Tuesday 22 November 2011

Black Tuesday






















































Black Tuesday Protest outside Parliament - Cape Town

Democracy might have fallen to pieces, but today most South Africans stood together and shared one voice.

This is our country.


Right 2 Know Campaign
R2K is a grassroots coalition against the Secrecy Bill

www.r2k.org.za

Friday 4 November 2011

Isilumo Siyaluma - Zanele Muholi










































Isilumo Siyaluma

An extremely powerful and eye opening exhibition by South African photographer and activist, Zanele Muholi.

The exhibition, held at Blank Projects in Woodstock, focuses on woman's rights and issues surrounding the corrective rape of lesbians.


Press Release

Isilumo siyaluma is a Zulu expression that can be loosely translated as “period pains/ periods pain". Additionally, there is an added meaning in the translation that there is something secretive in and about this blood/“period in time.”
At one level, my project deals with my own menstrual blood, with that secretive, feminine time of the month that has been reduced within Western patriarchal culture as dirty.

On a deeper level then, my menstrual blood is used as a vehicle and medium to begin to express and bridge the pain and loss I feel as I hear and become witness to the pain of 'curative rapes' that many of the girls and women in my black lesbian community bleed from their vaginas and their minds.

Between March - May 2011, three (3) young black lesbians under the age of 25 were brutally murdered in various townships. Nokuthula Radebe (20), Katlehong, whose body was discovered on Monday 28th March late afternoon around 5pm by kids playing in an abandoned building in Everest Thokoza, Ekurhuleni. According to FEW website, her friend Simangele who saw the body before it was taken by police say that Nokuthula’s pants were pulled down, but was still wearing her underwear. Her faced was covered by a plastic and had been strangled with one of her shoelaces.

Noxolo Nogwaza (24), Tsakane, Johannesburg. Her body was found lying in an alley in Kwa-Thema at about 9am on Sunday, April 24 2011. Her head was completely deformed, her eyes out of the sockets, her brain spilt, teeth scattered all around and face crashed beyond recognition. Witnesses say that an empty beer bottle and a used condom were stacked up her genitals. Parts of the rest of her body had been stabbed with glass. A large pavement brick that is believed to have been used to crash her head was found by her side.

Nqobile Khumalo (23), KwaMashu F-section, Durban, went missing on May 4 and her body was found in a shallow grave near her parents’ home two days later.

As we continue to live and survive in troubled times as black lesbians in South Africa and within the continent, where rampant hate crimes and brutal killings of same gender loving women is rife. This ongoing project is an activist/artist's radical response to that violence.

The passage in which we bleed
The passage where we are/ were born
The passage through which we become (wo)men?
The erotic passage meant to be aroused, is raped
The passage we love is hated and called names
The sacred passage is ever persecuted

I continue to bleed each time I read about rampant curative rapes in my 'democratic' South Africa.
I bleed every time queer bodies are violated and refused citizenship due gender expression and sexual orientation within the African continent.
I constantly bleed when I hear about brutal murders of black lesbians in our townships and
surrounding areas.
I'm scarred and scared as I don't know whose body will be next to be buried.
I bleed because our human rights are ripped.
I cry and bleed as mothers, lovers, friends, relatives lose their beloved ones,
let alone the children that become orphans because of trans/queerphobic violence.
We bleed, our life cycles invaded, we bleed against the will of our bodies and beings.

Each patterned piece in this series represents a 'curative rape' survivor or a victim of hate crime,
the physical and spiritual blood that is shed from our bodies.

-Zanele Muholi


I am honored to have been part of the printing process for this exhibition.  Well done Zanele, you are an inspiration to many.


For more information on Zanele and her exhibition visit the following sites:



Thursday 3 November 2011

Wolftown
















































Cape Town Rock n Roll band, Wolftown, live at Zula Bar.

Check them out here

Howl like you mean it