Wednesday, 9 June 2010
A Blow Dealt to Chris Brown
Chris Brown was denied entry to the UK yesterday and I could not be happier. Not because I think he is an awful person and because I think he is beyond redemption. Rather, I could not help being happy because I think this decision sends a strong message that domestic violence is a serious offence, and that the perpetrators should (rightfully) be called to full account. And by full account I do not mean a bullshit scripted apology, two months out of the public eye and then back with an album, singing, dancing and grinning away on a jet ski like you are the next Michael Jackson. It sends a strong signal that hitting, punching and kicking a woman is not acceptable, by any means whatsoever and that it does not matter who or what you are and what you have achieved.
The trivialisation of Brown's treatment and the pseudo apologetics saying that "maybe Rihanna looked for it and that she instigated it" really bothers me. I also hate the stupid trotted out "you don't know what happened". Maybe I don't, but maybe I don't need to know because when during an argument one sexy-ass looking girl comes away looking like The Elephant Man, with visible bite marks on her arms and a bloody nose and lips- while the other party looks intact, I can form my own views, thank you very much. The circumstantial evidence is enough to convince me beyond reasonable doubt.
I am very (you might want to say ultra but I don't mind) sensitive towards domestic violence cases and victims. First of all, I hate the term "domestic violence" as I think it diminishes the idea that the matter at hand is violence- adding the word domestic in front does not make the matter any less acute. I prefer the term violence in the home or violence towards partners because this trivialisation is perhaps the root cause of the issue. Clinton Brown reports his son's criminal assault as a "situation, a stumble". No, it isn’t. Many people trot out tired ass clichés telling us that we shouldn't judge. Yes, I do not apologise: I will unreservedly judge a man who beats a woman in a gown on one of the most important days of her professional life and walks away while she is nearly unconscious.
The number of seemingly intelligent women who has come to Chris Brown's defence astounds me. It goes to show that a degree and higher learning does not always confer common sense. Sources on the ground in Barbados admit that this was not the first time there was abuse in that relationship. Rihanna admits that the relationship was a "continually abusive" one. Her statement reveals that he went ballistic not over the fact that he was accused of sourcing a "booty call" but that she faked a call to a friend hinting that the police would be present. In short, she was attacked for intimating that she would seek help- like prolific women beaters, he muffled her attempt for aid by beating her with his fists. What a coward! Rumours are that her scratched cornea at the 2008 American Music Awards were on account of a previous incident and her friends have reported that she has sometimes appeared with mysterious marks and bruises. After the incident he changed his facebook status to "She will show her true colours, believe it". What colours? Black and blue? Fact is that irrespective of the circumstances, there is never a good enough reason for assaulting a woman, and the fact that this idiot could not face up to the gravity of the offence, suggests he is a knuckle head who needs to learn what true contrition is.
Maybe I get angry because we run a Domestic Violence Unit at my firm and the number of cases that I have worked on where women in what we call the First World with careers and high flying jobs are afraid to speak out lest they are ridiculed are too many to mention. Women are being choked and scratched and beaten in secret. They are being flung around like towels, slapped and punched and hospitalised for their injuries. Some die. This is no Bossip/MediaTakeout/PerezHilton/DListed issue. This is some serious shit.
Maybe I am even more sensitive because I was brought up in a Caribbean community where domestic violence was commonplace, especially when men were drunk. Rihanna herself remembers her mother suffering violence at the hands of her alcoholic father. Alongside cheating, it was usually the feature of local gossip that filtered downwards as I sat between the legs of the woman who was tasked with plaiting my hair. Sports personalities featured heavily, assaulting their women often in public places such as local community parties and fetes.Violence often moved on from relationship to relationship but I still know one woman who remains stuck in the cycle for over 20 years. Instead of kisses, she welcomes blows every evening and almost every contrary word is met with sharp, angry fists. She was rid of him for about a year, during which he lived with another woman I knew, but she, too, got tired of the violence, and threw him out of her house. It was extremely commonplace and almost normal for a man to show who had the upper hand by throwing punches.
Sadly, it was often interpreted as love :"If my man doh beat me, he ehn love me" was often used as a feeble explanation. The ferocity of the argument and the vigour of the blows were wrongly interpreted as fits of uncontrollable obsession, okayed because they were born of passion. It was not only the working classes- there were hushed whispers of doctors, teachers and civil servants silencing their women, and police officers were particularly notorious for dealing their women serious blows. One woman I knew, in an abusive relationship with a policeman, was called stupid by her peers, for leaving his house to move back in with her parents.
Nothing has changed significantly in my town. A mother pleaded with me to talk to her daughter who left her parents' house to live with the father of her young baby. Her mother told me that her daughter's boyfriend would beat her to distraction. I confronted her and pleaded with her to go home. She told me "I am not saying he doesn't put his hand on me, but he doesn't beat me bad as in how they saying". When a teenager appears to being okay with being hit "from time to time" by her boyfriend -this is to me, a serious cause for concern. It shows tacit societal acceptance and early indoctrination that women can be put in their place with "licks".
Amnesty International, in a study on the Caribbean in 2004, reported that it was a serious cancer that ate away at the core of Caribbean society. Professional organisations in Barbados, Antigua and Trinidad, in particular, notes that the problem is particularly acute as there are very few women's shelters and support networks offering refuge. Economic dependency and the presence of children in the home often militate in favour of sticking the abuse and staying put.
This is why I applaud Rihanna's decision to walk away from an abusive relationship. Her attack has removed some of the unfair stigma from being a victim and maybe more women will feel confident in speaking out that they too, are suffering. She has broken the cycle. Most women return to their abusers at least three times before they make a final decision to leave. There is an almost sick desire to protect and to heal the perpetrator.
By making the decision to move on, Rihanna has set a powerful precedent, a precedent that is in danger of being eroded if Chris Brown is allowed to go on with his life in the same direction as he did before, as if nothing happened. Even his statement after her interview with Diane Sawyer had me reeling "I only hope that others in similar situations can learn from our experience as well. Abuse of any kind is always wrong. The rest I leave it to God". Since when his attack has become a shared experience? Why not own your abuse instead of talking about generic abuse of any kind? What is there to leave to God? Please do not take the man’s name in vain. There was no accountability, no sincerity, no absolution. These open statements suggests some detachment towards the issue and hints at blame towards the victim. I was very angry with his people for allowing him to distance himself from the assault in this way.
I am no psychoanalyst but part of me really believes that the women who defend him have either been hit, or have seen parents or relatives hit and they do not wish to indict him because it would somehow be indicting that parent/man/boyfriend on a subconscious level. I can only wish they would get some help for their scars.
As Rihanna herself said in her interview with Dianne Sawyer:
The thing that men don't realize, when they hit a woman ... the face, the broken arm, the black eye, it's going to heal. That's not.... the problem. It's the scar inside."
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
I agree with you 100%. I cannot believe the amount of intelligent women saying that "She must have provoked him" or "You don't know what happened." No excuses! Great post.
ReplyDelete*applause* *high 5* Two thumbs WAY UP!
ReplyDeleteLuv,
Ms.Zindzi
I wholeheartedly agree Kima and I feel physically sickened that mothers, sisters, brother etc of women think this man or such a man deserves a second chance. As black people we are way too lenient in matters such as this, the real naked truth is that every woman involved in domestic violence DOES NOT get a second chance so why should Chris.
ReplyDeleteHe is a domestic abuser now ONLY because she didnt die but the way he beat her and left her, frankly - he could have been a murderer.It is semantics to me at this point, the intention and actions were there.
If people really want to support this young brother, instead of supporting his overdeveloped sense of entitlement in believing that he is above the law, morality or just plain decency and can make one apology to erase what he did to that young girl they should encourage him to step out of the spotlight and work on himself and the causes of the hate that spewed out of him that night.
Anyhoooo - i am loving the site, i love that am always catching some wisdom here, am still using this martinican phrase cocoone hehehe Richard is shocked everytime i am referencing stuff about martinique or paris and am like o i read it on Kimas blog hahahahah!!
Kima....love this post
ReplyDeleteI've never been able to understand why men hit women they claims to love and care about (If you love someone you won't beat them like you fighting with a man for your life) I'm still trying to understand as well why the women takes so long to get out and some never do. I've pleaded with a certain person to get out of that type of realtionship for years, I even offered to pay for her to have councelling which might have helped her to get out and move but it was a lost cause, she's still with him and now has kids for that same man.
Guess this is a problem we all have to keep trying to fix and pray it's sorted sooner than later.
@Pam Ms Zindzi and Tammy- thank you. Its a very hard question especially when there are children and other factors involved. My advice would be to leave, but who feels it knows. We need to empower our women so that they know that they can leave and move on without fear! Some women I have met have been threatened with death threats, one man would wait for a woman coming home when she left and intimidate her, another actually beat a woman two hrs before their wedding! This is REAL talk right there.
ReplyDelete@Mac you raise a very important point. I wonder if she had died what would his "fans" be saying. The intent was certainly there to cause her serious harm. Can't believe you are using all the martinique and pareee talk... will soon have some more.
Who feels it knows. I've read this more than once - you know this was a sore issue for me, and I am glad Kima 'spoke' because I couldn't have said it better myself (I just get too angry about it!)
ReplyDeleteAll I can say is 'Thank You'.
Fyiah bun de beata dem, wi nuh waan dem roun' 'ere!
ReplyDeleteOne other thing: Chirs Brown is a victim of the cycle of violence in the home. He used to piss himself in his bed when 'im step fada dida kill him momma wid beatin'.
ReplyDeleteIt does in no way excuse his behaviour but women who stay in abusive relationships must also take reasponsibility the the patterns and standards of behavious they set for their children because as we know, children often repeat what they see.
Good point Gooders Girl. Welcome! It is the cycle repeating itself and it is actually quite shocking that both he and Rihanna came from that environment. So yes, you are right his parents are to blame too.
ReplyDelete