{UAH} Allan/Gook/Pojim: This woman, Stella Nyanzi: A freak in public and a lady in private?
There was an acquaintance I used to know. He was a friend of a friend who I tolerated because I try not to impose limitations on the friends of my friend, especially when he is the host.
But I had issues with this chap because he seemed to get a kick out of the shock value from guests who wondered why a burly man with the demeanour of Santa Klaus had to be so lewd. He was vulgar. Every second line had some sexual innuendo and he was forgiven because it was seen as a bland attempt at humour.
In those social circles he was dismissed as 'naughty' even though he was more of the creepy uncle who unconsciously scratches a persistent itch in his nether regions in a middle a family funeral committee gathering.
I have known a lot of guys like that, whose stock in trade was dirty jokes and we always called them funny. Then there was the older aunty, who shot from the hip, took no prisoners and said it like it is. She could be really funny, but people labelled her as angry. Before I got to know her personally, I used to believe what I had been told, that she was an angry woman with issues for days. Then somewhere in my teenage years, I got a chance to stay with her and discovered a witty woman who did not mince her words. When she had something to say, she did not apply any filters.
I remember her reputation preceded her and you either liked or hated her. There was no halfway house with my aunt. She had been a pioneer on many fronts, suffered for her defiance as one of the first women to drive her own car in her day and was no longer interested in playing nice. I would watch men cringe especially the conservative types who airbrushed all their sentences with strokes of morality.
The rules of vulgarity are different for men and women. Bold women do not have the luxury of the funny label. Women can only about talk sex in public at a great personal risk to their reputations. In most societies in the world, we insist that our women must be ladies in the streets and freaks in-between the sheets. Yet vulgarity is never just about sex for women.
Sex can be turned into a power tool and mere words can have the gravitas to shake a system. In this case, there is a fine line between an insult and a protest. It stops just being dirty. It becomes political and radical because sex sells all things, including activism.
Ugandan activist Stella Nyanzi seems to have found a way to walk that fine line and she has been sticking it up to the first family and the collective that she calls the Musevenists in manner that is both hilarious and audacious. That ability to be honest and unfiltered has been transformed into a powerful tool of activism that has turned Stella Nyanzi into a force to reckon with.
This is an ordinary woman scaring a dominant regime with the power of words. She has transformed sexual shaming that historically has been used to undermine women into a weapon of activism. It is obvious if Stella was writing in straight speak, she would just have been another radical academic limited to peer circles and critically acclaimed for her activism. But she decided to be the 'bad girl' and took her activism to social media streets and the naked truth behind her words have become so compelling that she cannot be ignored any longer or simply dismissed as mad.
There is a long history of women in Africa, using sex and their bodies for protest. Our very own Wangari Maathai was the 'mad woman' of the nyayo era and we have her 'craziness' to thank for Nairobi's most prominent green spaces, Uhuru Park and Karura Forest. Stella Nyanzi reminds me of brave mothers of the Release Political Prisoners who petitioned the government to release their sons detained without trial in 1991.
After 11 months of protest at Uhuru Park's Freedom corner, the government decided to send a contingent of policemen to come down on them hard. In one moment of madness, the elderly mothers stripped naked in a counter protest that shook the country. That single act, created a butterfly effect that was the beginning of the end of the once unshakeable single party Kanu dictatorship.
Stella Nyanzi is that kind of crazy and those who do not know will find out the hard way. In the famous words of R. Kelly: "When a woman's fed up, there is nothing you can do about it and soon, it will be too late to talk about it".
This woman, Stella Nyanzi: A freak in public and a lady in private? - Entertainment News <
http://www.sde.co.ke/m/article/2001235748/this-woman-stella-nyanzi-a-freak-in-public-and-a-lady-in-private
Sent from my BlackBerry 10 smartphone.
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