Happy belated International Men’s Day. I was caught by surprise
when it happened and only noticed because there was a slight nod in that
direction on social media.
Unfortunately, any plans
to investigate this day further were derailed by the combative stance
that so many commenters took on the issue.
Hard to tell
if that was just the effect of social media – everybody misbehaves
online – or whether it was the usual grousing about feminism.
Having
an International Men’s Day is a great idea, and I say that as a
self-identified feminist. Even when we reach gender equity in all areas
of life, I imagine that Women’s Day and Men’s Day will continue to be
celebrated by those who wish to do so, no harm no foul.
In
fact, it is the very experience of being a woman and therefore having
to face gendered challenges that made me realise these equitable
movements can be based on compassion as well as revolt.
If men are not the problem but patriarchy is, I am all for finding out how the “other half” experiences life in the patriarchy.
This
isn’t to say I am fine with male privilege, of course not. It is to say
that I want to know what that male privilege does to men.
For
example, what is it like working your way up the ranks of the
patriarchy with competition as your model? I am interested in men who
don’t necessarily conform to the idealised model of a man (basically the
majority).
I want to know how their emotional lives
are organised in a world that seems to discourage emotionality in men…
and of course, I want to know what men think feminism is, and how they
feel about it.
Interestingly enough, I met two
self-declared feminist men in this past one week, which is so rare in
Tanzania that my quota for the decade has probably been exceeded.
What an opportunity
I
didn’t get a chance to find out what had driven them to identify as
feminists but it was encouraging to see that maybe this thing will catch
on over time. But back to International Men’s Day: What an opportunity.
I
don’t know how it is usually celebrated, but one thing that it offers
is the opportunity for dialogue. I think I have many assumptions about
men that could be helpfully challenged simply by listening to what they
have to say.
I have a lot of biases too that would be
smugly confirmed by simply listening to what men have to say. But most
important, I am curious about the experiences that men have trying to
inhabit their gender role.
This concerns me because
youth are a particular cause of mine. It seems to me that youth is a
rather dangerous phase for a lot of men, that that is when they are
prone to making shockingly bad decisions, sometimes life-threatening
ones.
But even if they manage to escape youthful folly,
we have a tendency to put guns in their hands and send them off to war,
or when we are at peace, we still manage to somehow blame them for
unemployment, recruit them into organised or disorganised crime, pick
them up for simply being idle, all while expecting them to “man up” and
be of use to society.
I don’t think this patriarchy
business is as simple as an opposition of men and women, and need to
understand what men suffer from in its clutches too.
So, happy belated International Men’s Day. Next year hopefully I will remember to catch it, and I will be listening.
Elsie Eyakuze is a consultant and blogger for The Mikocheni Report. E-mail: elsieeyakuze@gmail.com
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