issues > men's role > men's responses Men's responsesThe South African Men’s Forum was established
in 1996-97 by Bafana Khumalo to mobilise and galvanise
men against the abuse of women and children. Its membership now
includes more than six thousand men and it runs workshops, seminars
and public demonstrations.
It’s spokesman says, ‘It’s not
only a South African issue, it’s a worldwide phenomenon.
The sooner all men realise the importance of their involvement,
the
better.’
Bongani firmly believes that men who rape do so
because they lack respect for themselves and don’t have a moral code
by which they abide.
‘For me, it’s just a deliberate act
of destroying a woman… They cite many lousy reasons [for
raping] but I mean all the lousy reasons that they cite do not
really make
sense, you see that it’s just a strategy to escape the
reality that they are animals, they are lunatics.’
Bongani
does not believe that the dark years of apartheid can be used
as a justification for sexual assault.
‘Some of them would also sometimes say that apartheid
has taken so much of black men’s pride… you know
they’ve been ridiculed, our men have been ridiculed for
too long and then they need a soft target, a scapegoat to take
out that anger and women always turn out to be that easy target.
And then you know by raping you get the power that you never
ever had. So I mean they give their different reasons but I still
feel that it takes a man with low self esteem, with no morals
to rape. It’s disgusting.’
‘Let us not use any excuses to say, "No,
we are traumatised. We’ve been treated badly by apartheid,
now let’s take advantage of that and do it to other people.” I
mean it’s not fair; it’s abnormal; it’s not
even African; it’s against Ubuntu. You know in our culture
a man is supposed to be a figure of authority, the leader, the
protector. You have to look after your family - women, the children,
and not just the women that are close to you. Even the people
in the broader community. So now what happens if this protector
then abuses his protection powers to rape. It’s breaking
our tradition as well so it’s not acceptable."
Charlene
Smith says, "Very often in South Africa they
tie up the men and they rape the woman next to him. It profoundly
emasculates them because you get men who sit together and they
say, 'Anyone touches my wife, girlfriend, daughter, sister,
etcetera, I’ll kill the bastard' and after the woman
is raped or the child is raped they realise there’s nothing
they can do, that the police investigation is going nowhere,
that no one can find the rapist or rapists, there’s nothing
they can do. And if they find them in the end, they have to sit
in Court, they have to listen to the testimony of their wife
or child and for the first time really hear how she suffered,
because most of us won’t tell all the detail except
when it comes to Court, and they feel a profound sense of emasculation."
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