Thursday, December 08, 2005

Updates on Jamming VAW Night

Okay! Some pretty cool berita. First of all, Joe Kid found the map to The Lost Generation Space, http://www.geocities.com/lostgenspace/

Jangan sesat! Senang nak cari actually, and the best mamak in the world is actually pretty close by.

And we managed to get some awesome people to confirm their support by giving us some of their time, music and words, and they include:

360degree head rotation, Mei Chern, Hassan Peter Brown, Bernice Chauly, Rafidah Abdullah, Azmyl, Sei Hon, Sumbang, Jerome Kugan, Zapa.. and maybe some surprise drop in during the jamming sesi lewat malam.

Don't forget we are also going to be doing some art stuff, so if you wanna get your hands dirty, jangan pakai cantik-cantik ;-)

click to go to external page where this map boleh membesar sikit

Wednesday, December 07, 2005

Jamming Violence Against Women

9 & 10 December, 2005

Come and make the end of this year's 16 Days of Activism Against Violence Against Women a little more sparkly, a little more edgy, a little more swanky, and a little more crazy with your presence. KataGender + Food Not Bombs has two evenings lined up for you to play with:


Jamming Violence Against Women - films, music, words, paint and people



When?
Friday, 9th December 2005, 8:00pm till late (but not so late until we cannot wake up for the HR Walk the next morning ;-))
Where? The Lost Generation Space (notthatbalai), 11, Lorong Permai, Off Jalan Syed Putra, Robson Heights, KL
What? Mural Stencilling; Readings of original and not-so-original-but-still-make-the-heart-go-wahlau works; Sounds by local music-makers/players/people-with-guts-talent-and-a-guitar/dijeridoo
/voicebox; Films about how to turn the world upside-down-inside-out; Story Telling; Random Things that you can think of or want to do.
Why? 'Cause violence against women is a really stupid thing to live with?
Who? Hmm.. anyone who feels that spending one friday evening to provoke and ridicule the reality of violence against women with creative expressions is time well spent! Hope that includes you ;-)

Human Rights Night - Food Not Bombs + KataGender

When? Saturday, 10th December, 8:00pm till late. International Human Rights Day
Where? Same as above. The Lost Generation Space (notthatbalai), 11, Lorong Permai, Off Jalan Syed Putra, Robson Heights, KL
What? Art Exhibition, Poetry, Music, Peformance Art, Bazaar, Chill, Love, Peace etc... (all good things)
Why? 'Cause if we haven't got rights and freedoms, then what are we left with?
Who? You, me, your neighbour's kid who got spammed with this mail, her friends, their Friendster list, their ex-discipline teacher's list of Bad Rambutans, people who think and give a sen (maybe, who knows, maybe) etc etc etc

Bring your own makanan dan minuman because unfortunately, KataGender & Food Not Bombs do not have links to generous Mak Datuks and Tuk Datins who are able to fund our activities :)

Please help us pass this along! Hope to see you this weekend!

For more information:
katagender.blogspot.com | kata.gender@gmail.com

------

Mari menjenguk dan mengakhiri Aktivisma 16 Hari Menentang Keganasan Terhadap Wanita tahun ini bersama kami. Penglibatan kamu akan memastikan Pesta Dua Malam ini menjadi lebih gempak, lebih meriah, lebih kagum, lebih cacamerba. KataGender + Food Not Bombs mempersembahkan:

‘Jamming’ Keganasan Terhadap Wanita – filem, muzik, kata, warna, manusia

Bila? Jumaat, 9 Disember 2005, 8:00pm sehingga lewat (tapi taklar lewat sampai tak terbangun tidur utk Perjalanan Hak Asasi Manusia pagi esok :-))
Mana? The Lost Generation Space (notthatbalai), 11, Lorong Permai, Off Jalan Syed Putra, Robson Heights, KL
Apa? Stensil Mural; Bacaan2 karyaan asli, asal dan juga ciplak-namun-berdaya-mendengupkan hati; Bunyi2an dpd penghasil/pemain-muzik/mereka-yg-berani-berbakat-bergitar-bermacam2; Filem tentang bagaimana utk menunggang-terbalikkan dunia, Cerita-lah; Aktiviti2 Lain yg anda akan terfikir secara rambang…
Kenapa? Kerana kehidupan yang penuh dengan keganasan terhadap wanita sungguh tidak masuk akal?
Siapa? Hmm… siapa-siapa yg berpendapat bhw satu malam Jumaat yg digunakan untuk mencemuhkan ke-nyataan keganasan terhadap perempuan adalah masa yang digunakan dgn baik! Diharapkan ini termasuk anda ;-)

Malam Hak Asasi Manusia - Food Not Bombs + KataGender


Bila? Sabtu, 10 Disember, 8:00pm sehingga lewat. Hari Hak Asasi Manusia Sedunia
Mana? Sama seperti diatas. The Lost Generation Space (notthatbalai), 11, Lorong Permai, Off Jalan Syed Putra, Robson Heights, KL
What? Pameran Kesenian, Puisi, Sajak, Muzik, ‘Peformance Art’, Bazaar, Chill, Love, Peace etc... (err.. aku tak erti macam-mana nak menterjemahkan ini tanpa menggelikan hati!)
Why? Keranamu Malaysia (acahje…) *ahem* Kerana kalau tiada hak dan kebebasan, apakah lagi yang tertinggal untuk kita?
Who? Kamu, aku, anda, dia, mereka, saya, anak jiran yang kena ‘spam’ oleh email ini, kawan-kawan dia, teman-teman mereka di laman Friendster, sesiapa yang berfikir dan memberi satu sen (mungkin, entahlah) etc etc etc

Bawalah food and drinks sendiri, sebab sayangnya, KataGender & Food Not Bombs tiada perhubungan dengan Mak2 Datuk and Tok2 Datin yang murah hati dan menyokong aktiviti-aktiviti kami melalui derma bakti :-)

Kalau boleh, tolong kami passkan mesej ini ke rakan2 riang-ria anda yang lain! Semoga kami akan bertembung muka pada akhir minggu ini (wah.. formal & aksyen)!

Utk keterangan yg berlebih-lebihan atau saja nak berchatting2:
katagender.blogspot.com | kata.gender@gmail.com

Troubagangers 16 Days Activism Special

In collaboration (but to be honest, more like with the support of lah...) Troubadours & Doppelgangers, Troubagangers 16 Days Activism Special managed to not only have a good time with good music, draw a HUGE crows, but also raise some funds for WAO's Refuge. With half of the proceeds going to the Refuge, almost RM500 were raised for groceries and other basic necessities.

More details of the event can be found on the TroubadoursKL blogsite

We handed out some leaflets and gave a small little smurf-sized ceramah on our aktivisma and the isu, and then sat back, and enjoyed the muzik!

More foto-foto:

Lisa Zahran.. she rocks! Cunnye voice control...


Sarah Lo & Kohl. Best best best giler!


Some members of Akustic 39 membaca-ing our KataGender 'propaganda' to the audience =D



"16 Days is..." "Hope there are no SBs here..."
Jac, temporary rep of KataGender for the night, giving out more off-the-cuff 'propaganda'.



Of the crowd, picture dicuri dari blogspot Troubagangers KL



And the irony is...



As our beloved P Ramlee would say, "Cobaan..."

Mural Painting

3 December

In support of Women's Aid Organisation, Sisters In Islam, Amnesty International Malaysia and Malaysian AIDS Council, KataGender got together to paint a mural on the NGO's theme for 16 Days this year:

Get the Power, Get the Knowledge, Keep the Promise

Playing around with retro-style, we attempted to symbolise the various elements needed to form a movement around women's rights - hence the waves.

But I think maybe it ended up looking a bit like a signboard for Mimaland, as cheekily observed by one of our members. Takpelah.. asalkan jadi! Anyway, kami akan continue pada 9 December, kali ini menggunakan cara stencilling. So jom join!

Now gambar-time:


angkut barang bukan senang!



boing boing! set up time...



mari mengecat!



penuh dengan concentra-si nampaknye.



apa ni? symbol black metal?? bukanlah.. simbol perempuan ;-p


jangan main-main dengan masking tape.


clean up crew! cuba teka, siapa pegang kamera? berminyaknye muka..


err... hilang inspirasi untuk describe adegan pelik dan boria ini..

To be continued pada 9 Disember, The Lost Generation Space!

Tamparan Hebat


2 Disember 2005

Sekali lagi, kami mengambil aktivisma 16 hari ke kaki-kaki lima dimana orang ramai berkerumun dan berjalan-jalan.

Kali ini, dua ahli KataGender beraksi melalui performance art yang dinamakan sebagai Tamparan Hebat.

Apa??
Mereka berdiri menemui each other, dan memberi tamparan diantara satu sama yang lain. Pada masa yang sama, ahli-ahli lain berkapur dikeliling mereka dan mengemukakan persoalan-persoalan:


"Membisu?"
"Apa yang sedang berlaku?"
"Sampai bilakah ia akan berhenti?"
"Indifferent?"
"Bizzarre? Reality!"
"Why can't we talk about violence?"
"Stop violence against women"

dan sebagainya.

Aksi ini mempunyai dua objektif:

1. Menonjolkan betapa peliknya fenomena keganasan terhadap wanita, dan apabila dibawa ke ruang awam instead of private spaces in the home, how ridiculous it is.
2. At the same time, how real it is. Tamparan itu bukan sekadar bermain-main sahaja, tetapi adalah perlakuan yang berdaya melukakan dan menyakitkan.

Apakah reaksi kamu sebagai seorang spectator?

Hentikannya? Berdiri dan tersenyum-senyum kambing? Jalan dan lalu sahaja kerana menganggap bahawa ini bukan masalah anda?


Support from a member of the public

Kami mendapat bermacam-macam response. Some were curious, stood around and whispered amongst themselves. Ada yang mengambil gambar. Ada yang lalu sahaja dan membaca sms tanpa menoleh ke kanan dan ke kiri, atas atau bawah. Some came up to us and engaged us in conversation to ask us what the whole action was about. Some were showing their support by joining us in the chalking, initiating more conversations with the crowds that were forming around us.

Tapi... kami diusir. Sekali lagi.

Apabila kami beredar dan membuat aksi ini ditempat yang lain, inilah kisah enam aktivis yang ditahan oleh polis kerana berani menonjolkan kuasa kapur untuk menghentikan keganasan terhadap wanita.

Pelikkan dunia ini?



We set out to highlight the reality and ridiculous nature of violence against women. What happened to us in the end, highlighted to us the reality and ridiculous nature of State and Corporation's violence against our right to exercise our freedom of expression.

Check updates on Meor who was arrested on the same day, 2 December 2005, for daring to sing in public.

Monday, December 05, 2005

Kuasa Kapur

[a thought from the 2 December incident]

Strangest thing happened...

Who would have thought
that chalk
would awaken such fury -
3 cameras began clicking,
moustaches fumed authority,
and men with the same tailor
who talked with a swagger
came marching in to call for Order;
"Order!"

"Do you know whose property this is?"
"Ko tau tak tempat siapa ni?"

The arrogant curl from
a clean lipped Mister
He lectures, like to a child
It's evident, isn't it?

"Kalau berani buat, kenalah macam ni..."

Our identities were ripped from us from
little thieves hiding behind a layer cake of obscurity;
"It's gone to the very top", he says,
and patiently tries to engage my empathy.
"They'll lose their jobs if I don't report you to the police."

For a moment, I imagined them as human
with mouths to feed, addictions to sustain,
and frustrations with giggly youths who dared
to carve their presence through a Word on Wood
in a Park for Tourists.

It didn't last, this moment.
It didn't go away either.

So we asserted our Peace,
asserted our assertions,
asserted and asserted
our tired exasperation.

We could either wait,
Or we could each have our private moustache
implanted on our bodies.
So we waited (I despise facial hair).

and we waited,
and we waited,

As the Evidence of The Deed faded
with the careless scuffle of mall creatures
checking their SMSes,
from the squatting scrutiny of stares
in curious walker by-ers
checking our wanton messages -

"I don't want to live in a world where the stupidity of violence against women exists."

Finally two turned up
Plain as clothes can be,
one good, one bad,
makes a couple of bored beauracrats.

"Apa ni? Tulis apa ni?"
"Niat kamu baik, tapi tempatnya salah"

Same old, same old.
We pay to have this retold
a million times over,
"Capitalism rules over Chalk you see,
and freedoms needs some ink
over the dotted line. Humour me.
You see?"

I see.

The sign of disruption
to genitalia-ic prescription
is misread
as Bad Music instead.
They scrabble in packs,
Sniffling rats,
Looking for the prawn behind our pastels.
Even SBs find it hard to imagine
a woman raped every 10 seconds
a matter of Public Politics.

So into metal blue cans we went
Sardine VIPs
Flashing lights and whizzing by the circus.

"Nak gari ke tidak?"
Cocainne junkie, stuttering his repetitive
God-making questions
"Nak gari ke tidak?"

Escourts to the toilets,
More hours in a room,
Sharing silences and ashtrays with
the boy scouts.

"Adakah saya ditahan?"
"Dibawah seksyen apa saya ditahan?"
"Adakah saya ditahan?"
"Adakah saya ditahan?"

His habits are infectious, and I think
perhaps it is the stale air that
imbues the black of bones
with surrendering despair,
and burden my tongue
with foamy replication.
I can get no answers here.

The surge of witnesses enlarged,
and our spirits hardened for a second -
unwavering -
Their presence stilled the wind from choking.
"No worries. If any ketuk ketampi happens,
call me."
Even Mawi had to stifle a laugh.
The show must go on.

Twin SBs, with "Nothing to hide.
This is not my business,"
Came around for a friendly chat -
"What really happened?"
Still searching for the prawns,

I see.

Barbed wires over fence, two rifles
and some iron hands, a prayer book
to cleanse from trickery;
Playing with time,
miming with rhymes,
112, 113,
It's an elegant dance of
slipping tongues.

I'm getting tired.

Who did we piss off?
In trying to reclaim some space
just for a moment, maybe an hour,
maybe till the next monsoon shower,
Must all sidewalks be athritic veins of shoppers?
Was it the taking of words and
splashing it in colours
as gifts, without an advertiser?
Or perhaps we snubbed the uniforms,
finding them childish games
by playground bullies,
where even rifles failed to crack
our plastered, friendly smiles?
Could it be the communal cynicism
that contaminated to catatonic complacency,
and crystalised possibilies
to imagine catalystic contingencies?

Who would have thought that chalk
Would awaken such energy.

Sunday, November 27, 2005

Chalking Sidewalks to Launch 16 Days

16 Hari Aktivisma Menentang Keganasan Terhadap Wanita bermula pada 25 November 2005!

We kicked off our 16 days of activism through a simple, but effective action: chalking sidewalks and pavements.

Armed with 5 kotak of kapur berwarna-warni, we met up outside of the Masjid Jamek LRT station, berhampiran dgn Jalan Masjid India. Immediately, kami mencangkung di hadapan OCBC bank, dan menulis with bold words in red, yellow, blue, green, orange and white, messages about violence against women, discrimination against women, women's human rights and gender equality.

It was simple and effective. Ramai member-member awam berhenti dpd perjalanan mereka ke lunch break dsbgnya dan berkerumun dikeliling kami, bertanya-tanya, "what is this?", "apa yang kaum tengah buat?", "tulis apa nie?", "what's going on?", dan berikutan dgn "ooooh...... keganasan terhadap wanita!"

We managed to hand out some leaflets we took from the official NGO launch of the 16 days to the public, and also had conversations with passers-by about our action, the International Day for the Elimination of Violence Against Women, what we think about gender equality and discrimination and women's human rights.

Of course we got stopped and chased off when we were writing outside of banks, with OCBC lasting about 20 minutes, and HSBC about 2 minutes! But generally, the reaction was not too hostile, and we just moved our action from spot to spot, stopping at sidewalks, traffic light junctions, bus stops, street clocks, walls and rubbish bins.

Chalking the Walkways started from Jalan Masjid India and ended at Pasar Seni, with us taking over a huge section of the pavement outside of Central Market. We got random members of the public to join in, and at the end, we named the space as "Ruang Seni tentang Diskriminasi" and left some chalks behind for the writing to continue.

Watch this space for our next action!

First Stop, Jalan Masjid India
Di mana action ini bermula...

Image hosted by Photobucket.com
Mengambil-alih kaki lima dengan isu keganasan terhadap wanita

Image hosted by Photobucket.com
Orang awam juga menggabung tenaga dan menulis pertikaian mereka

Image hosted by Photobucket.com
Walaupun kami diusir dan telah beredar, mesej kami masih lagi berdaya menolehkan kepala

Tuesday, October 18, 2005

Gender: Poked with Fun

The Solidarity Walk went fairly well today, despite the slight drizzle that threatened to push our route indoors, not having cukup masa to do our silkscreen stickers that we wanted to hand out, and slightly kucar-kacir when it came to mobilising people - especially those not directly involved with katagender - to tunjuk their support.

Starting at 5:00pm, we hung about outside of Kiosk 24 jam, waiting for people to turn up. First with not much anticipation, then as more and more people joined us, the playful spirit started to grin. By the time H & Z datang with our printed white cloth that bore the World March for Women logo, we had I think, close to 20 orang. With 2 journalists - one from CIJ & another from Keadilan (I think?). Cool! Yay! Thank you berjuta-juta for support! Also to KOMAS for documenting the whole action for us. Looking forward to seeing the clips, and also for some stills (since I stupidly tertinggal the kamera in the kereta! bodoh!)

So we slipped on our wrap-around skirts, sarongs and selendangs, most of the boys and some grrls put some lipstick on, grrls etched some dishy moustache on our faces with eyeliner and mascara, and we were ready to walk the talk :)

First the brief:

Why this walk?
To demonstrate our solidarity to the global women's movement to claim public spaces in sufacing women's rights as an issue that concerns everyone. From freedoms to equality to peace to justice to solidarity. We were very much part of this world-wide struggle for a gender lense to these issues. Our commitment to walk on a Monday, a couple of hours before buka puasa, was our small effort to tonjolkan this semangat solidariti.


Why X-Dress?

A playful poke at the absurdity of rigid gender roles. What makes a man, a man? What makes a woman, a woman? Why the hysterical need to assert the boundaries? What happens when we rearrange the signifiers on "normal" bodies in "normal" spaces? It is precisely the need to uniformly attach strict gender markers and all the values, privileges, marginalisations and exclusions that they signify onto particular bodies that creates a whole host of other social costs that are barriers to equality.

Why KLCC to Bukit Bintang through Jalan Raja Chulan?
A route that is focussed and dedicated to consumption, demonstrated through mega besar malls, we felt it was important to destabilise the normativity of these spaces through our bodies. Particularly since the roots of the World March for Women was invested in poverty. Plus lots of pedestrian traffic, and more opportunities to engage in dialogue.

How did it go?
Pretty interesting. There are some lessons learnt, but some good stuff that surfaced:

- connections between activists and people interested in issues who usually operate in different spaces and events coming together, even if it was a relatively small group of us.
- the gender transgressions, even though - or maybe precisely because - it was not a 'neat' or complete crossing, was responded to as threatening, quirky, interesting, weird, needing policing and performative. One guy especially started talking about how god made day and night, and men are day and women are night, and we shouldn't mess about with it, etc etc etc. Another guy said, no, he didnt want to ask questions sebab takut misai! padahalnya, dia pun ada misai lebat! misai aku bukannya bulu pun, lukis je... but interesting how a few dark lines penned onto the face can create such discomfort.
- our lack of materials to hand out meant that we actually were more compelled to walk up to people and engage random orang to berdialog & berdiskusi. Halfway through the jalan-jalan, getting tired of eyes that wanted to stare but resolutely refusing to be fixed into a reciprocal connection, we wrote "Tanyalah", "Ask me" on pieces of A4 paper and held them up as an offer for questioning. Some people did decide to tanya, which was cool :)

Trying to search for pictures I took on my phone to put on this blog, but can't seem to locate them. Maybe esok! Thinking maybe puppets next year...

Sunday, October 16, 2005

Details of Solidarity Walk | Butiran tentang Perjalanan Solidariti

Where? Mana?
* Putra LRT Station, KLCC | Stesyen Putra LRT KLCC
* Outside Kiosk 24 jam shop, near ticketing booth | Di hadapan Kiosk 24 jam, berhampiran dgn tempat membeli tiket

Bila? When?
* 5:30pm | Isnin. Monday. 17 October | Oktober

What to bring? Apa yg perlu dibawa?
* An article of clothing that is usually associated with a gender different from yours, that you can wear symbolically | Satu artikel pakaian yg biasanya dikaitkan dengan gender yang berlainan dengan kamu, yang boleh kamu boleh memakai sebagai suatu lambang simbolik.

Jumpa siapa di LRT? Who to meet at the LRT?
* Perhatikan sesiapa yang memakai baju putih and seluar atau skirt hitam. Jika boleh, sila juga memakai top putih dan seluar atau skirt hitam apabila kamu hadir untuk berjalan-jalan bersama kami | Keep an eye out for people who are wearing white tops and black bottoms. Please also wear a white top with a black bottom when you come for the walk.

Untuk sebarang pertanyaan, sila email: kata.gender@gmail.com : please email this address for any queries.

Saturday, October 15, 2005

october 17

katagender

katagender

walk with us

17 october 2005

we are planning to show our solidarity to the global campaign towards gender equality, freedoms, peace and justice through transitory occupation of spaces with our bodies - performatively.

one of our understanding of identity-based inequality is based on normative discourses that is solidified through markers on our bodies. we perform our gender roles from the moment we awake to the moment we sleep; from the moment we choose what clothes to wear, how to negotiate behaviour in our daily routines, how we interact with strangers, friends, lovers and our family. for an hour on october 17, we hope to initiate a more critical discourse on gender through subverting these daily gender performances.

join us and be part of a global movement towards equality, freedom, peace, justice and solidarity!

if you are interested, send us an email ASAP: kata.gender@gmail.com

Thursday, October 13, 2005

october 17 – world march of women

Where Does the Idea for a Women's World March in the Year 2000 Come From?

The idea to hold a world march of women in the year 2000 was born out of the experience of the Women's March Against Poverty, which took place in Québec in 1995. This march, initiated by the Fédération des femmes du Québec, was hugely successful. Three contingents of 850 women marched for ten days to win nine demands related to economic justice. Fifteen thousand people greeted them at the end of their ten-day walk. The entire women's movement mobilized for the march as did many other segments of the population.

The presence during the 1995 March of twenty women from countries of the South reminded us of the importance of global solidarity-building. The Beijing Conference proved that women everywhere are struggling for equality, development and peace more than ever before. It was at this conference that we made our first proposal to organize an international women's march.

one view of feminism

Feminism is a way of thinking, a social movement, an alternative and another perspective from which to understand the world. Feminism is more than simply observing inequality and obtaining access to positions of power. We are driven by the need to dismantle systems that perpetuate fear and hatred of "the other" and justify violence; we denounce all systems that generate exclusion and reinforce domination.

- from World March of Women