Cape Times

Zapiro cartoon out of touch with reality

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THE WOMEN’S Legal Centre (WLC) strongly condemns Zapiro’s latest cartoon depicting a black woman being gang-raped by the president and his cronies. One cannot compare the current political and economic challenges to a woman being raped. Citizens may feel helpless and angry, but this is nothing like how women feel when they have been raped.

By using the rape imagery, Zapiro is appropriat­ing women’s experience­s. There are other ways in which to portray the challenges currently facing the country.

South Africa has the highest incidence of rape in the world, yet the majority of women do not report and this cartoon enforces the stigma and the reasons rape is under-reported. Thus, we condemn this cartoon for a number of reasons:

● Zapiro’s cartoon is a form of violence as it triggers real pain for rape survivors.

● It is a form of white entitlemen­t on Zapiro’s part as he is representi­ng black bodies without thought and acknowledg­ement of white privilege.

● Rape should not be used as metaphor for anything. This kind of representa­tion normalises rape.

● Zapiro is stoking racial animosity by objectifyi­ng black women (and men). Black men as hypersexua­lised rapists, black women's bodies as always available to be raped. These are malicious stereotype­s of black sexuality.

● Lastly, and most importantl­y, black women’s bodies do not stand as a representa­tion of the South African nation, or representa­tions for what men fight over.

The greatest pain in this country falls upon the black woman. Zapiro’s cartoon is neither humorous nor makes a strong political point. It is insensitiv­e and out of touch with the lived realities of women in South Africa. Angie Richardson The Press Office

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