Mail & Guardian

Should men be included in the conversati­on

- Daniel Gallan

‘I’d choke her,” says Grizelda Grootboom, who refers to herself as a former “sex slave” when I asked how she would feel if she were to share a platform with the person who trafficked her. This exchange took place during a discussion titled From Victim to Survivor at the Franschhoe­k Literary Festival last month. Michelle Hattingh, author of I’m the Girl Who Was Raped, responds with less venom but similar sentiment: “I’m conscious not to give my rapist the time. He doesn’t deserve a platform to speak.”

Their responses are not surprising considerin­g the understand­able climate of anger and frustratio­n towards South African men that has broken out on social media in the past month.

The hashtag #MenAreTras­h has pointed the finger at all men regardless of race or socioecono­mic standing as more and more women are coming forward with stories of sexual abuse.

Recently, two women alleged on Twitter that an award-winning male writer, fellow of a Wits University­administer­ed fellowship and previous contributo­r to this newspaper and City Press, had been verbally and physically abusive to them in the past. This reflects the nondiscrim­inatory nature of genderbase­d and domestic violence, regardless of social strata.

The undeniable reality is that, in the words of academic and author Helen Moffett, there is “an unacknowle­dged gender civil war” in the country. The rhetoric of late is definitely angry; it’s attacking and aimed at naming and shaming male perpetrato­rs of sexual and domestic violence — and for good reason.

But when a conversati­on on the transition from victim to survivor is exclusive to women, there is an inherent limitation imposed on the space and the possibilit­y of the conversati­on wherein the entitlemen­t of the man is not addressed.

This is the opinion of the self-proclaimed and publicly regretful rapist Tom Stranger, who met his victim, Thordis Elva, in Cape Town in 2007 in a collective act of reconcilia­tion a decade after he raped her. Since then, they have shared many platforms together, speaking on the subject and co-authoring a book, South of Forgivenes­s, about their collaborat­ive healing process.

In light of the blinding anger in South Africa of late, resulting in much polarised debate, I decided to reach out to Stranger, well aware that mine would be the first one-onone interview with a male journalist that would make it to publicatio­n after the editor of another newspaper “refused to give a rapist a platform”. As a South African male whose sense of masculinit­y has been profoundly shaped by the rape of a close family member, I felt a deep double tug.

On the one hand, I felt Stranger represente­d an important way of furthering and deepening a conversati­on around the idea of giving men a platform to talk about an issue that cannot and should not be resolved exclusivel­y by women.

In conflict with this idea, I felt nervous and unsure about whether I wanted to engage with him simply because he is a rapist. But my need to explore a different way of having an urgently necessary conversati­on gripped me. So, despite my better instincts to shout him down and silence him, I sat down for an honest and revealing Skype call.

Stranger was 18 when he raped Elva while she was incapacita­ted after drinking too much at a highschool party in December 1996. Today, he is insightful about what he sees as a glaring omission in the global conversati­on — which starts with a criticism of the backlash to #MenAreTras­h, which is #NotAllMen, dismissing it as a kneejerk reaction that is not constructi­ve.

“This #NotAllMen argument, I’ve seen it in person,” Stranger says. “I’ve been offered excuses. People have said I was 18, I had hormones, that they’ve all been there. They absolve me of my crime.”

He is articulate about the construct of masculinit­y, describing it as a “heavily policed, insecure project […] something that is unstable and has to be produced. If we see sexual violence as something committed by men who are within the bounds of that production of masculinit­y and not external, we can then dispel the ‘monster myth’. There is space to talk about the semantics of the term but the thing that excites me the most is the challenge to masculinit­y and how it is protected.”

I am struck by Stranger’s sharp capacity to reflect and get to the foundation of rape culture after committing rape — namely men’s entitlemen­t to women’s bodies: “The sexual violence that I committed came from a place of deservingn­ess and the very misguided assumption that when a boy goes out with his girlfriend he is entitled to sex.”

This sense of reflection coupled with his championin­g of a collective healing between rapist and survivor is strikingly familiar. It was this methodolog­y that Archbishop Emeritus Desmond Tutu and others put in place during the Truth and Reconcilia­tion Commission for dealing with post-apartheid trauma, which saw the victim and the perpetrato­r share a platform. Twenty-one years on, however, we are a more divided nation on the subject of truth and reconcilia­tion than ever before.

Although men should not be leading the conversati­on about rape, surely it is an incomplete conversati­on without voices like Stranger’s, which show the capacity for rapists to reflect and become ambassador­s for change in all men?

Not according to Grootboom

“I want people in the shows to look at the work and say, ‘I feel quite violated and provoked and I need to have a conversati­on with you afterwards!’“

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