INTERSECTIONALITY OF VIOLENCE.
Violence is defined by the World Health Organization as
"the intentional use of physical force or power, threatened or actual, against
oneself, another person, or against a group or community, which either results
in or has a high likelihood of resulting in injury, death, psychological harm,
mal-development, or deprivation", although the group acknowledges that the
inclusion of "the use of power" in its definition expands on the
conventional meaning of the word.
Violence has with time been engrained in the core of our
national values. Violent has the power to inflict fear, death, exclusion and
this has been evident in the society we live and thrive in. In the social
economically challenged areas; slums… violence has been a tool that the members
of the society use in order for their voices to be heard. Recalling a time when
Kibera people burnt and destroyed properties put up by the government to air
the imbalance that they experienced in the job allocations.
Violence and development or economics: Areas that are
perceived to be of lower economic value are greatly violent in nature. From the
high rates of crime, high cases of unemployment and low paying jobs that reign
sovereign in the areas. Areas like the Northern parts of Kenya has seen the
flip side of development. This areas are hit by cases of Cancer and now Cholera
that the society has turned a blind eye on as the proximity to the area is
distinct. In the Northern parts, the porous nature of the border has caused
terror attacks and loss of vital lives that impact the people that fall victim
to the plight.
Violence and democracy: Kenya passed the new constitution
that among many provisions provides for the right of persons to demonstrate in
issues that are wrongly implemented. With the political atmosphere, those in
power have used state officers to threaten the rights of citizens to have
peaceful demonstrations, this is a great indicator of the democracy of the
society being under threat. People who take up initiatives to participate in
demos are painted to be deviant, law breakers and thus #PoliceBrutality is
highly anticipated and rarely condemned by leaders who are on the wing of the
power plays.
Violence and Inclusion: Minorities (sexual minorities,
persons with disability, refugees) in society have been excluded from policy
reforms, parity talks and this has created a difficult time in ensuring that
their plights are highlighted in the main talks. Refugees/asylum seekers in the
country have been labelled “terrorists” pushing the closure of their camps,
amidst these little efforts are made to ensure their resettlements to their
countries or other asylums.
Sexual minorities all
over the world have had limited human rights accorded to them; their rights to
health, education, employment, housing are met by violent utterances by leaders
giving lee way for the society, state officials, medical practioners to violate
their dignity, privacy, right to form families and to acquire the standards of
living that are progressive. In Kenya today, there are cases of forced anal
examination that those accused of same sex acts are…. The violation in such
acts cuts across to the dignity and privacy of a human being. In other
instances, homosexual presenting persons are discriminated, beaten and kicked
out of their houses all because of the different orientation that they uphold.
Its critical for society to look into the actions that our beliefs propel,
dehumanizing individuals to points of suicides, drug and substance abuse and ostracizing
of persons from families is not a #NonIssue.
Violence in family: Domestic violence has become so rampant
in our daily interactions and yet the intervention side; a stale game. The evident
lack of association that occurs when there is a violent scene happening in
one’s surrounding, the excuse given by society and state is that they don’t
want to interfere with ‘matters family’ to the public stripping of women due to
dressing is questionable. Makes me wonder on the state of tolerance that
society has clothed itself in. Do we not question the psychological, mental,
physical state of the society, victims and the children in the violent area?
Violence and Ethnocentrism is a concept that has evolved to
ethnic disputes and clashes manifested in the recent post-election violence
that occurred in 2007, a vice yet to heal in our conscious and subconscious
states. Ethnic or tribal differences has caused violence to be easily
perpetrated in different ethnic communities. Is culture being upheld to the
unifying angle of inclusivity?
Violence and religion: The diversity in religious beliefs
proclaimed, converge on the similarity on: compassion, love and tolerance to
all mankind. The prophecies of the great ideologies have failed their
manifestation with the collision of popularity and mass influence with
politics. The idea of unity in differences has been exploited to accommodate
violent expressions amongst different domains; the effects are seen in the
extremist nature of persuasion and coercion to pull congregations and alienate
those that do not conform. The neutral position of religion has failed in
society as the religious fronts succumb and propagate hate, intolerance and
thus violence to those that do not conform to their beliefs.
Violence seems to be an accepted norm in our society. A vice
that needs a remedy as humanity is running down the drain. A conversation that
seeks more clarity in the minds of all. A path that each of us partakes and
propagates in the effort to progress in life. Sad reality of the
intersectionality of violence in our interactions that we as humans have turned
a blind eye on…. #LetsTalkViolence #TheIssueIsViolence.
©Arudi Laura Cori.
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