Friday, 1 March 2013

DRC Gender Minister Geneviève Inagosi goes to war against March-8 sarongs

(PHOTO 1: A March-8 commemorative sarong on display at a store in Kinshasa)

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(Photo 2: Geneviève Inagosi, DRC Minister of Gender, Family and Child

at a press briefing in May 2012.

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I am told that it was in 2003 that March 8, the UN International

Women's Day, turned into a kind of Dionysian mass ritual countrywide

in the DRC.



As usual, the trend was allegedly set in Kinshasa.



On that day, women from all walks of life, clad in commemorative

pagnes (sarongs) specially designed for that year's commemoration by

the Kisangani-based French textile company SOTEXKI, would first march

on the martial beat of the army and the Kimbanguist church fanfares as

Kinshasa governor and a bevy of officials would be looking on from the

platform.



After that parade along the Chinese-built Boulevard Triomphal running

by the also Chinese-built People's Palace, the Parliament building,

the governor and the gender minister would then each make a speech

celebrating the Congolese "mamans" (as women are called in the Congo),

the backbone of society, deploring gender violence, and denouncing

"rape as a weapon of war" in eastern Congo.



Women would then leave Boulevard Triomphal and storm the "ngandas"

(sidewalk bars) where they'd drink till late in the night.



Evangelical pastors and self-appointed public moralists often accuse

women of losing all their sexual inhibitions at those drinking parties

of the International Women's Day.



For Congolese men, it's an ominous day, what with the mandatory

expenses entailed by showing appreciation to their wives and daughters

by buying them expensive commemorative pagnes.



Kinshasa urban legend has many tales of men who have committed suicide

after their wives quit them for failing to buy those commemorative

pagnes on Women's Days.



The International Women's Day is also a costly proposition for the

government as well, for it has to foot the bill of the pagnes of all

its female civil servants.



This year, however, the government hopes to do away with that ritual for good.



By mid-February, Gender Minister Geneviève Inagosi had taken to the

airwaves to announce that this upcoming March 8 won't be a holiday and

that the government wouldn't be ordering bulks of pagnes from SOTEXKI.



The country is at war, Inagosi keeps repeating, and could ill afford

to engage into such onerous expenses.



Inagosi further explained that the country's theme for this year's

Women's Day being, "Together against war and violences towards women

and girls by strengthening peace and justice in the DRC," there's only

one way to mark March 8, 2013: through education and meditation.



Adding:



"The government, through my ministry, isn't against wearing

[commemorative] pagnes. [...] But a certain opinion has a tendency to

reduce the International Women's Day to the wearing of the pagne

solely. And that isn't acceptable."



Well, Inagosi was expecting to get attaboys from "patriotic" women and

men; what she reaped instead was massive flak.



SOTEXKI bemoaned a move it described as unfriendly toward the

struggling national textile industry, while women feel robbed of their

hard-won right to pagnes and street parties.



I heard a man on a bus decry the government action that would deprive

men of "easy access to easy women."



Many women vow to celebrate anyway, even without any official seal of

approval. And SOTEXTI obliged by producing thousands of yards of

commemorative pagnes.



At any rate, on March 8, the DRC government might well find out it's

hard to dismantle a Congolese ritual by decree.



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PHOTO CREDITS: PHOTO 1: Alex Engwete; PHOTO 2: via groupelavenir.cd

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