Source: Autostraddle
By Spectra Speaks
My
cargo shorts and graphic tees weren't exactly what my mother had in
mind when she envisioned showing off her daughter who'd "just returned
from America with an MIT degree!" to her friends at church.
The prodigal daughter, I'd returned home to Nigeria for my high school bestie's wedding.
We hadn't seen each other in five years; during that time I'd not only
come out as queer, but founded an organization for immigrant and/or
queer women of color (QWOC+ Boston),
cut my hair into a frohawk, and started dressing as a boy. I'd pretty
much gone from a lip-gloss-wearing straight girl to the gayest person
ever, but nobody had witnessed the transition, not even my friend who
was getting married. I hadn't reached out to her for fear that I
wouldn't be able to lie about who I was, and that soon after she'd tell
her mom, who would tell other moms, and eventually the rest of Lagos
where my parents lived, forcing my mother to endure becoming the center
of gossip and ostracizing her from the very social networks she needed
to survive as an aging entrepreneur. In order to make ends meet, my
mother relied heavily on referrals from her religious community about
various contract jobs -- event planning, hotel management etc; the last
thing she needed was a taboo subject like "lesbianism" turning off
potential clients.
Needless to say, I hesitated when my
friend invited me to be part of her bridal train, but I couldn't refuse
an invitation to be part of my girl's wedding, even if it meant wearing a
bridesmaid dress. I tried to get out of it but she firmly
insisted that the dress wasn't up for negotiation. "Well, what then if
you don't wear a dress?" she'd asked laughing, "So, you're going to wear
a suit and stand with the boys?" It hurt my feelings, but I laughed
along with her and retorted, "Obviously not. That would be ridiculous."
That was just the beginning.
I spent the entire two weeks
of my first visit home since my queer transformation absorbing my
mother's daily jabs at my clothing (and eventually, anything I said):
"So you're earning all this money and can't even afford some nice
tops?", "You really should dress your age", "What, you think you're a
boy now?" Gender binaries. If there was ever a place for them to thrive
unchecked, it would be Lagos, Nigeria, a place where being gay is not just viewed as a choice, but a crime,
and -- pending the new anti-LGBT bill being deliberated -- holding
hands with your best friend or choosing same-sex roommates could be made
punishable for up to 14 years in prison.
But while I was plenty aware of the political debate around my identity
as a queer African, I couldn't have cared less about the law; I was
still trying to survive within the confines of my own home.
The
night before the wedding, my mother was chaperoning me through the
bridesmaid dress fitting. As the strapless lilac dress found its awkward
place on my body, the delicate layer of my personal confidence dropped
mercilessly to the floor. I felt naked and invisible at the
same time. As the zipper went up, I felt increasingly suffocated. The
silver, high-heeled shoes my mother had purchased for me earlier that
afternoon didn't help either. The entire ensemble felt like a ridiculous
costume.
Long before that moment, it had been easy to "dress up
like a girl." I even had a nickname/alter ego for that person "dressed
up like a girl" -- "The Empress." But now, being forced to wear drooping
earrings and high-heeled stillettos felt less like "performative drag"
and more like the real me didn't matter.
When my father
said I looked "pretty," I immediately went on a dramatic tirade (more
dramatic than usual) to assert that this wasn't who I was. "You only
compliment me when I'm wearing clothes I don't want to wear," I
complained, "I don't feel pretty. I feel stupid."
He
laughed then, dismissing my gender non-conformity as me being "a rebel."
He'd been a "rebel" too, he told me (although I can't recall seeing any
pictures of him in dresses). My mother, on the other hand, was
on to me. She eyed the dress silently; it was a fitting disguise and I
could tell she was relieved I was wearing it.
Throughout my stay
in Nigeria, the micro-aggressions continued: from things as silly to
being called "feminist" (as an explanation as to why I had a puzzled
look on my face when some girl said that all women should cook for their
husbands to avoid making them angry), to my mother dragging me through
stores to purchase large, obnoxious earrings, and to straight up
homophobic rants, which I suspect were directed at me -- "We don't have
that rubbish here in Nigeria -- all those gay people in America, why
should we be copying them? This is Africa!" Thanks to America's media, my friends' perceptions of gay people were limited to comic relief -- white gay men dancing glittery and half-naked down the streets, lipstick on, "dressing like women."
When
I vented to my friends in the US, I was met with well-meaning -- albeit
privileged and individualist sentiments -- "Who cares what they think?
You should be able to wear what you want and be yourself. Fuck 'em."
Except, I did
care what Nigerians thought of gay people; I cared that I had no proof
to show them that "gay people" could include Africans. I cared that I
had no proof to show them that "gay people" included me.
Admittedly,
even I had my doubts that I was who I said I was -- a gay Nigerian?
After all, just after I'd come out and I'd filled my Netflix queue with
every recommended film from the Gay and Lesbian section in search of
narratives that aligned with my experience. But I could barely find any
films that included women of color, let alone African lesbians.
I
realize now that I was searching for affirmation of who I was because a
part of me was still internalizing homophobia; "I'm Nigerian, we're not
gay. I must be the only gay Nigerian in the world." And even when I
finally met another queer Nigerian, I dismissed her because she "hadn't
been raised at home." If I was so quick to dismiss queer Nigerians, what
chance did I have that my Nigerian family would ever come around?
But then I saw Pariah, and I knew instantly that this was the film I'd been searching for. Pariah could save me from endless arguments over laws, policies, and tradition currently in Nigeria's media. Pariah could humanize me -- turn me from "issue" to "person -- and earn me empathy instead of judgement.
For
the group film screening I'd helped put together for QWOC+ Boston, I'd
dragged a whole crew of people: my partner, a few friends, and my straight Nigerian, Christian brother, who'd always been supportive of me,
yet still had moments when he dismissed my masculinity and/or gender
presentation without knowing it; like the time my mother had forced me
to wear our traditional attire for his graduation (I wanted to wear the
men's kaftan, but she'd put me in the elaborately feminine women's counterpart -- the iro and buba), and he'd told me to get over it, saying flippantly, "It's not like you never wore this stuff before."
I
remember holding my breath during pivotal scenes in the movie -- like
when Alike was forced to put her earrings back on before she returned
home in an effort to hide her gender identity from her parents. I
wondered nervously if my brother saw then the direct parallels to his
own sister's life, if he could finally understand that my protesting the
outfit my mother had brought with her from Nigeria wasn't just about
defying norms for the sake of being a rebel; I really did feel more like
a boy than a girl.
During the Q and A portion of the screening, Adepero Oduye (the Nigerian actress who plays Alike in the film)
told us, "When my mother first saw the film, she said, 'People here
[Nigeria] need to watch that movie. You wouldn't believe all the things
they are always saying. They need to see it. They need to understand.'"
After
I emerged from the theater, deliriously happy after seeing a gay
character whose experience I could finally relate to, my brother relayed
that the film's exploration of masculinity within the women's community
was similar enough to his own experience that he too deeply connected
with Alike. And therein lies the power of Pariah: whether or
not you are part of the LGBT community, expect to "aww" and cringe
several times per scene, as both the acting and directing create a
winning combination for unlocking the most powerful tool in social
change: empathy.
For Nigerians to accept their LGBT citizens as Nigerian, they need to experience queer stories as part of our own cultural landscape (as opposed to an American sitcom on Showtime) and framed within every day issues Nigerians like my parents can relate to: lack of electricity, overbearing mothers bickering over whose daughter will get married first, and simultaneous deep-rooted disdain and yearning for modernization.
Pariah may not be about LGBT Nigerians or Africans, but Dee Rees' bold narrative has certainly opened up the possibilities for such films, at least for people like me.
So as my country deliberates the new anti-LGBT bill, I pray for LGBT Africans to find their own Pariah, and I look forward to my mother finally seeing the film so that, just like my brother, she will finally be able to hear me when I say "I am Alike:" a proud queer, Nigerian boi, but more importantly, still her daughter.
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