Black Feminists announces Rage Against Racism rally (for local & international racial equality, fairness, transparency)

 


Some people talk about change, others dream about change, but we believe in action, not words. Join the protest

 

Black Feminists announces Rage Against Racism rally

Rage Against Racism, at the Swedish Embassy in London on Tuesday May 1st at 4pm.


The rally is calling on the Government to commit to ending the racist misrepresentation and stereotyping of Black Women within the political, social and cultural dialogue of the UK. The protest is in part inspired by the racially charged, misogynistic cake created by Swedish artist Makode Aj Linde for World Art Day. The cake, which prompted laughter from spectators, has angered anti-racism campaigners around the world.

Video featuring Naana Otoo-Oyortey of Forward

The rally will feature guest speakers including Saria Khalifa from FORWARD, the African Diaspora women’s charity, Lee Jasper, the activist and former Senior Policy Advisor to the Mayor of London, Michael Doherty and Merlin Emanuel of Campaign for Justice and Aaron Sonson, developer of the  Stop and Search App, which provides a forum for people to share their experiences of being stopped by the police.

Sam Asumadu, Organiser, Black Feminists: “Far from challenging racism, the Swedish art installation failed to adequately contextualise a highly sensitive issue. This is just another ripple of racism, just one of the many ripples that hide under the guise of humanitarianism, or art, or advertising or social commentary.”

ñ  Female Genital Mutilation offered by UK medics – April 2012

ñ  Cadbury compares Naomi Campbell to a chocolate bar – June 2011

ñ  LSE claims Black women are less attractive – May 2011

ñ  Just 500 people surveyed to represent all British Asians in “honour code” research for Panorama – March 2012

ñ  Athlete Tiffany Porter referred to as “plastic” because of her nationality – March 2012

ñ  Over representation of Black women’s involvement in UK-wide riots – August 2011

ñ  Under representation of African women in Leadership. E.g. In UK parliament, management despite their qualifications and professional experience

Asumadu adds: “Mayor of London Boris Johnson has argued that the way to challenge racism is to ‘axe large chunks of the anti-racism industry’ and instead rely on ‘tolerance and good manners’.

“So in the absence of an effective response from the Mayor or government, we are gathering to protest in the name of all Black women who are being objectified, dehumanised and degraded.”

Lee Jasper, activist and former Senior Policy Advisor to the Mayor of London, said: “Black women in Europe are facing increased rates of racism and sexism. Objectified, stereotyped, denigrated and oppressed they face multiple levels of discrimination.”

Every year more than 22,000 girls in the UK and up to 6,000 in London are at risk of undergoing the surgery. Saria Khalifa from FORWARD said: “We support the ‘Rage Against Racism protest’ at the Swedish Embassy as we campaign to end Female Genital Mutilation. Never should awareness raising insult and degrade the very people who undergo FGM. This is another sad example of offensive misrepresentation of an important issue.”

 

Rage Against Racism takes place on Tuesday 1st May 2012 at 4pm.

Location: Swedish Embassy, 11 Montague Place, London, W1H 2AL

For further information please contact:

blackfeministsuk@gmail.com

 

About Black Feminists

Black Feminists is a group for women who are ‘Black’ in the political sense, including all women descended (through one or both parents) from Africa, Asia (i.e. the Middle East to China, including the Pacific nations), Latin America and those descended from the original inhabitants of Australasia, North America, and the islands of the Atlantic and Indian Ocean.

We express strength and solidarity in our shared experience of inequality and power imbalance based on our race and gender.

We are committed to healing and addressing the legacy of oppression past and present including slavery, colonialism, neo-colonialism, imperialism and militarisation.

Black Feminists raises consciousness and socio-political activism by observing, analysing, debating and challenging dominant and oppressive ideologies pervasive in mainstream society.

www.blackfeminists.org

About Campaign4Justice (C4J)

C4J is calling for all communities to come together to express their concerns and call for a full public enquiry into the actions of the IPCC. Ultimately it is demanded that the existing organisation is abolished and replaced with a truly independent, effective and just public system to investigate and hold the police accountable when they have acted in a criminal manner or failed to act according to their duty.

 

About Forward

Forward (Foundation for Women’s Health Research and Development) is an African Diaspora women led UK-registered campaign and support charity dedicated to advancing and safeguarding the sexual and reproductive health and rights of African girls and women.

 

About Stop and Search App

Making stop & searches fair and transparent” Feedback how you feel you were treated by the officers you were stopped and searched by, where and when it happened and their badge numbers. www.stopandsearch.org
 
The uploaded Experiences of everyone stopped & searched in the UK will be displayed on our website.

 

In London we live under a Mayor, Boris Johnson who dismissed the Macpherson report (released after Stephen Lawrence’s racially motivated murder) with these comments:

‘As for his [Macpherson’s] suggestions that there should be more race awareness sessions for the police, and possible adjustments to the national curriculum to stamp out racist attitudes, he [Macpherson] is vehement that this should not be exaggerated.’ (Lend me your ears p217)

‘we could probably achieve the same results, if not better, if we axed large chunks of the anti-racism industry, stopping taxing so many people with the threat of legal action, and left a bit more of the struggle against racism to tolerance and good manners.’ (Lend me your ears p212)

On Africa:
‘The problem is not that we were once in charge, but that we are not in charge any more… If left to their own devices, the natives would rely on nothing but the instant carbohydrate gratification of the plantain… The best fate for Africa would be if the old colonial powers, or their citizens, scrambled once again in her direction; on the understanding that this time they will not be asked to feel guilty.”
(Spectator 2002)

Boris Johnson who
• has no African or Muslim political advisers representing a City that is 40% non white
• has not had a single public meeting on the issue of race equality policy in the GLA in 4 yrs
• turned Operation Trident gun crime squad into anti gangs unit designating London’s gang problem as exclusively black issue
• ended the hugely popular schools Black History Month Scholar competition funded by Accenture not the taxpayer
• cut funding, forcing closure of critically important local borough based police consultative groups
• cut funding to Africa Day, the anti racist Rise festival and St Patricks day celebrating London’s diversity
• transport policies fail to address the fact Black & ethnic minority children are over represented in road fatalities
• on taking over control of the MPS abolished all MPA race equality policy and consultative forums
• has seen the number of black youth going to jail in London increase by 100% during his term
• stopped publishing detailed race equality workforce figures to hide reduced number of black people employed
• concluded that ethnic representation in the police force was not necessary to achieve good community relations
• in 2008 promised 1000 black mentors to combat youth violence and in 2012 had delivered just 56

An Open Letter from African women to the Minister of Culture: The Venus Hottentot Cake 

Sign Petition HERE

April 21 2012
We the undersigned women of African /African descent and  our supporters, which include anti-racist activists, scholars community leaders and Faith leaders wish to address the Swedish  Venus Hottentot Cake Incident.  First, we commend our Swedish friends and colleagues, and those from the African-Swedish Diaspora for their substantial contribution to anti-racist  mobilization and education through their various Policy Institutes and Research Programs, which have worked diligently to promote the interests of African Diaspora communities in Europe and Internationally.
 
The Issue At Hand
“Contemporary forms of oppression do not routinely force people to submit. Instead, they manufacture consent for domination so that we lose our ability to question and thus collude in our own subordination.”
 -Patricia Hill-Collins, Black Feminist Scholar.

On Sunday, April 15th, at the  Moderna Museet the Swedish Artists Organisation celebrated World Art Day, as well as celebrating its own 75th birthday.  Lena Adelsohn-Liljeroth, the culture Minister, was Invited to speak and a number of artists were invited to create birthday cakes for the celebration. The Minister was  informed that the cake would be about the limits of provocative art, and about female genital mutilation. The event was launched with Lena Adelsohn-Liljeroth cutting the first piece of cake from a dark, ruby red velvet filling with black icing, which we understand was created by the Afro-Swedish artist Makode Aj Linde, whose head forms that of the black woman,  and is seen with a blackened face screaming with pain each time a guest cuts a slice from the cake. Rather disturbingly for many African women, the minister is pictured laughing as she cuts off the genital area (clitoris)from the metaphorical cake, as the  artist Makode screams distastefully.  The gaze of the predominantly white Swedish crowd is on Lijeroth who  is positioned  at the crotch end,  as they look on at their visibly ebullient culture minister with seemingly  nervous laughter as she becomes a part of the performance - a re-enactment of FGM  on a cake made in the image of a disembodied African woman.
 
The pictures of the event that followed in the media and video footage can only be described  in the mildest of terms, as a very negative  racialised spectacle, that has infuriated many people.  As representatives of African women on the ground, we have the experiential privilege to convey to the Swedish Embassy’s Ministry of Culture the fury that we have seen, particularly from African women who are dismayed at the fact that this project which was supposed to bring awareness of the very painful and complex issue of genital cutting has ironically, had the complete opposite effect.The fact that the artist is black does not in any way diminish the gravity of this racially demeaning project. The black artist who created this may be accused of being a dim witted misogynist on the one hand or on the other, some sort of gnostic proponent of postmodern praxis, in relation to black identity and difference - that we just don’t get - but we do not believe, based on what we have seen and heard from the artists own explanations, that this so-called ‘provocative performance art’ stands up to the intellectual rigor  required of  literary and cultural critique.The work is definitely not empowering or transformative for women who are victims of FGM  in any shape or form, and the racial overtones of this project re-inscribe the exploitation and dehumanisation of black African women, which clearly cannot be denied.  The fact of Makode Linde’s blackness does not legitimize anything done here, and the message about the seriousness of FGM is completely subsumed  by the hideous medium through which it has been conveyed. One does not need to be subjected to the epistemic violence  underpinning the grotesque reconstruction of FGM,  in the form of a black woman having her clitoris cut off to the sound of  a laughing crowd with a fixed gaze,  drinks in hand, to raise awareness of this very serious issue. Perhaps some reflection is required on what this might be saying about the people who were participating, and  who saw nothing wrong in what will surely go down as a deeply disturbing episode and blight in Sweden’s history.
 
As the representatives of African women it is with grave concern that we express our extreme and utter dismay that the minister for culture, Lena Adelsohn-Liljeroth - someone who holds a position of great authority and power - would take part in what basically amounted to a humiliating and dehumanising racialised public spectacle of African women. We believe the naive re-enactment of this oppression and symbolic violence in the name of “raising awareness” shows a profound disconnection between the minister  for culture and the women who have to deal with FGM. Unfortunately, this serves to reinforce the huge chasm that exists between the cultural sensibilities of African women and western women [albeit not  always exclusively between these two categories, when the dynamics of difference is taken  into further consideration]. We do not in any shape or form subscribe to this sham, that is so widely described to as “women’s empowerment.”  In this sense we the undersigned believe that this project is no different from the” Hottentot Venus” Sara Baartman and other African women who were exhibited as freak show attractions in Europe in the 19th Century.Sara Baartman was tricked into going to Europe, where she and other African women were paraded naked in museums and public squares and gawked at by all and sundry, for their “huge buttocks and peculiar genitalia”. The objectification of African women’s bodies by the west is rife in the pornography industry and there at least one can argue that the women who participate do so willingly. However, when this happens in the context of a serious issue such as FGM and it is done in the name of “art”, we believe that there is a  need for a strong unequivocal response to challenge such derogatory and racist representations promulgated by so-called “provocative art”.
 
 As such /We/African Women/African-Americans and many women of the African Diaspora the world over view this as an assault on our foremothers, sisters and our selves who have worked tirelesslly in different historical and cultural contexts to rid society of the sexist/racist vernacular  and stereotypes of black women as  sluts, jezebel, hottentot, mammy, mule, sapphire; to build our own sense of selves and redefine what women who look like us represent.
 
In this sense we completely reject the grotesque caricature of  the black African woman constructed by the artist Mokode Linde to re-enact FGM,  which displayed  no discernible cultural sensitivity towards those African girls/women  and girls/women generally who  are subjected to that experience. We in no way except this as a valid representation of the experiences of African women, but rather, we view it as a racialised slur and an attempt at erasure of all that we have struggled for historically in order to genuinely empower African women the world over.  We can learn from successful movements like the Civil Rights movement, from Women’s Suffrage, the Black Nationalist and Black Feminist movements that we can make change without resorting to the sort of  connivance outlined here between white female power and the  black male power that legitimized this gross act of cultural insensitivity and public humiliation towards African women in the form of what is now infamously known as the Venus Hottentot Cake. 
 
The Artist and Ethics
Internalized racism has been one of the primary means by which we are constantly forced to perpetuate and collude in our own oppression and the oppression of others of our race. In the case of the “Venus Hottentot Cake”, equally devastating is that the artist Makode Aj Linde is Afro-Swedish. His own head adorned with long locks forms that of the naked Black woman in the cake, lying motionless on a table in a room surrounded by a laughing crowd. Not one Black woman, not one Black person in the room, except the artist and his cake. Makode Aj Linde is seen with a blackened face screaming with pain each time a Swedish guest cuts a slice from the cake. We are horrified as we try to make sense of this artist’s actions and we are perplexed by his explanation of the art as an awareness raising piece on the “practice of female genital mutilation” in certain African communities, or a practice that many African women’s rights defenders have come to rename female genital cutting (FGC).
 
The moment that cake was presented; the moment that cake was eaten; the moment that cake caused joy and excitement, re-opening the marvel that white Europeans felt at exploiting African women’s bodies—specifically, the sexualized celebration, the entrapment, the cutting of the genitalia of the Sara Baartman-like black body, the ethics of the artist comes into serious question, even if not the art itself, for the sake of “art”, for the sake of non-censorship. Racism was propped up in its ugliest form, facilitated by a Black artist and perpetuated on the representation of the body of a Black female.
 
No one, including the artist seems to have consulted Black African women at the forefront of the movement to end the practice of female genital cutting, often with little resources and in direct and dangerous conflict with their own communities. We echo Shailja Patel in stating: “What makes the cake episode so deeply offensive is the appropriation, by both artist and his audience, of African women’s bodies and experiences, while completely excluding real African women from the discourse. It is a pornography of violence.”
 
We disagree with the artist, that the various statements, comments, letters, and responses flooding the blogosphere represent “a shallow analysis of the work”, of his art. As he expresses that it is “sad if people feel offended”, we too are saddened by his lack of analysis and his acquiesce to racist and misogynist systems that not only serve to undermine the humanity of Black women, but also of Black men.
 
Ethics are defined as “a system of moral principles” which constantly factor into the choices we make, whether as artists or responsible governmental and/or institutional representatives. However, these decisions can become confused, making this system of principles seriously muddled and producing a blurry set of ethical guidelines, especially when competing priorities are at work—money and recognition vs. dignity and humanity. It is our personal opinion that this cake represents both ethical and moral violations not only in its presentation within the context of art, but within the department of cultural affairs sponsorship of it, regardless of country.
 
To the artist, by colluding in this or any level of oppression, and by providing the tool for the racialized, sexualized enjoyment of the visual body of a Black woman, by participating in the enticement of others to cut out and eat her cake vagina, which in the case of Sarah Baartman was first felt up, groped at, raped, looked at as a sexual enigma—is indeed an outrage.
 
Controversies and arguments abound as ethical decisions, or the lack thereof, play a role in institutional practice, in governmental practice—then you add the artist, as in this case, and you have a dangerous situation and a perpetuation on a global scale, another assault on Black women’s bodies. With the advent of technology today, our world is global. Technology allows us to see beyond our backyards. The world is watching as we still see layers of the objectification of black and indigenous peoples throughout the world, where institutions of cultural education reach their market by presenting dangerous ideologies of culture that objectify and exploit and dehumanize ethnic groups, such as Dr Kananazawa for his “Black Women Are Less Attractive” research. We are also fortunate, in the sense that we can use this same technology to respond and resist.
 
The fact that anthropologists, scientist, and other social scientist, educators and now this artist and the Swedish institution is being challenged around the world in outrage signals that, even through art, people want to be educated without harm, without violation, and without limitation.
 
What We Ask
We would welcome a meeting with the minister of culture, Lena Adelsohn-Liljeroth to discuss the implications of the event in its global reach for African women and the moral outrage it has caused. We would welcome the opportunity to engage in critical conversation with the artist Mokode Linde about the strategies he intends to employ for remaining accountable to black African communities in Sweden and further afield,  he has indicated he will continue to represent in his art.  We would welcome a conversation about the work ahead in relation to reconciliation for those who have been affected and/or offended by the insensitive nature of the Venus Hottentot Cake event, particularly those who have experience of FGM. Finally, we the undersigned would welcome a sincere public apology that would demonstrate the issues we have outlined in this letter have undergone serious consideration by the minister of culture, followed up by a robust review and implementation of anti-racist policies  that impact the lives of African Swedes  and those from African Diaspora communities in Europe  and Internationally.It behooves each artist, or researcher, or activist, or educator, to be aware of their position and their privilege and power when communicating or producing what can then interpreted as some form of “reality” by those the product reaches. Conversely, it is the ethical job of the institution, in this case the department of cultural affairs in Sweden to use their monies to fund programming that educates without racism and exploitation. In addition, we believe it is also imperative that they work to redact and develop programs of reeducation to counter information promulgated throughout years and centuries, via exhibitions, world fairs, zoos, parks, and more, that have framed Black women continuously, as “lesser,” “inhumane,” “sexual creatures.”When the department of cultural affairs ate and laughed at the caricature body of Sara Baartman, the head of the department showed herself incompetent and incapable of morally and ethically making choices and incapable of running the department of cultural affairs in Sweden.
 
SIGNED
 
Dr Claudette Carr Director, Jethro Institute for Good Governance, BlackWomens Blueprint, Barbara Mhangami, Samantha Asumadu, Minna Salami
 Sign  petition HERE 
Thank you.
ALSO
We are protesting on May 1st 2012 ouside of the Swedish Embassy in London to stop the abusive racially charged characterisations of black women, to empower black women as they defend themselves against racist and stereotypical imagery, to improve race relations in the African diaspora as well as on the continent, to raise cultural competence and sensitivity to issues pertaining to Africa and African cultures, to enhance understanding and views of African people as human beings with dignity and pride. We want a robust review and implementation of anti-racist policies that impact the lives of African Swedes and those from African Diaspora communities in Europe and Internationally.
Twitter: Rage Against Racism @RacismRage
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/events/280535495368249/
Contact: 07854475673
Sign Petition: http://www.change.org/petitions/minister-of-culture-sweden-apologise-for-the-display-of-offensive-artwork-of-black-women
Protest: Please come with your inventive placards, we expect attention!
Some facts
The feminist movement has been bringing attention to female genital cutting for decades; the women who experience FGM have been sharing their own experiences for decades too. The display at the Moderna Musset museum decontextualises, dehistoricises, depoliticises and attempts to deracialise an highly sensitive issue.
In London we live under a Mayor, Boris Johnson who dismissed the Macpherson report (released after Stephen Lawrence’s racially motivated murder) with these comments: ‘As for his [Macpherson’s] suggestions that there should be more race awareness sessions for the police, and possible adjustments to the national curriculum to stamp out racist attitudes, he [Macpherson] is vehement that this should not be exaggerated.’ (Lend me your ears p217)
‘we could probably achieve the same results, if not better, if we axed large chunks of the anti-racism industry, stopping taxing so many people with the threat of legal action, and left a bit more of the struggle against racism to tolerance and good manners.’ (Lend me your ears p212)
On Africa: ‘The problem is not that we were once in charge, but that we are not in charge any more… If left to their own devices, the natives would rely on nothing but the instant carbohydrate gratification of the plantain… The best fate for Africa would be if the old colonial powers, or their citizens, scrambled once again in her direction; on the understanding that this time they will not be asked to feel guilty.” (Spectator 2002)


An Open Letter from African women to the Minister of Culture: The Venus Hottentot Cake


Sign Petition HERE

April 21 2012

We the undersigned women of African /African descent and  our supporters, which include anti-racist activists, scholars community leaders and Faith leaders wish to address the Swedish  Venus Hottentot Cake Incident.  First, we commend our Swedish friends and colleagues, and those from the African-Swedish Diaspora for their substantial contribution to anti-racist  mobilization and education through their various Policy Institutes and Research Programs, which have worked diligently to promote the interests of African Diaspora communities in Europe and Internationally.


The Issue At Hand

“Contemporary forms of oppression do not routinely force people to submit. Instead, they manufacture consent for domination so that we lose our ability to question and thus collude in our own subordination.”

 -Patricia Hill-Collins, Black Feminist Scholar.


On Sunday, April 15th, at the  Moderna Museet the Swedish Artists Organisation celebrated World Art Day, as well as celebrating its own 75th birthday.  Lena Adelsohn-Liljeroth, the culture Minister, was Invited to speak and a number of artists were invited to create birthday cakes for the celebration. The Minister was  informed that the cake would be about the limits of provocative art, and about female genital mutilation. The event was launched with Lena Adelsohn-Liljeroth cutting the first piece of cake from a dark, ruby red velvet filling with black icing, which we understand was created by the Afro-Swedish artist Makode Aj Linde, whose head forms that of the black woman,  and is seen with a blackened face screaming with pain each time a guest cuts a slice from the cake. Rather disturbingly for many African women, the minister is pictured laughing as she cuts off the genital area (clitoris)from the metaphorical cake, as the  artist Makode screams distastefully.  The gaze of the predominantly white Swedish crowd is on Lijeroth who  is positioned  at the crotch end,  as they look on at their visibly ebullient culture minister with seemingly  nervous laughter as she becomes a part of the performance - a re-enactment of FGM  on a cake made in the image of a disembodied African woman.

 

The pictures of the event that followed in the media and video footage can only be described  in the mildest of terms, as a very negative  racialised spectacle, that has infuriated many people.  As representatives of African women on the ground, we have the experiential privilege to convey to the Swedish Embassy’s Ministry of Culture the fury that we have seen, particularly from African women who are dismayed at the fact that this project which was supposed to bring awareness of the very painful and complex issue of genital cutting has ironically, had the complete opposite effect.The fact that the artist is black does not in any way diminish the gravity of this racially demeaning project. The black artist who created this may be accused of being a dim witted misogynist on the one hand or on the other, some sort of gnostic proponent of postmodern praxis, in relation to black identity and difference - that we just don’t get - but we do not believe, based on what we have seen and heard from the artists own explanations, that this so-called ‘provocative performance art’ stands up to the intellectual rigor  required of  literary and cultural critique.The work is definitely not empowering or transformative for women who are victims of FGM  in any shape or form, and the racial overtones of this project re-inscribe the exploitation and dehumanisation of black African women, which clearly cannot be denied.  The fact of Makode Linde’s blackness does not legitimize anything done here, and the message about the seriousness of FGM is completely subsumed  by the hideous medium through which it has been conveyed. One does not need to be subjected to the epistemic violence  underpinning the grotesque reconstruction of FGM,  in the form of a black woman having her clitoris cut off to the sound of  a laughing crowd with a fixed gaze,  drinks in hand, to raise awareness of this very serious issue. Perhaps some reflection is required on what this might be saying about the people who were participating, and  who saw nothing wrong in what will surely go down as a deeply disturbing episode and blight in Sweden’s history.

 

As the representatives of African women it is with grave concern that we express our extreme and utter dismay that the minister for culture, Lena Adelsohn-Liljeroth - someone who holds a position of great authority and power - would take part in what basically amounted to a humiliating and dehumanising racialised public spectacle of African women. We believe the naive re-enactment of this oppression and symbolic violence in the name of “raising awareness” shows a profound disconnection between the minister  for culture and the women who have to deal with FGM. Unfortunately, this serves to reinforce the huge chasm that exists between the cultural sensibilities of African women and western women [albeit not  always exclusively between these two categories, when the dynamics of difference is taken  into further consideration]. We do not in any shape or form subscribe to this sham, that is so widely described to as “women’s empowerment.”  In this sense we the undersigned believe that this project is no different from the” Hottentot Venus” Sara Baartman and other African women who were exhibited as freak show attractions in Europe in the 19th Century.Sara Baartman was tricked into going to Europe, where she and other African women were paraded naked in museums and public squares and gawked at by all and sundry, for their “huge buttocks and peculiar genitalia”. The objectification of African women’s bodies by the west is rife in the pornography industry and there at least one can argue that the women who participate do so willingly. However, when this happens in the context of a serious issue such as FGM and it is done in the name of “art”, we believe that there is a  need for a strong unequivocal response to challenge such derogatory and racist representations promulgated by so-called “provocative art”.

 

 As such /We/African Women/African-Americans and many women of the African Diaspora the world over view this as an assault on our foremothers, sisters and our selves who have worked tirelesslly in different historical and cultural contexts to rid society of the sexist/racist vernacular  and stereotypes of black women as  sluts, jezebel, hottentot, mammy, mule, sapphire; to build our own sense of selves and redefine what women who look like us represent.

 

In this sense we completely reject the grotesque caricature of  the black African woman constructed by the artist Mokode Linde to re-enact FGM,  which displayed  no discernible cultural sensitivity towards those African girls/women  and girls/women generally who  are subjected to that experience. We in no way except this as a valid representation of the experiences of African women, but rather, we view it as a racialised slur and an attempt at erasure of all that we have struggled for historically in order to genuinely empower African women the world over.  We can learn from successful movements like the Civil Rights movement, from Women’s Suffrage, the Black Nationalist and Black Feminist movements that we can make change without resorting to the sort of  connivance outlined here between white female power and the  black male power that legitimized this gross act of cultural insensitivity and public humiliation towards African women in the form of what is now infamously known as the Venus Hottentot Cake. 

 

The Artist and Ethics

Internalized racism has been one of the primary means by which we are constantly forced to perpetuate and collude in our own oppression and the oppression of others of our race. In the case of the “Venus Hottentot Cake”, equally devastating is that the artist Makode Aj Linde is Afro-Swedish. His own head adorned with long locks forms that of the naked Black woman in the cake, lying motionless on a table in a room surrounded by a laughing crowd. Not one Black woman, not one Black person in the room, except the artist and his cake. Makode Aj Linde is seen with a blackened face screaming with pain each time a Swedish guest cuts a slice from the cake. We are horrified as we try to make sense of this artist’s actions and we are perplexed by his explanation of the art as an awareness raising piece on the “practice of female genital mutilation” in certain African communities, or a practice that many African women’s rights defenders have come to rename female genital cutting (FGC).

 

The moment that cake was presented; the moment that cake was eaten; the moment that cake caused joy and excitement, re-opening the marvel that white Europeans felt at exploiting African women’s bodies—specifically, the sexualized celebration, the entrapment, the cutting of the genitalia of the Sara Baartman-like black body, the ethics of the artist comes into serious question, even if not the art itself, for the sake of “art”, for the sake of non-censorship. Racism was propped up in its ugliest form, facilitated by a Black artist and perpetuated on the representation of the body of a Black female.

 

No one, including the artist seems to have consulted Black African women at the forefront of the movement to end the practice of female genital cutting, often with little resources and in direct and dangerous conflict with their own communities. We echo Shailja Patel in stating: “What makes the cake episode so deeply offensive is the appropriation, by both artist and his audience, of African women’s bodies and experiences, while completely excluding real African women from the discourse. It is a pornography of violence.”

 

We disagree with the artist, that the various statements, comments, letters, and responses flooding the blogosphere represent “a shallow analysis of the work”, of his art. As he expresses that it is “sad if people feel offended”, we too are saddened by his lack of analysis and his acquiesce to racist and misogynist systems that not only serve to undermine the humanity of Black women, but also of Black men.

 

Ethics are defined as “a system of moral principles” which constantly factor into the choices we make, whether as artists or responsible governmental and/or institutional representatives. However, these decisions can become confused, making this system of principles seriously muddled and producing a blurry set of ethical guidelines, especially when competing priorities are at work—money and recognition vs. dignity and humanity. It is our personal opinion that this cake represents both ethical and moral violations not only in its presentation within the context of art, but within the department of cultural affairs sponsorship of it, regardless of country.

 

To the artist, by colluding in this or any level of oppression, and by providing the tool for the racialized, sexualized enjoyment of the visual body of a Black woman, by participating in the enticement of others to cut out and eat her cake vagina, which in the case of Sarah Baartman was first felt up, groped at, raped, looked at as a sexual enigma—is indeed an outrage.

 

Controversies and arguments abound as ethical decisions, or the lack thereof, play a role in institutional practice, in governmental practice—then you add the artist, as in this case, and you have a dangerous situation and a perpetuation on a global scale, another assault on Black women’s bodies. With the advent of technology today, our world is global. Technology allows us to see beyond our backyards. The world is watching as we still see layers of the objectification of black and indigenous peoples throughout the world, where institutions of cultural education reach their market by presenting dangerous ideologies of culture that objectify and exploit and dehumanize ethnic groups, such as Dr Kananazawa for his “Black Women Are Less Attractive” research. We are also fortunate, in the sense that we can use this same technology to respond and resist.

 

The fact that anthropologists, scientist, and other social scientist, educators and now this artist and the Swedish institution is being challenged around the world in outrage signals that, even through art, people want to be educated without harm, without violation, and without limitation.

 

What We Ask

We would welcome a meeting with the minister of culture, Lena Adelsohn-Liljeroth to discuss the implications of the event in its global reach for African women and the moral outrage it has caused. We would welcome the opportunity to engage in critical conversation with the artist Mokode Linde about the strategies he intends to employ for remaining accountable to black African communities in Sweden and further afield,  he has indicated he will continue to represent in his art.  We would welcome a conversation about the work ahead in relation to reconciliation for those who have been affected and/or offended by the insensitive nature of the Venus Hottentot Cake event, particularly those who have experience of FGM. Finally, we the undersigned would welcome a sincere public apology that would demonstrate the issues we have outlined in this letter have undergone serious consideration by the minister of culture, followed up by a robust review and implementation of anti-racist policies  that impact the lives of African Swedes  and those from African Diaspora communities in Europe  and Internationally.It behooves each artist, or researcher, or activist, or educator, to be aware of their position and their privilege and power when communicating or producing what can then interpreted as some form of “reality” by those the product reaches. Conversely, it is the ethical job of the institution, in this case the department of cultural affairs in Sweden to use their monies to fund programming that educates without racism and exploitation. In addition, we believe it is also imperative that they work to redact and develop programs of reeducation to counter information promulgated throughout years and centuries, via exhibitions, world fairs, zoos, parks, and more, that have framed Black women continuously, as “lesser,” “inhumane,” “sexual creatures.”When the department of cultural affairs ate and laughed at the caricature body of Sara Baartman, the head of the department showed herself incompetent and incapable of morally and ethically making choices and incapable of running the department of cultural affairs in Sweden.

 

SIGNED

 

Dr Claudette Carr Director, Jethro Institute for Good Governance, BlackWomens Blueprint, Barbara Mhangami, Samantha Asumadu, Minna Salami

 Sign  petition HERE

Thank you.

ALSO

We are protesting on May 1st 2012 ouside of the Swedish Embassy in London to stop the abusive racially charged characterisations of black women, to empower black women as they defend themselves against racist and stereotypical imagery, to improve race relations in the African diaspora as well as on the continent, to raise cultural competence and sensitivity to issues pertaining to Africa and African cultures, to enhance understanding and views of African people as human beings with dignity and pride. We want a robust review and implementation of anti-racist policies that impact the lives of African Swedes and those from African Diaspora communities in Europe and Internationally.

Twitter: Rage Against Racism @RacismRage

Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/events/280535495368249/

Contact: 07854475673

Sign Petition: http://www.change.org/petitions/minister-of-culture-sweden-apologise-for-the-display-of-offensive-artwork-of-black-women

Protest: Please come with your inventive placards, we expect attention!

Some facts

The feminist movement has been bringing attention to female genital cutting for decades; the women who experience FGM have been sharing their own experiences for decades too. The display at the Moderna Musset museum decontextualises, dehistoricises, depoliticises and attempts to deracialise an highly sensitive issue.

In London we live under a Mayor, Boris Johnson who dismissed the Macpherson report (released after Stephen Lawrence’s racially motivated murder) with these comments:
‘As for his [Macpherson’s] suggestions that there should be more race awareness sessions for the police, and possible adjustments to the national curriculum to stamp out racist attitudes, he [Macpherson] is vehement that this should not be exaggerated.’ (Lend me your ears p217)

‘we could probably achieve the same results, if not better, if we axed large chunks of the anti-racism industry, stopping taxing so many people with the threat of legal action, and left a bit more of the struggle against racism to tolerance and good manners.’ (Lend me your ears p212)

On Africa:
‘The problem is not that we were once in charge, but that we are not in charge any more… If left to their own devices, the natives would rely on nothing but the instant carbohydrate gratification of the plantain… The best fate for Africa would be if the old colonial powers, or their citizens, scrambled once again in her direction; on the understanding that this time they will not be asked to feel guilty.”
(Spectator 2002)
A Calm Call to Action: African Women and the “Golliwog Cake”



“Toni Morrison has used the following metaphor to describe the invisibility of whiteness: it is like the fishbowl that contains both fish and water. Whiteness, in other words, provides the very context for meaning-making. It supplies the norms and categories against which all groups are measured. But the categories of whiteness are invisible as constraint because we keep focusing on what is inside them — the water and the fish, rather than the fish bowl itself.” [Audrey Thompson]

I don’t know about you, but in a week where I had seemingly been inundated with a litany of posts, about, “Whites in Shining Armor” and “White Privilege” in the development field post KONY 2012, I’ve yet to see or hear the corollary of this, which might include righteous indignation of the same measure concerning Sweden’s “Golliwog Cake”. Sweden’s Minister for Culture Lena Adelsohn Liljeroth and the artist, black Swede, Makode Linde, have rightly met a barrage of criticism on a global scale that has gone beyond blogsphere and into the mainstream media. However, in the midst of this cacophony of noise surrounding the latest installment of the ‘White Savior Industrial Complex’ I ask the question, what is to be done? We are no longer talking about some [proxy][ NGO, run by Invisible Children, we have now graduated to the hallowed halls of power occupied by GROWN ADULTS who run the Swedish Government. Only this week Afrolens Voices for the Sub-Altern wrote, an open ed entitled, “Dear White Liberals Allies of the Marginalized: Thanks for Acknowledging your Privilege , But….”

“The sensationalist KONY 2012 calamity personified the neo-colonist, paternalistic relationship the Western world has had, and continues to have with marginalized peoples; And through the power of social media, the masses were beckoned to respond, critique, and analyze what all this meant in a globalized, post-social media world. We discussed the implications of ‘the White Saviour’, paradigm, dissected ‘white privilege’, chastised Invisible Children, and promises were made to honor indigenous voices. The marginalized masses shouted, ‘let us speak’, and but I don’t think many of you were listening. Here’s where I make enemies, and begin to formulate my misgivings about our recent and continuing conversations surrounding ideas of ‘white privilege’, ‘racial justice’, ‘representation’, and indigenous ownership about the narratives of the marginalized.”

Internationally renowned Kenyan writer Binyavanga Wainaina had this to say on the controversial devils pie: “That “art” like so many others, was not for “awareness” or “shock appeal” - it was for the entertainment and enjoyment of the bullet proof liberals who rule the planet, and who consume the pain of others as a product they like to call “charity” or “giving back”. The most important thing to know is that the makers, the buyers, the ministers are all utterly bullet proof. They believe that nothing you or I can do can move or hurt them. The only platform for communication, recognition or engagement is inside the world of pity, and leftovers. This is the true power of the world today, the thing to be feared, for when it decides to destroy you, with contracts and policies,and AID - it will make it seem as if it is doing you a favour - and if you are a fool, you will believe it. You are truly invisible, and if you have dreadlocks they will want to have sex with you, and turn you into a well paid trophy for dinner parties.”




“All our silences in the face of racist assault are acts of complicity.”
― bell hooks, killing rage: Ending Racism

“After all, acknowledging unfairness then calls decent people forth to correct those injustices. And since most persons are at their core, decent folks, the need to ignore evidence of injustice is powerful: To do otherwise would force whites to either push for change (which they would perceive as against their interests) or live consciously as hypocrites who speak of freedom and opportunity but perpetuate a system of inequality.”
― Tim Wise

This is a call on behalf of all black African women to action by ALL who seek to challenge the blatant injustice of racism in all it’s manifestations. I wait to hear constructive proposals.

-Dr Claudette Carr

Read more here: Sweden: the country where racism is just a joke

copyright 2012, Dr Claudette Carr

Dr Claudette Carr is is the Founder and Executive Director of the Jethro Institute for Good Governance (J!GG).

Twitter:

http://www.jethroinstitute.org.uk

Please contact me at sama2179@hotmail.com or tweet me @honestlyAbroad if you wish to get involved.

Black Feminists UK are organising a demonstration which will take place within the next 10 days in Central London. Keep checking back for further information http://blackfeminists.blogspot.co.uk/

also Dr Claudette Carr wrote:

REGARDING THE RACIST CAKE OF SARAH BARTMAN. WE ARE OUTRAGED AND SINCE MOST OF US CANNOT AFFORD TO BE ON A FLIGHT TO SWEDEN, WE WILL WRITE THE Embassy of

Embassy of Sweden London

Postal address Embassy of Sweden
11 Montagu Place
London W1H 2AL
United Kingdom

Address 11 Montagu Place

The nearest underground stations are Marble Arch, Baker Street and Marylebone

Tel+44-20-7917 6400

Fax+44-20-7724 4174

Emailambassaden.london@foreign.ministry.se

Email Visa Sectionambassaden.london-visum@foreign.ministry.se

Email Passport Sectionambassaden.london-pass@foreign.ministry.se

Thank you

Free counters!