.”

 

His name is Varkey George and he’s the director of the Student Health and Welfare Centres Organisation. He hosts student groups that come to Cape Town to do charity work. I told him about the book I was writing, and he thought it odd that I define healing so broadly.

 

“Well, why not?” I asked. “People seek healing from all kinds of practitioners and I’m not sure there’s a logical correspondence between the type of illness they’re experiencing and the type of healing they’re seeking. I think people have different ideas of what healing is, so they don’t necessarily feel healed by a medical doctor even if their body is in good shape after seeing one.”

 

He could understand that. The question, he said, is this: “What is the wound?”

 

A good question to ask. What IS the wound? Even if you are physically ill, that may not be the wound you’re seeking to cure even when trying to cure your body.

 

I also sat next to Barnard Gardiner, who works for the Red Cross as the Manager of the HIV Global Programme, Health and Care Department. We had a long and involved conversation about AIDS, especially AIDS in South Africa, and he asked several provocative questions about how we could stop the epidemic in Africa.

 

First, he asked me if I knew about the theory that HIV is spread when people are engaged in simultaneous relationships, not necessarily promiscuously but one man has two relationships and both his girlfriends also have two relationships, and so on and so forth, until it creates a network where HIV is easily transmitted. Of course I was so he continued. He said that gay men were able to stop the transmission of HIV because, without coordination, they somehow figured this out and realized that they didn’t need to use condoms all the time, but they should use condoms outside of their primary relationship. So they didn’t use condoms with their primary relationship but when they slept with other people, they did.

 

He suggested that there are two ways to stop the epidemic—either be monogamous or use condoms all the time, something that no group has been able to do. He said that nobody realized that Africans had concurrent relationships—women as well as men—until the epidemic, so he said, “We’re asking Africans to either use condoms all the time (something nobody has been able to do) or to stop being African.”

 

I thought this was a disturbing way to put it. Is it African to have concurrent relationships all the time? Polygamy, yes, but to my knowledge, there is not a long history of African *women* also being involved in more than one relationship at a time. I pointed out that there was no evidence from archival materials and early European recordings of African behavior that would suggest this was a common part of African culture. And Europeans were certainly happy to exaggerate any behavior they found odd!

 

“It may be a common part of African culture today,” I said, “but I struggle to believe that it’s a long-standing feature of African culture, that it’s been around for centuries, because there’s no evidence of it in the record. Maybe it could have gone by unnoticed for so long but…”

 

It disturbed me to think that the reason the epidemic has spread in Africa is intrinsically related to something that is fundamentally African. Maybe that’s true and I just have sickly-sweet, politically correct, academic-trained-by-the-book knee-jerk reactions that are misplaced and misguided. But still…

 

Then I remembered a few things: thigh sex and Facing Mt. Kenya. I told him that there are African practices that indicate that women did have multiple partners when they were young, but they didn’t engage in penetrative sex. I told him how Jomo Kenyatta outlined practices that the Gikuyu engaged in, that young people were encouraged to indulge in sexual play with multiple partners as long as they didn’t go all the way. And the Zulu trained women how to have “thigh sex,” that is, how to get a man to come by rubbing his penis together with their thighs.

 

He got kind of excited when I mentioned that and said that this might be the answer—if Africans could re-learn some of these traditional behaviors, then maybe it could stop the epidemic.

 

Like any good academically-trained historian, I have knee-jerk reactions to the concept of “tradition” as well. There are always people that believe if we go back to some idyllic past, to practices that they believe have been corrupted or have disappeared from society, that we will eliminate or reduce some problem that has cropped up in modern life. But many times, our idea of what is “traditional” is based more in nostalgia and romance than in reality. And furthermore, I’m not sure it’s ever possible to resurrect old practices that way without enormous controversy.

 

Both interesting conversations on my way to South Africa to explore this topic!

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Scary picture

mormon-picture.jpgThis picture was taken in Sacramento near the capitol steps prior to voting on Proposition 8, the proposition that banned gay marriage in California. While I find this man’s views appalling, I think he has a right to express them. And although I find his views abhorrent, I prefer someone who is clear on what they think about these issues, who at least is honest about what he thinks, who doesn’t provide mealy-mouthed, watered-down versions of his truth. But I wonder how many Mormons would be as honest as this one? Or how many Mormons would agree with what this man is proclaiming for Mormonism?

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Alternative Views on the Texas Polygamists

I’ve kept my mouth shut about the Texas polygamist raids, mostly because I think that it’s such a complicated subject. On the one hand, I agree with freedom of religion. On that same hand, I don’t have a problem with polygamy in certain contexts, when you are talking about long-standing cultural traditions and consenting adults, such as what you find in many African communities. On the other hand, I do have a problem with child abuse, coercion, and brain-washing, regardless of where, how, when, and in what context it happens (even if I happen to agree with the message that is being sent via brain-washing, I disagree strenuously with the method. I love how many people call something propaganda only because they disagree with it–but fail to recognize propaganda when they happen to agree with it.) (On yet another hand, says Ms. Octopus, rearing children in general veers into that arena of brain-washing and propaganda. I don’t know any self-respecting parent who doesn’t try to instill values in their children, but I think there is a gray area between instilling said values and training children to think exactly like you think.) Okay. Having said all that, I do find the tactics of the FLDS church to be fairly coercive; and enough information has emerged from those communities to indicate widespread child and wife abuse. Nevertheless, here are two blogs/columns, one which argues that the state of Texas was correct in raiding the compound and the other that argues it was indeed a violation of religious freedom and individual rights. Both interesting posts and both have interesting things to say. I don’t know much about the guy who wrote the second article, but the first post was written by a woman whose granddaughter is the daughter of a rather infamous polygamist now in jail for bombing a church and killing an FBI agent, Addam Swapp. Her entire blog is interesting and heartfelt….I definitely encourage people who are interested to read it.

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Speaking of the spiritual personality of places….

I spent last week in Utah, home of the LDS church, fundamentalist LDS church, and a whole lot of other crazy folks–including my crazy brother, sister-in-law, and a host of other friends and relatives, none of whom are Mormon but, by virtue of living in Utah, know a whole lot about it by default. Familiarity can breed contempt. A writer I know mentioned to me on Sunday that living in Utah has caused her to be less “open-minded” about Mormonism, a fact she wasn’t proud of but recognized was due to living there: she’s seen the coerciveness of the church and its culture. Continue reading ‘Speaking of the spiritual personality of places….’

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Warren Jeffs, polygamy, religion and rape

Warren Jeffs, the leader of the polygamous break-away sects of Mormonism in Hildale, Utah and Colorado City, Ariz, has been convicted of being an accomplice to rape. Polygamist sect leader Warren Jeffs listens as a jury finds him guilty of being an accomplice to rape.

He married a 14-year-old girl against her will to a cousin she says she did not like. The courts have argued that he knew in a case like this that non-consensual sex would occur.

Of course, his lawyers plan to appeal. Unfortunately, they may have a case for appeal since the New York Times reports that the jury was deadlocked until an alternate jury was substituted for one of the original panel members for “reasons the court did not explain.”

If you want to watch a documentary about Colorado City and Hildale, the twin communities where members of the Fundamentalist Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints live, click here. You may have to become a member of Az news sources in order to watch the documentary. The documentary suffers from a one-sided perspective–the only people willing to talk to the reporters are disaffected members, those who have left or been barred from the community, and those like Flora Jessup who conduct an underground railroad where they help women escape. From this perspective, the only possible interpretation of the religion and its leaders and practices is characterized through such labels as “America’s Taliban” and “welfare state.” I don’t have a problem with those characterizations but I wish (and I’m sure the reporters who wrote the report wished) they could have had an “insider’s” perspective from someone who is still an active member of the church/community.

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