Black History
Month is that time of year when the achievements and courage of people
of African descent are acknowledged and celebrated. However, for decades
now, Black History Month has not once acknowledged or celebrated the contributions
of its lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, and queer communities.
Our omission from the annals of black history would
lead you to believe that the only shakers and movers in the history of
people of African descent in the U.S.
were and still are heterosexuals. And because of this heterosexist bias,
the sheroes and heroes of LGBTQ people of African decent like
Pat Parker, Audre Lorde,
Essex Hemphill, Joseph Beam, and Bayard Rustin, to name a few, are most
known and lauded within a subculture of black life.
Along with the pantheon of noted black heterosexual
leaders who will be lauded this month, I want to personally celebrate
one of my queer and crossover sheroes, renown
writer and poet Alice Walker for giving black women everywhere on the
globe a new name we all can embrace - “womanist.”
While “sistah girl” is
my favorite term to depict black women, no word, however, captures the
totality of women of the African Diaspora in popular culture today than
Pulitzer Prize author, Alice Walker’s, term “womanist.” Alice Walker coined
the term in her 1983 collection of prose writings “In
Search of Our Mothers' Gardens: Womanist Prose.”
The term “womanist” derives from African-American
women’s folk expression “You are acting womanish”. The phrase illustrates
little African-American girls’ precociousness as they attempt to comprehend
and overcome the challenges adult African-American women face in their
strategies for survival in an oppressive society.
Walker
defines a “womanist” as a black feminist who continues the legacy of “outrageous,
audacious, courageous, and willful, responsible, in charge, serious” African-American
women as agents of social change for the wholeness and liberation of their
entire people, and by extension, the rest of humanity. A womanist can
be a lesbian, a heterosexual, a bisexual or a transgender woman. She celebrates
and affirms African-American women’s culture and physical beauty. A womanist
“loves herself. Regardless”.
“Womanist” was coined as a term that is both culture
specific and encompasses a variety of ways in which women of the African
Diaspora support each other and relate to the world.
Walker specifically devised
the term in response to literary historian Jean Humez’s (who resides here
in Somerville, MA) introductory statement in “Gifts
of Power: The Writings of Rebecca Jackson, Black Visionary, Shaker Eldress.”
Humez suggested that Rebecca Jackson and Rebecca
Perot, who were part of an African-American Shaker settlement in Philadelphia in the 1870’s and lived with each other for more than
thirty years, would be labeled lesbians in today’s climate of acknowledging
female relationships. Humez supported her speculations of the Jackson-Perot
relationship by pointing to the homoerotic dreams the women had of each
other. Walker disputed Humez’s
right, as a white woman from a different cultural context, to define the
intimacy between two African-American women.” “Womanist” was coined as
a term that was both culture specific and encompassed a variety of ways
in which African-American women support each other and relate to the world.
Although the words “religion” and “Christian” do
not appear in Walker’s definition,
there are both religious and secular usages for the term “womanist.” Because
Walker emphasizes African-American
women’s love for the Spirit, African-American Christian women have used
“womanist” to articulate their witness to and participation in God’s power
and presence in the world. “Womanist” in the religious sense is often
used by African-American women who are Christian ministers and seminarians,
as well as by feminist scholars in the field of religion. Womanist Christian
thought and practices began to flourish in the mid-1980s as a way to challenge
racist, sexist, and white feminists’ religious practices and discourses
that excluded African-American women’s participation and which ignored
their experiences in church and society.
For womanist Christian ministers and seminarians,
Walker’s definition serves as a springboard for
their preaching style, liturgy, and pastoral ministry. For womanist Christian
academicians, the definition shapes and frames their analytical and theoretical
approaches. By using African-American women’s experiences of struggle
and survival as their starting point of inquiry, these clergywomen and
scholars examine the simultaneous forces of race, class and gender oppressions
in African-American women’s lives. A “womanist” approach also celebrates
African-American women’s religious history, and validates their theological
beliefs.
Although Walker’s
definition includes lesbians as womanist, lesbian voices in the womanist
Christian discourse as well as their contributions to African-American
women’s religious histories have been suppressed. Proponents for the exclusion
of lesbians in the discourse argue that a lesbian sexual orientation is
antithetical to the tenets and survival of the Black Church and black family. As a result,
many Christian lesbians in the womanist Christian discourse have responded
either by engaging in the debate without disclosing their sexual identities
or by opting not to engage in it at all.
The secular use of “womanist” is by African-American
women who have either left the Black Church because of its gender bias and homophobia, or who do not come
from the Black Church
religious experience. These women use the term to identify a culturally
specific form of women-centered politics and theory. They claim that the
term “feminist” is inappropriate because of its history of identification
with a predominantly white movement that has often excluded and alienated
African-American women. In addition, because the term, “feminist” has
been used to identify women as lesbians regardless of their sexual orientation,
“womanist” provides a way to affirm one’s identity without being associated
with lesbianism. Because of this, however, some women have challenged
the term “womanist” because of its homophobic implications.
Hmm?!
BlackCommentator.com Editorial Board member, the
Rev. Irene Monroe, is a religion columnist, theologian, and public speaker. She is the Coordinator of the African-American Roundtable of the Center for Lesbian and
Gay Studies in Religion and Ministry (CLGS) at the Pacific School of Religion.
A
native of Brooklyn, Rev. Monroe is a graduate from Wellesley College and
Union Theological Seminary at Columbia University, and served as a pastor
at an African-American church before coming to Harvard Divinity School
for her doctorate as a Ford Fellow. She was recently named to MSNBC’s
list of 10 Black Women You Should Know. Reverend Monroe is the author
of Let Your Light Shine Like
a Rainbow Always: Meditations on Bible Prayers for Not’So’Everyday Moments. As an African-American
feminist theologian, she speaks for a sector of society that is frequently
invisible. Her website is irenemonroe.com.
Click here to contact the Rev. Monroe.
|