TO BE A NON-PERSON
(July/Aug 2006)
The burkha made it to my neighborhood,
hanging from a hook, innocent among the goods brought over by
globalization, in a store that also sold shirts from Guatemala,
baskets from China, wool from Romania, bangles from India
It called the eye, being black among the rainbow colors of the
stores wares. I made light of my shock, telling myself
that likely, it was being sold for Halloween. Then because I
am that kind of weird, I went in, bought the thing and dropped
it over my head.
Instantly, the world narrowed
to a little square space, that net-covered hole before my eyes.
Sound became muffled. The odors of the cuisines of Korea, Argentina,
India and Mexico disappeared. Neither wind nor sun touched my
skin. I couldnt look anyone in the eyes. Instead, passers-by
gave me sidelong glances.
This is how it is not to exist,
I said to myself. I was shuffling on the sidewalk, hugging building
walls. The anonymity was complete. I felt both helpless and
sinister; I could do anything since I was nothing; and conversely,
anything could be done to me because I was nothing. After three
blocks, the claustrophobia became overwhelming; I tore the thing
off my body.
A squeal of brakes: a car nearly
hitting a teenage couple. A male face loomed out of the passenger
side window and screamed: You moron, Im going to
take your dray and f-k her so her eyeballs pop! Dray?
In the wind of male rage, she teetered on four-inch heels. She
wore a half halter top, butt-crack and pudenda peeping over
low-rise jeans. She reached a hand out, stepped back to the
sidewalk and clutched my arm. As threats charged the air, many
promises of disaster to the female, we huddled closer to the
building flanking the sidewalk, me half-shrouded, her half-naked.
I wasnt sure which the worse non-personhood was: to be
exclusive property or common property.
It is disgustingly easy to render
women non-persons; sometimes even a word suffices. It took GABNet
a decade, for instance, to move the issue of mail-order brides
from the private domain to the public. By simply calling such
women wives, the sellers of women were able to move
the issue to the private domain; it became a matter of consenting
adults.
The Philippine government manages
to hide its traffic of women by simply classifying all exported
labor as overseas contract workers. Even though
nearly 30% of the women exported end up in the sex trade (under
the category technical skills), there has been general tolerance
for this development tactic of the Philippine government
supported by the International Monetary Fund, World Bank and
the World Trade Organization.
GABNet itself has been accused
(quietly) of having an incorrect political line,
in campaigns designed to turn it into a pariah, because it refuses
to abandon opposition to patriarchy and sexism. As a organization
of women, it has consistently considered such opposition as
integral to the advancement of womens liberation, integral
to the struggle against imperialism and certainly, considering
that women are among the poorest of the poor in the archipelago,
integral to its support for the just struggle of the Filipino
people for national independence and democracy.
Unfortunately, the mis-judgment
persists (or is deliberately fostered) that being opposed to
the exploitation and oppression of women detracts from a comprehensive
progressive political position. How this is explained with any
modicum of logic, I have no idea. Never mind that women do live
in a climate of sexism and patriarchialism (a mindset
based on the male dominance and hence, the marginalization and
devaluation of women and the resulting devaluation and alienation
of their labor).
Just as the conflict over land
forms the stuff of the peasants daily struggle, or the
high cost of education and poor job prospects form the stuff
of the youths daily struggle, gender-based discrimination
and exploitation permeate the lives of women, exacerbating and
in many cases, molding the specifics of contradictions involving
their sector. But many persistently deny that women have a specific
sectoral reality, thereby withholding from them the right to
expect non-sexist policies and practices from everyone.
Nevertheless, to paraphrase Galileo,
like it or not, the world of women turns on this axis. The across-the-board
devaluation of domestic work, for instance, in all 168 countries
to which the Philippines export women, stems from the history
of women as the first truly private property (in contrast to
slaves who were tribally owned), hence from a historic devaluation
of women, a historic devaluation of their work and skills, and
hence, from the social perspective and economic view that household
work creates no surplus value, requires no skills and is therefore
subject to underpayment.
Womens oppression and the
apartheid against women are intensifying; the US-led so-called
war on terror has steadily shrunk public space for women. Hopefully,
women will not simply surrender to this trend but will commensurately
increase their political engagement and activism, if only to
relieve the claustrophobia of these times. -- ###
>>> For comments and response: email blog@gabnet.org
LILY
PAD
2006