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Tuesday 25 December 2012

The Sexual Minority and Legislative Zealotry


By Wole Soyinka 

Wole Soyinka
Let us go back a little, nearly a year ago, to that earlier attempt to interfere in, and legislate on sexual conduct between consenting adults. Profiting from that experience, I would like to caution – yet again - that it is high time we learnt to ignore what we conveniently designate and react to as ‘foreign interference’. 
 
By now, we should be able to restrict ourselves to the a prior  position that, as rational beings, we make pronouncements on choices of ethical directions from our own collective and/or majority will, independent of what is described as ‘external dictation’. The noisome emissions that surged from a handful of foreign governments last year should not be permitted to obscure the fundamental issue of the right to private choices of the free, adult citizen in any land – Asian, African, European etc. Those external responses were of such a nature - hysterical, hypocritical and disproportionate – that, speaking for myself at least, I could only wonder if they had not been generated by a desperate need for distraction away from the economic crisis that confronted, at that very time, those parts of the world.


Hopefully, the majority of Nigerians have also learnt to sniff out ploys of legislative distraction within the nation.  At that initial attempt to cloak prurience in legislative watchfulness, the timing of the removal of the oil subsidy was coincident with a sudden obsession with homosexual and lesbian conduct. Was this truly an accident of timing?  And now? Attempting to mobilize public sentiment against what many, admittedly, do consider deviant sexual conduct certainly takes attention away from the crumbling of society and the failures of governance in multiple directions. These range from minimal infrastructural expectations to mind-boggling escalation of corrupt practices in high places, and the basic issue of security in day-to-day existence of the populace as it affects high and low, affluent or impoverished, old and young, regardless of profession or records of service to Nigerian humanity.

But, to begin with, I implore all those who boast the capacity for reason: let us separate two distinct, albeit related issues within that one bill tabled before our legislatures. One issue is: homosexual practice; the other, same-sex marriage. I first became aware of, and alarmed by, the conflation of the two – quite deliberate in most cases - when, after a lecture at the University of Technology, Calabar,  a year ago, I advised the legislators to mind the numerous, and urgent businesses for which they were elected, and take their noses out of sexual practices between consenting adults.  

Either deliberately – as I have already indicated – or thanks to the now familiar deficiency in listening that sadly characterizes Nigerian responses to public pronouncements, the main reactions were unleashed against something I had not even commented upon, which was:  same-sex marriage. With the now confirmed outing of this bill however, the law-makers have served notice that their monitoring zeal is intended at nothing less than the right of state interference in private lives, especially in personal relations of the most intimate kind. This is the warning shot of legislative fascism. It has no place in a democracy.

Basically, such legislations constitute improper encroachment on personal lives, leaving the door wide open for all forms of social persecution, intimidation and even – as we know very well in this society – incitement to violence against targeted individuals, including lynching.  Next, as several nations all over the world have come to acknowledge after centuries of blindness and hideous injustice, such state interventions glorify ignorance of the science of the human body, and contribute to the elevation of limited or zero knowledge on any subject to the altar of the morally sacrosanct.

The biological truth is this: some are born with imprecise gender definition, even when they have sexual organs that appear to define them male or female. Years, indeed decades, of scientific research have gone into this, so what is needed is understanding and acceptance, not emotionalism and the championing of ‘moral’ or ‘traditional’ claims.  Let us take the first. For those who base their position on moralities extracted from received scriptures, permit me to state bluntly that articles of faith are no substitute for scientific verities, no matter how passionately such faiths are embraced or espoused, or for how long. In any case, faith is also a very private matter, so what we have here is simply one private plaintiff, a ‘conscientious objector’, attempting to lord it over the rights of another private entity, this time one that yields to sexual impulses in obedience to Biological Scriptures. Now, which one should lay claim to precedence?

We must make up our minds where we belong.  We must choose either to create a society that is based on secular principles, or else surrender ourselves to the authority of - no matter whose - theocratic claims. What this implicates is that the next time a woman is sentenced to be buried live in the ground and stoned to death on the authority of one set of scriptures, other scripture adherents must learn to hold their peace and allow such ‘laws’ to run their course. The full implications of either position leave no room for fence-sitting. The national train must run either on secular rails or derail at multiple theocratic switches. No theology can be privileged over another in the running of society.  This means, theology and its derivatives cannot be privileged over material reality and its derivatives.

The science of the body is not limited to issues of consenting adults alone. It is what guides the making of laws in rational societies, what makes the law frown decisively on sexual relations with the under-aged, and spells out just what the law means by ‘underage’ in specific years of existence. Adult males earn several years in prison for sexual relations with the under aged because scientific knowledge has identified – beyond argument – the often irreparable damage that is done to a pre-pubescent body through sexual penetration by males. Society therefore protects the potential victim. Has an adult homosexual run to the law for protection in any society we know of? Only where they have been, or are in danger of becoming victims of rape – and there, the law is firmly on their side. Otherwise, the law should have no interest whatsoever in any form of consensual sexual conduct between adults.

So far, we have only addressed the issue of the homosexual act itself as it should concern – or should not – a nation’s legislatures.  Let us now turn to the related problem of same-sex marriages. My interest is not – as a hysterical prelate, among others, tried to over-simplify in his reaction to my observation in Calabar – it is not whether or not homosexual marriages should be permitted or banned. Let us take it step by step.  The issue, to start with, is - ‘criminalisation’!  Perhaps such marriages exist in Nigeria – I am not aware of them. But we do know that homosexual liaisons exist. Are they granted the status of marriage? Not that I am aware of. Was there a threat somewhere that this might soon happen? Are they a menace to society? Again, all this is shrouded under legislative mystery. No case, to the best of my knowledge, has been brought to public notice where a court registry has been compelled to register same-sex marriages. No priest has been hauled up so far for sanctifying such a marriage.

Always open to debate is the right of institutions (civil or state) to be part of the formal mechanisms for pledges that adults undertake in their relations with one another. Priests – of any religious adherence – remain free to refuse to become involved in the ceremonies of such associations. Individuals cannot be compelled to endorse such conduct. It remains their right to privately ostracize or embrace such liaisons – formal or informal. The state however overreaches itself where it moves to criminalize them. Biology takes precedence over ‘moral’ sentiment. Physiological compositions are increasingly held responsible for a number of mental and/or physical predispositions. Only in the past few decades was schizophrenia successfully tracked backwards to – among other causes - the contraction by mothers of some forms of ailment during pregnancy, as well as to genetic transmission. We should learn to listen wherever the voice of the empirical can be called upon to testify in human conduct.

On the ‘moralists‘, we urge a sense of proportion, and a turn towards objectivity. Yes, a society without moral signposts is only a glorified arena of brute instincts. Nonetheless, morality is far too often mired in subjectivity, sometimes touted as ‘revelation’, erected on untested foundations, increasingly subject to mass hysteria and manipulation. Morality therefore – we must re-emphasize - when applied to the private realm of the human body,  must take second place to biology - morality either as derived from cultural usage or religious givens. We are speaking of – plain biological human composition, over which no individual has any control whatsoever. No individual was responsible for his or her birth, for emerging as a precocious being, a budding genius, or handicapped - either mentally or physiologically.  Those who evoke ‘morality’ so loosely should take care that they do not keep company with theocratic warlords like al-Shabaab of Somalia, who instituted amputation at the wrist for anyone found guilty of the ‘immoral’ act of shaking hands with a fellow human being of the opposite sex!

Permit me to address some of the anxieties – publicly addressed or not – that I happen to have encountered. No one denies the perverse agency of ‘peer pressure’ in certain societies – or institutions - where homosexuality is considered ‘fashionable’, or even becomes a membership card for advancement in some professions.  It is also the admissible right of the individual to experience and express disgust at the mere thought of homosexual conduct: the complement, incidentally, also obtains among some homosexuals with regard to heterosexual practice.

I have encountered some who declare that the very thought of heterosexual act makes them sick.  Also, there exist the bi-sexual individuals who live and die at ease – or with resignation - with their complex anatomy. None of these tendencies justifies criminalization. The heterosexual – or ‘straight’, to use that tendentious expression - minds his or her business like the rest. Laws, if any are promulgated in these cases, should be towards the protection of the vulnerable in society, vulnerable from whatever cause, including deviations from the sexuality of the majority genders.

Non-consensual conduct is a different matter, or coercion, such as rape or other forms of sexual abuse, and these apply both to the homosexual and the heterosexual. I have had occasion to intervene in boarding schools to demand protection for some young pupils whose lives were bedeviled by sexual harassment from their senior colleagues. Their teachers turned a deaf ear to the victims’ complaints to an extent that virtually amounted to connivance. Now that is one area against which legislators might usefully want to turn their legislative ire – such teachers deserve to be brutally purged from their positions and made to face prosecution.

I shall be remiss if I do not also to address the appalling evidence of hypocrisy among the law makers. New laws are being proposed for private conduct that has never constituted a danger to the fabric of society. By contrast, the notorious violation of existing laws by a member of the law-making fraternity was rendered a non-event by a conspiratorial silence, amounting to connivance and enthronement of impunity.  A former governor and present Senator violated the laws of two lands – Egypt and Nigeria – through his sexual behaviour. Serial paedophilia and cross-border sex trafficking are criminalized near universally. Laws for the protection of minors are rigorously enforced in civilized societies. On that, and allied issues, the law-making conclaves of wise men and women remained mute or conciliatory.

An opportunity to enforce the existing laws in high places as a high profile deterrent to others was simply discarded. No new laws have been proposed, not even as a sop to outraged public conscience, to re-criminalize such acts, yet the legislatures take time off to make laws that criminalize private conduct that have not constituted a threat to the well-being of the vulnerable in society.

Is it too much to ask that our legislators cool their moral ardour for a study period during which they seek to understand a phenomenon that many hold abhorrent? (Please note: this is not intended as yet another incentive to undertake expensive study tours around the world – the relevant publications are available everywhere.)  If there are scientific explanations for homosexual conduct — and these have been expounded in profusion — then a process of education is called for, enabling a more empathetic response to what appears an aberration to the majority.

That it appears an aberration to some does not, however, make it immoral or socially subversive.  And foreign interventionists should – let me repeat - at least exercise a sense of proportion, recalling that even within their own societies, such issues are still up for debate, with see-saw decisions between state and federal courts – examples include the United States - right up to the present. The high moral grounds that those nations attempt to occupy by hurling threats of sanctions etc., etc., merely strike one as extreme cases of hypocrisy, unmindful of their own scriptural injunctions that urge: ‘Physician, heal thyself ”. 

8 comments:

  1. I realise that the Nigerian society is steeply religious albeit blindly, deeply hypocritical. while morality is needful to maintain certain bounds of acceptable behaviour and can never be over-emphasised, yet it does appear that mindless clinging to faith obscures the view of many. this is a hotly contested issue and I think it takes conviction to stand where Prof Soyinka stands. Ours is a society of ease, mental laziness. I myself are caught between an obligation to shared faith with those who matter to me and a keen sense of justice for issues such as this. It's unfair that, people only learn empathy when they are victims otherwise, they are white robed priests on their high moral horses.

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  2. In as much as our highly nobel laurate can't oppose or back the so called proposed law, he should be remembered that such behaviour or/and action is not even African as he himself claim to be. Except one is a fool, no right sane person will condone such immoral act or reversed biological trend as espoused by the erudite prof.Our legislators should do what is right and fear the day of reckoning when all of us will be called to account by our Creator.

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    1. Martin Efe obazee25 December 2012 at 19:45

      My dear anonymous it is people like you who (I want to believe can read and write) sees the truth and embrace lies. If you carefully read the moral and biological points espoused by one of Nigeria's proud gift to mankind - who is respected the world over, he is vehemently opposed to such legislative wasteful and deceitful exercise.
      The creator also created gay and bi-sexual people. You are blinded by your religious impaulse that u cannot even understand that our erudite prof is opposed to such laws. Please remain anonymous with your shameful response to a courageous and factual piece. Thanks prof. Soyinka for your tireless service to an ungrateful nation who sees light but turn to darkness as others embrace and acknowledge what is a biological fact.

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  3. God cannot be mocked. Your intellectual gift can never equal the Holy Bible which is a guide. The write-up below will be relevant on this issue.

    ''Billy Graham's daughter was interviewed on the Early Show and Jane Clayson asked her: “How could God let something like this happen?” (regarding Hurricane Katrina). Anne Graham gave an extremely profound and insightful response. She said: “I believe God is deeply saddened by this, just as we are, but for years we've been telling God to get out of our schools, to get out of our government and to get out of our lives. And being the gentleman He is, I believe He has calmly backed out. How can we expect God to give us His blessing and His protection if we demand He leave us alone?”

    In light of recent events... terrorists attack, school shootings, etc. I think it started when Madeleine Murray O'Hare (she was murdered, her body found a few years ago) complained she didn't want prayer in our schools, and we said OK. Then someone said you better not read the Bible in school. The Bible says thou shalt not kill, thou shalt not steal, and love your neighbour as yourself. And we said OK.

    Then Dr. Benjamin Spock said we shouldn't spank our children when they misbehave, because their little personalities would be warped and we might damage their self-esteem (Dr. Spock's son committed suicide). We said an expert should know what he's talking about. And we said okay.

    Now we're asking ourselves why our children have no conscience, why they don't know right from wrong, and why it doesn't bother them to kill strangers, their classmates, and themselves.

    Probably, if we think about it long and hard enough, we can figure it out. I think it has a great deal to do with 'WE REAP WHAT WE SOW.'

    Funny how simple it is for people to trash God and then wonder why the world's going to hell. Funny how we believe what the newspapers say, but question what the Bible says''.

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  4. I quite respect Prof. soyinka's contributions to the legislative zealoltry of legislators. I also do not agree with him totally that it was not a matter that our legislators should have kept silence to. The U.S presidents Barak Obama, the prime minister of Britain, south African presisdent and other world leaders and sectarian aothorities have also made their stands/voices known on this isse. The issue being discussed is now a global topic of discuss. Nigeria with its position in the comity of nations cannot be silent over it as the problems was spilling over to us. It is neccessary that our stands as a nation is made known. The legislators exercised their prerogative responsibility of making laws guiding us. The issue if not given a guiding law will not stop at the consensual relationship between two consenting adults but will become over time a norm on the bases of the fact that its globally accepted and if not nibbed in the bud on time will amount to an infrigement of rights when raised in the future. As a nation with varying ethnic groupings, strongly religious and with similar cultural values cannot be silent, give a deaf ear or pretend not to show concern on issues challenging its ethno-cultural values. If not spoken against will amount to Nigeria being without guiding leaders. Lets not forget that Nigerians are the most widely travelled Africans. With our enormous populations scattered all over the globe we pick foreign matters and treats either good, bad or ugly.

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  5. Intellectualism, Spiritualism, Sociology, Biology, Constitutioinalism, Democracy, Politics,Literature, Culture, and more are on display in that write-up by Professor Wole Soyinka. Each of them has its rule of engagement. That we allowed a Senator of the Federal Republic of Nigeria to remain in the Senate after violating two nations' law is no reason to condemn our representatives (elected, selected or rigged in)for legislating on an issue they coinsider to be of national importance. Let us exercise our constitutional right to elect people who will legislate on other issues of 'greater and more urgent' national importance in the next election in 2015. I look forward to a law that will give any Nigerian the locus standi to take a corrupt politician to court for corruption instead of just the manipulable EFCC, for instance. A law that will allow one to take that 'paedophilic' Senator to court without having to be the parent of the young girl. I believe that if the zealot majority were homosexual, the vote would have swung to the other side of the divide. That is politics and democracy interacting with the other 'tures', 'isms' and 'ogy' I stated previously. Finally, I conclude with my words or theme for the outgoing 2012, which I am tempted to retain till after the 2015 elections, "Choices have consequences. Choose right always"

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  6. It is a pity if at this age and time someone still claims God made some people gays and lesbians... It is the satan who based on his request from God to encircle Adam's offsprings and get companions in the depth of hell fire that is deceiving those that form such groups, if we should follow the conjecture of biological theory then we should not create any consistution that will guide the affairs of people in every nation which is why God gave His commandments and laws to His messengers so that mankind will not just be without guidance and direction. For those supporters of gay and lesbianism rights, let them abolish all laws so that there won't be any infringements. To hell with them and their apologists.

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  7. Soyinka is not a scientist the last time I checked. It's like that evil he helped created in the University of Ibadan, Cultism, and if you like Satanism. It grew wings and ended in the spewing of innocent students' blood, sometimes because of ordinary girlfriend fight. He doesn't want us to hold him accountable for that, but in a rather twisted but curious manner, he wants Sanni Yerima to be sentenced to prison/purged in accordance with Egyptian and Nigerian laws for his pedophilia. Well, Mr Soyinka, sorry, you will be seriously disappointed this time. Gone are the days you could speak some grammar to catch attention and promote some hideous monster in the society, we will not accept homosexuality in Nigeria, PERIOD! Your argument about democracy is half, the other half which you conveniently ignore is that democracy is the rule of the majority. YES, majority owns democracy, there's no where in the entire world where minority dictates to the majority in a democracy, sir. If you like, bring biology or chemistry, so far as several people have been "born" homosexual before and have now been "born again" as normal human beings by renouncing the despicable behavior, so long we'll continue to see those "science" as bogus. Yeah, the same way Prof. Awe regretted what you did together in UI. By the way, does anyone notice how these people avoid INCEST in their arguments, why not come out boldly, we know that's what you guys will start, yes INCEST RIGHT, after achieving your universal GAY RIGHTS. You'll meet your Waterloo in Africa though. There's no University of Technology, Calabar in Nigeria though. Oga gay rights activist, Chido Onumah, you have done well by directing traffic to your site, but I'll advise you to look for something else to do. Using Soyinka to promote your nonsense while blackmailing our elected lawmakers has it's disadvantage, Soyinka is not without his own negative contribution to the society too, I am sure you won't to destroy his legacy at his twilight.

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