[ Dean Spade ] So, yeah, first I wanted to say
thanks. It's really exciting to be here.
I'm really honoured to be part of a conversation
with the other folks who are gonna be in this
--who I can't see right now
but I trust are in front of you--
[ Dean and audience laughing ]
-who are all activists and scholars who
I really admire and inspired by,
so I feel really lucky.
And I also just want to say, obviously
I'm coming to this work from the U.S.,
so that's my frame,
and there's some overlap obviously with
Canadian conditions and politics and histories,
but there's also a lot of divergence,
so I hope it'll be useful,
but it's my, sort of, framework.
And I'm also gonna be reading,
because I'm trying to be really concise,
so that we can stick to our schedule,
so I apologize for reading.
So, yeah so when I was invited
to speak at this event,
I was asked to be part of a series that
I guess is about critical masculinities,
and so what I wanted to think about was
how really highly-gendered roles in our very
militaristic, settler, white supremacist societies
--like spouse, soldier, police officer--
have come to stand in a really complicated way
as symbols right now, of sexual
and gender liberation in some contexts.
And how weird that is, especially given that
many feminist and queer movements
have sought to eliminate
the existence of those roles.
So I want to try to spend these few minutes
just talking and thinking about that.
So, I think in particular these conversations
about that dynamic that I just named,
are servicing in important ways right now,
because of the role that equality
for gay and lesbian people,
and in some instances but not usually trans people,
is playing in global discourses about human rights,
increasingly the degree to which
countries have adopted certain high-profile
lesbian and gay law reforms,
specifically granting marriage recognition,
and access to military service to gays and lesbians,
is framed as central to a country's reputation
regarding respect for human rights.
In recent years, the U.S. and Israel
have put significant resources
into framing countries with certain
lesbian and gay rights in place as "modern",
while framing countries
that don't have those in place --
particularly framing Arab and African countries
as "backward" and "un-democratic".
And this strategy of using lesbian and gay rights,
particularly marriage and military participation,
as a marker of being
a human rights respecting country,
and particularly doing so in the face of charges
of ongoing significant human rights violations,
has been called "pinkwashing".
Maybe that's a term
that a lot of people have heard.
So, in the U.S. context,
Hilary Clinton's 2011 speech where she said
"gay rights are human rights",
along with the prevalence of references
to same-sex marriage and gay rights
at the 2012 Democratic National Convention,
are examples of American pinkwashing.
Clinton's [ inaudible ] is a relatively new logic
in U.S. imperialism.
That the U.S., regardless of failures
to protect queer and trans people
from state violence here in the U.S.,
where I am, not you [ laughs ],
will now use gay rights as a measure to...
as a measure to countries
it seeks to intervene on.
Basically, like, "we're going to
call countries homophobic
"and that'll give us a good excuse to bomb them
or show up there and do weird military stuff."
Clinton uses lesbian and gay rights to bolster
the notion that the U.S. is the world's policing arm
forcing democracy and equality globally
on purportedly backward and cruel governments.
Gay rights operates as
a new justification for this imperial role,
a justification that fits really well within
anti-Arab and anti-Muslim framings
that have been developed during the war on terror,
and portray Arab and Muslim countries
as more sexist and more homophobic
than the U.S., Europe and Israel.
We also see this with the framing of
the U.S. intervention in Afghanistan,
that it's supposed to, like, save Afghan women,
like this kind of women-saving,
gay-saving framework is very popular,
the saving framework has a very long history,
and in some ways the gay-saving
framework seen in a new way.
At the Democratic National Convention,
Obama's [U.S. President] support for
same-sex marriage similarly helped him
portray his administration as progressive --
and, like, the number of people
who buy into this is shocking --
and equality-loving in order to obscure
his abysmal record on key issues
such as austerity, his failure to close
Guantanamo, ongoing drone strikes,
harsh sanctions against Iran,
the long wars in Iraq and Afghanistan,
and his record-breaking rates
of deportation --
I'm sure you know he's the most deporting
president ever in the history of the United States--
and I think in particular you see
this kind of American pinkwashing,
I've seen it again more recently
in his inaugural address,
he talked about Stonewall, which basically,
like, caused me to fall over,
y'know, it's again...
why is this guy talking about Stonewall?
Stonewall's a moment of resistance
to police brutality.
He's running the country that imprisons
more people than anyone in the world,
where queer and trans people
are still suffering
police violence and extremely horrifying
conditions of imprisonment.
Like, how does this fit?
And also, recently he's
kind of made waves
because there's this really awful immigration
reform policy going around in the United States
that's supposed to be like the answer to
the unjust system of immigration enforcement,
but really it's just a way of
ramping up immigration enforcement.
And he said about it that he's gonna make sure
that gay and lesbian couples can be in on it,
and that is kind of this pinkwashing of this actually
really conservative set of policies and principles
around immigration that we're
supposed to be, like, grateful for.
And many people do articu- [ inaudible ]
The term "pinkwashing"
is most frequently used to describe
the explicit strategy Israel has
undertaken in recent years
to market itself as a human rights leader,
based on its stances on same-sex marriage,
and LGBT military service.
Israel has explicitly worked with
marketing experts to re-brand itself
trying to overcome its international reputation
as a brutal occupying force.
I think particularly in the face of the
Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions movement
which has really raised a lot of awareness
about, even further than before,
about these issues.
The new image is focused on portraying Israel
as a modern democracy in the Middle East,
surrounded by countries with supposedly
less enlightened policy and culture.
A key feature of that portrayal is
the articulation of Israel as a country
that recognizes gay and lesbian rights,
specifically marriage and military service,
and that it is an ideal destination
for gay and lesbian tourism.
As part of its pinkwashing efforts,
Israel has funded tours of Israelis
to the United States
in order to discuss Israel's military and marriage
laws with respect to gays and lesbians.
So it's like a really aggressive kind
of propaganda machine.
Critics of same sex marriage and military
service advocacy in the United States,
and critics of pinkwashing,
have suggested that it's necessary
to look at what these institutions are
in order to assess whether inclusion in them
is a felicitous goal for queer and trans politics.
The militaries of both the United States
and Israel have been accused of war crimes,
and operate daily in what have been identified
as illegal and immoral occupations.
In the case of Israel,
uh Palestine in the case of Israel.
And Puerto Rico, Guam, Hawaii,
the part of North America currently known
as the continental United States,
the Northern Mariana Islands, the Marshall Islands,
and more, in the case of the United States.
Internally, the U.S. military has a culture
and practice of sexism, racism, and torture,
that have been consistently identified
by survivors and critics.
Recent publications and the exposure
of classified documents
have further highlighted
the lawless violence of the U.S. military,
and the ways that its operations,
such as the occupation of Iraq,
are often motivated by profit-seeking corporations
with high level government ties,
rather than by the democracy-spreading rationales
commonly employed as justification.
The Israeli military's record similarly shows
that from its initial ethnic cleansing
project undertaken in 1948,
when over 400 Palestinian villages were destroyed,
the Israeli government has used military power
to forcibly settle the land it now occupies,
and to remove, destroy, and erase
the prior inhabitants wherever possible.
The recent outcry against these atrocities
committed by Israel on the inhabitants of Gaza,
as well as the Israeli military's brutal 2010 raid of
the flotilla bound for Gaza to deliver aid,
have further drawn international attention.
Israel's increasing threats toward Iran are further
building international opposition to Israeli militarism.
Despite the long-term critique Israeli militarism...
[ inaudible ]
...the U.S. and Israeli militarism specifically,
in many movements that define the American left,
the discourse about gay and lesbian soldiers
serving in the U.S. and Israeli militaries
has garnered support from many people,
who otherwise oppose the wars
in Iraq and Afghanistan,
the Israeli attacks on Gaza
in 2008, 2009 and 2012,
and other highly publicized
Israeli and U.S. military activities.
Images of gay and lesbian service members
in uniform, holding hands and kissing,
in front of national flags,
have successfully stirred
patriotic and pro-military sentiment,
deadening critical thinking
about patriotism and militarism,
by asserting such sentiments as a form
of sympathy for gay and lesbian people.
Similarly, long term left critiques
of marriage have been silenced
by the combination of relentless
right wing family values rhetoric,
and the articulation of the desirability of
marriage by same sex marriage advocacy -
- messages long contested
by feminists and anti racists.
Such as, that children benefit
from being raised by married parents,
that married people are healthier,
and contribute more to society,
or that marriage recognizes the most
important relationship people can have--
are now mobilized
by same sex marriage advocates
and judges writing decisions that are considered
victories for same sex marriage advocacy.
These pro-marriage messages
are now articulated
as anti-homophobic statements
in the arguments for same sex marriage.
Feminist, anti-racist
and anti-colonial movements
have long worked to dismantle marriage,
and have identified rules about marriage
as central to organizing
foundational violences of the U.S.:
slavery, settler colonialism, and genocide.
From the beginning, in the United States,
marriage laws were key to organizing
who is property and who can hold property.
Identifying Indigenous systems of gender and family
formation as backward and in need of intervention,
and enforcing colonial and gender family norms
on Indigenous people
has been an important part of colonization.
Marriage has been an important technology
of land theft and ethnic cleansing,
aimed at disappearing Indigenous people
in many ways.
One way, one example,
is that the U.S. encouraged westward settlement
by promising male settlers 160 acres...
to every male settler who would move west,
plus an extra 160 acres if he brings a wife.
Putting that kind of marriage
as a promotion for settlement
next to what the U.S.
was simultaneously doing,
which was criminalizing traditional
Indigenous communal living styles.
And, like, where I sometimes live in Seattle,
y'know, like burning down longhouses
and forcing people not to live in those ways,
and eliminating communal land holding methods,
and enforcing male, individual ownership
to facilitate displacing
Indigenous people from their land.
So in this way, management of
gender and family systems
has been essential to
displacement and settlement processes.
It's also been essential to structuring slavery.
So, denying the family ties of slaves
was central to slavery,
ensuring that children would be born enslaved,
and then later coercing marriage among newly freed
Black people after supposed emancipation,
and criminalizing them for adultery was one pathway
of re-capturing them into the convict lease system,
which was the predecessor of today's
U.S. mass imprisonment project
that centrally targets Black and native people.
Today, marriage is still used to distribute essential
life chances like health care and immigration status,
in ways that produce and maintain
enormous racial disparities.
So, there are very few pathways
to immigration in the U.S.,
and those are focused on either your family,
so if you don't have any family ties to the U.S.
it's much much harder to immigrate;
or jobs, which of course, y'know,
is available to extremely few people.
And we still get our health care through our jobs
and usually through family ties as well.
So if you don't have a partner or spouse
who has healthcare, you can't get it.
And given the racialized distribution
of the most highly compensated jobs,
there's a really severe racial disparity in that
kind of family-based access to healthcare.
So obviously these are unjust ways to
give out the essential things people need,
and these kinds of marriage ties to basic needs
traps people in violent family scenarios,
and just causes most people to
have no path to these necessities.
So in this way marriage still structures racialized
social control through the family unit and family law.
And marriage has been specifically central to
anti-Black and anti-poor politics in the U.S.
There's a strong story
that's been very prevalent in the U.S.
that the reason people are poor is because they're
morally flawed and they need to get married more.
So like in 1996 when
President Clinton dismantled welfare,
that the law that was passed is called the
"Personal Responsibility and Work Opportunity Act",
you can already hear the sort of racism
and anti-poor sentiment dripping off of that.
That law, y'know, all of its
findings section is all about
how the reason people are poor is
'cause they don't marry enough,
and how we have to get rid of this.
And this is based in, y'know,
really racist sociology,
where one of the most famous
government reports about this
is called the Moynihan Report of the 1960's.
It kind of articulates this idea
that Black families were poor because
they were pathologically female-headed.
So, this notion that family structure
is the problem with poor people,
and specifically with Black poor people,
has been this very prevalent racist notion that's
still very active in welfare policy in the U.S.
And both George Bush and Obama have had these...
spent millions of dollars on these
"healthy marriage" promotion projects
that force poor people to marry,
or that give you a financial incentive
if you're on welfare and you get married.
So all of this is about blaming poverty
on the failure to marry,
or the failure to have the state's idea
of a moral family structure.
Anti-racists and feminists
have sought to dismantle marriage,
identifying the family as a place of violence,
and the institution of marriage as a key form of social
control of sexuality, racialized population control,
and just not an OK way to distribute life chances,
the basic stuff people need.
And they've worked to make it easier
to get out of marriage.
That was a huge feminist legal project for years,
was trying to make it easier to get a divorce,
because people couldn't get out of marriages
'cause of the way American law structured divorce.
And feminists have also fought to explode
romance myths and family roles that trap people,
and to disconnect marriage from vital resources.
And there's also been an enormous amount
of legal work in the U.S.
to get rid of laws that disadvantage people if they
were "illegitimate", if they had un-married parents.
'Cause those laws, after it was
no longer explicitly permissible
to have laws that just excluded
Black people from certain opportunities,
those laws were the replacement.
So part of this as well is
a whole history of anti-illegitimacy laws,
which are really, like, pro-marriage laws
with a penalty,
to be used in really explicitly anti-Black ways.
Like in the U.S., in Israel marriage law
also plays a key role
in maintaining basic conditions of racialized
hierarchy necessary to settler colonialism.
This happens in a number of ways that are really
obvious parts of the ethnic cleansing project,
that seeks to win a demographic war
to ensure that Jews outnumber Arabs,
and that a particular, narrow defined
kind of Jewish life is cultivated.
One very obvious example is that
civil marriage does not exist in Israel.
So marriage between people of different religions,
or even between people who have different
matrilineal or patrilineal Jewish heritage
is not allowed.
And hundreds of Israeli couples
fly to Cyprus every month to get married.
This approach to marriage overall
is contested by many Israelis
who see it as a threat to freedom of religion;
but it more broadly attests to the use of marriage
as a tool of population control
aimed at settlement and population
displacement and replacement.
Another prominent example is the
Citizenship and Entry Into Israel Law,
the 2003 law that established that Palestinian
citizens of the Occupied Territories
who marry Israeli citizens
cannot acquire Israeli residency.
So Israeli citizens who marry people
from other places
win family munification through their marriages.
Their new spouses can come
and live with them in Israel.
Since most of the Israeli citizens who marry
Palestinians from the Occupied Territories
are part of the 20% of Israeli citizens
who are Palestinian,
this primarily means that the Palestinian families
are being divided by this 2003 law.
While Jewish people all over the world have
the right to citizenship in Israel,
and... for immigration purposes interestingly,
the definition of Jewish enough is very broad,
because the goal is to encourage settlement.
And others who marry Israeli citizens
can acquire residency in Israel,
Palestinians in the Occupied Territories
cannot access residency status
through their spouses in Israel.
And this immigration policy
--and immigration policy in Israel in general--
is focused on prioritizing
immigration of Jewish people,
there's a 3-track immigration system
which prioritizes Jewish immigration
with immediate and automatic citizenship,
places non-Jewish foreign immigration second,
with a multi-year process for
gaining residency or citizenship,
and provides a 3rd track for spouses
of Palestinian citizens of Israel,
as long as they are not residents
of the Occupied Territories
or states that Israel has declared enemy states.
Unequal marital privileges are part of the
ethnic cleansing project of the state of Israel,
and impact thousands of families,
maintaining forced separations,
depriving Palestinian citizens of Israel of access
to state resources for their families,
that are available to Jewish citizens of Israel;
and restricting movement for Palestinians.
Clearly, increased access to Israel's
marriage regime for same sex couples
does not change or reform
the fundamental role of Israeli marriage law,
in enforcing occupation and state-sponsored racism.
Lesbian and gay Palestinian citizens of Israel
whose partners are from the Occupied Territories
face the same restrictions as straight people do.
What does it mean to recognize... to get to
seek recognition in a marriage system
overtly created to forward
an ethnic cleansing process?
What does it mean to declare such recognition
as a victory for equality
or evidence of enlightened human rights policy?
[ MC interrupts to ask ] Dean, could we have
it wrap up in about 5 minutes or so?
[ Dean Spade ] Oh, much sooner than that!
[ MC ] Oh, sorry, carry on!
[ Dean Spade ] Thank you... I'm sorry that
our technical issues have made me so slow.
Just have one more paragraph. [ laughs ]
The intensifying discourse
of Israeli human rights leadership
buoyed by same sex marriage and LGB
--and in Israel T-- military service,
brings to the surface in new ways ongoing tensions
in queer and trans politics,
about efforts at inclusion
in central state institutions and systems.
The demands of marriage and military participation
are not only far from fulfilling feminist,
queer, trans and anti-racist imaginings
of sexual and gender liberation,
but must also be analyzed as methods
of justifying and sustaining and expanding
colonial and imperial violence.
it's not surprising that these demands
have risen to the surface,
and drowned out other images
of gender and sexual liberation
in corporate media owned and dominated
by those who have invented and executed
the war on terror,
and also the same people who don't mind
developing new markets for wedding day creation.
The same media that has, y'know,
24 hours a day on TV in the United States,
shows about buying wedding dresses,
and shows about how cops are great and stuff.
The context... and y'know, movies about
how the U.S. military is amazing...
this context in the U.S. has created ready
and willing audiences for Israeli pinkwashing,
which is dearly needed as more and more of the
world names conditions in Israel as apartheid,
and it becomes more and more essential to maintain
U.S. financial support for Israeli military violence.
It's become commonplace to convince straight people
--as well as many queer people,
amazingly, even those who would say
they are anti-war--
that our liberation is about becoming soldiers
and spouses, recuperating oppressive structures
by putting a gay flag on them
and saying they are good for gays.
I would argue that centuries of feminist,
anti-colonial, and anti-racist resistance
have proven that marriage and the military
are not good for anyone.
Today's anti-pinkwashing activists are encouraging
those invested in resisting sexual, gender, and family
formation norms, to develop discernment,
not asking just "can we be included in existing
structures?", but "what are those structures?"
And if it's a prison cell, a cop, a tank, a wall,
a border, a soldier, or a state family formation norm,
you can wrap it in a rainbow flag all you want,
and it still won't be anti-homophobic,
feminist or liberating.
So we have to ask: "can you have a movement
for sexual liberation or gender liberation
that does not contest colonization,
especially when sexual and family regulation
is a central tool of colonization?"
I wonder, will contemporary
gay rights frameworks be remembered
as pro-war, pro-military, and pro-apartheid?
That's all. [ audience claps ]
[ Isabel Krupp, Queers Against Israeli Apartheid,
AKA QuAIA ]
My name's Isabel Krupp,
and I'm a member of Queers Against
Israeli Apartheid, Vancouver,
which I'll refer to as QuAIA from now on,
just so I don't trip over my own tongue
while I'm speaking.
I'd like to begin by acknowledging that we're on
un-ceded and occupied Coast Salish Territories,
the territories of the Musqueam, Squamish,
Stó:lō and Tsleil-Waututh peoples.
And this acknowledgement of the ongoing occupation
and colonization of this land, of Turtle Island,
is foundational to all of the work that QuAIA does.
So, recognizing the ongoing
impacts of settler colonialism,
and working in solidarity with Indigenous movements
for sovereignty and decolonization,
is really what QuAIA is all about.
We're a Palestine solidarity organization,
we work in solidarity with Palestinian movements
for sovereignty and against Israeli
apartheid, occupation, and colonization.
So it's really important for us
to recognize how Canada and Israel
bolster each other’s colonial occupations,
both ideologically and materially, through
political, military, and economic support.
And I'd like to point out that Canada is one of the
key supporters of Israel in the world right now.
So if we want to effectively fight
against Israeli apartheid and occupation,
we need also to come out against
settler-colonialism here in Canada.
So for folks who would like to explore
these connections further,
there is a brilliant paper by Dana Olwan and Mike
Krebs on the topic, which I highly recommend.
So I've already used the phrase
“Israeli apartheid” several times.
and I know that's something that Dean has talked
about so I'm going to try not to overlap too much,
but I imagine that some folks in the audience
aren't as familiar with a critical perspective
on the Israeli state.
I won't have time to get into like
an Israeli Apartheid 101 today,
so I encourage those less familiar with this topic
to seek out critical resources,
which QuAIA would be happy to help provide.
But I will describe very briefly what I mean
when I say Israeli apartheid.
I'm talking about Palestinians in the West Bank
who live under a brutal military occupation,
which takes the form of illegal Israeli settlements,
checkpoints, and a system of walls, barriers,
and roads accessible solely to Israeli settlers.
I'm talking about Palestinians living in Israel
who face discriminatory policies.
Like Dean was talking about a little bit,
currently there are over 25 laws
which target them specifically as non-Jewish
and reduce them to second class citizens.
I'm talking about Palestinians in the diaspora
and in UN-administered refugee camps
who are by default denied their UN-sanctioned
right to return to their lands.
And I'm talking about over 1.8 million
Palestinians in the Gaza Strip
who are living in an open air prison
under an illegal siege,
described by international experts
as a "slow genocide".
So again, I encourage anyone surprised by what
I am saying or what Dean was talking about
to seek out critical resources and particularly
to seek out Palestinian perspectives.
So, there is a growing international movement
– led by Palestinians –
against Israeli apartheid and occupation.
In response, Israel's launched an aggressive well
funded PR campaign that Dean was talking about
to market itself as an oasis of tolerance
in the Middle East,
as this modern liberal democratic state –
specifically, the only democracy
in the Middle East, right? –
in order to obscure its status
as an apartheid state.
And I think it's important to point out
that the implication here
is that Israel needs to practice apartheid,
colonialism, and genocide
in order to preserve these freedoms and democracy
and rights for gays and lesbians, right?
'Cause like Dean was describing, gay rights
discourse is a big piece of this PR campaign –
Israel is working really hard to brand itself
as the only gay-friendly country
in what they frame as an otherwise
hostile and homophobic region.
And we can see really clearly how this plays into
racist, imperialist, and orientalist ideas
around the “West” as modern and civilized
and the “East” as barbaric and backwards, right?
So this practice of appropriating
the struggle for gay rights discourse
to obscure, excuse, or justify state violence
is called “pinkwashing”.
And Dean made that very clear...
And this practice, I'd like to point out,
is not unique to Israel.
In the Canadian context, we see an example of this
when we look at the re-branding of the tar sands
and this idea, this myth of “ethical oil”, right?
In opposition to so-called “conflict oil” that
comes from countries like Saudi Arabia,
which are again constructed through
racist narratives as exceptionally homophobic.
So one of the things that
this practice of pinkwashing erases
is how state violence, including colonialism
and apartheid, impacts all Palestinians,
queer and straight, trans and cis.
“There is no pink door in the apartheid wall” right?
We hear this phrase, this slogan
in anti-pinkwashing activism,
“There is no pink door in the apartheid wall”.
All of these supposed rights and freedoms
of “gay! friendly! Israel!”,
they don't extend to Palestinians.
And as much as the Israeli state
decries Palestinian homophobia,
its regime of apartheid and occupation
creates challenges and barriers
for queer and trans Palestinians organizing
against homophobia and transphobia.
So I'm gonna, I'm gonna read a little quote
from a Palestinian queer organization,
Palestinian Queers for Boycott, Divestment,
and Sanctions. And they say:
“As Palestinian queers, our struggle is not only
against social injustice
and our rights as a queer minority
in Palestinian society,
but rather, our main struggle is one against
Israel's colonization, occupation and apartheid;
a system that has oppressed us
for the past 63 years"
So that's Palestinian Queers for BDS.
And I think this statement makes a lot of sense
when we think about how social movements
for gender and sexual freedom
are contingent on freedom from the daily violence
of colonization, occupation, and apartheid.
I also want to acknowledge that these social
movements are alive and well in Palestine,
and several members of QuAIA Vancouver
were able to meet a number of amazing Palestinian
queer and trans activists at the recent
World Social Forum "Free Palestine" in Brazil,
which included a Queer Visions stream.
So Queers Against Israeli Apartheid is one of
a growing number of queer activist groups
working to resist the pinkwashing of Israeli apartheid.
And as queers and trans folks, we have the power
to interrupt this practice of pinkwashing.
When we come out against Israeli apartheid,
we interfere with the myth-making that's vital
to letting Israel get away with apartheid, colonialism,
and other forms state violence.
So, to give some background on QuAIA Vancouver:
There's been a QuAIA presence in the Vancouver
Pride Parade for the past several years,
which I attended but personally
wasn't involved in organizing,
and I want to recognize that work that took place;
but the current iteration of QuAIA Vancouver
came together just last summer
in response to 2 Israeli-funded films that were
being screened at the Vancouver Queer Film Festival.
They were called “Joe + Belle” and “Invisible Men”.
And in response to the screening of these films,
we came together under the banner of QuAIA
to call on the Queer Film Festival to come out in
solidarity with Palestinian queers and trans folks,
ultimately, to challenge pinkwashing
by honouring the cultural boycott of Israel
for future seasons of the Festival.
So for those of you who aren't familiar
with the idea of cultural boycott --
Dean mentioned BDS.
So, in 2005, Palestinian civil society
launched a global movement
for boycott, divestment, and sanctions against Israel,
which we call BDS.
So this includes economic boycotts,
divestment, sanctions advocacy,
but also a cultural and academic boycott,
which targets cultural institutions,
projects, and events
that continue to serve the purposes of
the Israeli colonial and apartheid regime.
So I want to be clear that cultural boycott doesn't
target artists or filmmakers based on nationality,
but rather targets officially sponsored voices
that serve the interests of apartheid.
So in this context, we felt and we feel that it
is very important to call on our queer institutions,
like the Vancouver Queer Film Festival
to come out against the Israeli apartheid regime,
because if this queer film festival,
if this is a queer film festival,
it belongs to all of us, right?
Including any Palestinian and Arab queers
and queers of colour
who may feel alienated from a festival that aligns
itself with institutional advocates for apartheid.
So as the Festival gears up again this Spring,
we're going to be organizing to make this happen,
to call on the Vancouver Queer Film Festival
to come out in support of
Palestinian queer and trans folks.
So in the coming months,
we'll need community support.
And we want encourage everybody here today
to sign up for our email list,
which, there's a signup list at the back of the room,
and to like us on Facebook if you're on there
[ laughter ],
and most importantly to come out
to future events and actions.
Because if we want to
hold our institutions accountable,
we need to show them
that we care about this, right?
So, yeah, because apartheid is a queer issue
- it's not only a queer issue
but clearly it's a queer issue -
and as queers and trans folks
i think our role in this struggle is clear:
There's no pride in apartheid!
[ audience cheers ]
[ Anna Soole, Social Justice
& Decolonization Facilitator ]
Thank you Isabel, that was a great ending.
I liked that little...
So, first I want to say thank you
to Dean and Isabel for what you said,
and I want to say thank you
to Harsha for what you're gonna say,
and SFPIRG for having us.
And I want to acknowledge that we are on
traditional Coast Salish territory.
And that I am... so... my name is Anna Soole,
and I'm Métis.
I'm Cree, Ojibwe, Apache, Algonquin and Lakota,
and I'm also French, Celtic, Dutch and German.
That's a lot of things to remember.
I'm kind of like a Heinz 57...
and so [ laughs ] I'm gonna be speaking
to my own personal experience,
more than... I'm not an academic,
and so my framework is much more
cultural and from my own perspective.
And I'm gonna share some stories,
and I'm gonna share a little bit about who I am
and how what we're talking about today
has impacted me as an Indigenous woman.
And, before I do...
one of the things in the work that I do
-I do decolonization work-
one of the things that's really important to me
is acknowledge the space that we're in.
And the space that we're in is what?
Just call it out, what do you see?
Concrete!
What else?
Rows! Exactly!
So, we're in a space that is
specifically a settler space.
And so I just want to acknowledge that
we're talking about decolonization,
we're talking about colonialism, settler colonialism,
inside a settler space.
And in my culture, does anybody know
how we would be set up?
In a circle.
And so a circle keeps us accountable to each other,
so I often have a lot of conflict
about sitting on a panel,
because I feel uncomfortable
with a table between me and a group.
I feel uncomfortable being the voice,
when there's so much knowledge in a room.
And so I just want to acknowledge that,
and my own conflict with it.
And acknowledge ways... maybe in the future...
maybe how can we look at that as a group,
the people that are here,
how can we look at that and changing these systems
that we're inside of even in this moment?
Um...
So, just about me, I wanna acknowledge...
I'm from a working class, Métis family,
and I'm personally, financially, somewhat precarious,
queer, and I have no high school diploma.
But I present as a white, straight, middle class,
educated and employable person,
so I carry a level of privilege that my contemporaries
who wear their station more visibly
don't necessarily have access to.
But that is specifically related to
my experience as an Indigenous woman,
because when Dean was talking about marriage,
that was the topic that struck me the most,
that I wanted to speak to the most.
Talking about marriage and colonialism
in my family,
both of my grandmothers are Indigenous,
and they both went to day school,
which is a lot like residential school,
and one of my grandmothers ran away when she
was 12 years old from Quebec to Vancouver;
and my other grandmother,
her whole family left Edmonton,
where we were well-established, well-known,
activist family that had everything stolen from us,
and the University of Alberta
is now built on our homestead.
So everybody came here, and both of my
grandmothers out of survival married white men.
And so I, every single day of my life,
walk through the world carrying
the legacy of colonization on my skin.
Because I carry a privilege that was designed,
and the design was for me to not identify
as an Indigenous person.
And so it's a radical act
for me to never identify as white.
Although I recognize my white privilege,
I identify as genocide white.
So my friend D. Williams, she was talking about
this concept of genocide white --
or genocide brown depending on the experience-
and for me that makes sense, because the reason
my skin is white is because of genocide.
And so it's a complicated experience for me
[ laughs ] to say the least.
When Indigenous women married white men,
they lost any status they might have.
Métis women actually didn't have any
status until the 80's --
actually we didn't have any status until this month
[ laughs ] We have status now.
What we had was citizenship in the 80's,
and so my grandmothers, they made their choices
according to that history. And it impacted my life.
It impacted abuse that was in my family and in my,
and in my own... on my own personal body.
And so, uh, I carry that with me every day.
So I wanna... I just wanna read my notes because...
it's nerve-wracking to
talk in front of a bunch of people
especially when you're not in a circle!
[ laughs ] It's really nerve-wracking!
So I'm just gonna look at my notes...
OK so the next thing I wanted to touch on
is that I was raised by a single mother,
she never got married,
and I never thought about marriage growing up.
It wasn't something that like a lot of girls
in particular, people who are raised as girls,
are expected to think about their wedding day.
There's a lot of pressure, socialization
to think about your wedding day,
think about what it's gonna be like to get married,
plan on getting married... I never had that.
And my experience was actually
that my mother was... was really...
she really didn't want me to get married.
And... but I also saw the other side of it,
which was that my mother was a single mother,
and she didn't have access to a lot of the things
that my friends had access to, my friends parents.
My mom couldn't get a loan
without a man in the 80's, and so
we were very poor for a long period of time until
my mother joined the system, worked for the city,
and literally broke her back working for
her whole life so that we could survive.
So it's a complicated system.
The reason we get... a lot of people feel
the pressure to get married,
is because the structure that we live inside
doesn't support not being married.
And so, what I wanted to sorta think about
or get people thinking about is
if you only have 1 concept of what is possible,
of course you're gonna want to
live inside that concept.
So the paradox of human agency, speaks to the
idea that people's choices are never straightforward.
The context of our present particular times
and places, constraints and possibility,
shape not only our choices,
but even what we can imagine for ourselves.
So right now the queer community, especially in
the U.S., because in Canada we have marriage rights,
but in the U.S. the queer community
is trying to fit inside a structure
that is the only structure
that people can comprehend.
And if there's only one structure,
people are not going to be able to...
if there's only one possibility,
if it seems like there's only one possibility,
people aren't necessarily going to be able to create
the world that they would want for themselves
in a different system.
So, uh, this is not just a... this is also about
the politics of identity.
It's about the politics of union,
and it's about the politics of family,
because if I'm gonna grow up
and become an old woman,
and not have a family to take care of me,
I'm basically going to be living in poverty.
And so, there's a lot of pressure on me
as a woman, to have children.
And there's a lot of pressure on me as a woman,
to have children, and be in a couple,
a specific kind of couple, with a romantic partner,
preferably a male, a cisgendered male.
So there's all of these pressures
that I'm expected to live inside of,
and, yes I want to have children, but I don't want
to have that pressure or that expectation,
I don't want it to be coming
from the fear of ending up alone.
So...
I have an excerpt from an article that I wrote
about whether or not I wanted to be a mother...
thank you! It's perfect, it's how I wanted to end...
So... the dominant culture has come to view
family as a small scale, intensely private unit.
In a healthy, traditional aboriginal community,
a child doesn't have just one mother.
She has aunties, cousins, sisters,
grandmas, and family friends.
Often, a biological mother is not
the most significant female in the child's life,
and this is not viewed as neglectful, as child psych-
ologist Dr. John Bowlby would have had us believe
when he said mid 20th century, when he mid
20th century coined the term "maternal deprivation".
In fact, it would be quite the opposite.
The child has so many caregivers
in an aboriginal community --
or a traditional prior to colonization
aboriginal community--
that she is able to connect with and bond
to the women, men, or Two-Spirited people,
that are right for her at that time in her growth.
Previous bonds with other women aren't lost or bro-
ken but maintained and evolved as the child evolves.
This works because the well-being of the family
community is valued above the individual,
whereas in contemporary settler colonial culture,
the individual is valued above the whole.
Bowlby's legacy has clearly entered
the dominant ideology of motherhood.
The requirement is that the individual mother should
have total responsibility for her own children at all times.
This has informed the decisions of colonizers
to remove children
from these traditional Indigenous family situations,
which we saw in the 60's Scoop,
which was taking Indigenous children out of their
homes and putting them into foster homes,
and it's still happening to this day.
Indigenous children are taken
out of their homes and put in foster homes
more than any other children in Canada.
... lost my place...
...because the ethic of domination
has been used to corrupt, violate,
and attempt to destroy these traditions
through privatization of the family,
it's often challenging for the individualistic culture
of the colonized and colonizers
to understand or see the merits
in multi-shared child rearing.
In my ideal world, an interdependent community
of peaceful, practical, creative, spiritual people,
working together to respect and tend to the earth,
and each other,
sharing responsibility for each other's well-being,
and the well-being of the children,
whether a mother is single or attached
is irrelevant,
as the child has many dedicated,
loving role models of every gender,
who are positively engaged
in every aspect of the child's life.
Prospective parents make informed decisions
about when and whether to have children,
and access to birth control is unquestioned.
The elderly are cared for by the whole community,
regardless of their blood ties,
and all community members basic needs are met.
Some might label these values as anti-racist,
eco-feminist, with socialist leanings...
but I prefer the title Indigenous Feminist,
and I wear that with pride.
And I have one final thing, because I only have prob-
ably one minute left. I found this on Facebook today.
[ whispers to a fellow panelist ] Would you be willing
to hold this up? Thank you.
And I'll describe it for people who...
who can't see it.
So, it's a series of three circles at the bottom.
The 1st circle has a series of multiple blue circles
in it, and outside is multicoloured circles.
And this is labeled as "Exclusion".
So all around the border of the circle
has the multicoloured circles.
The 2nd circle has the blue circles in the centre,
and a smaller circle on the outside.
And it's got all the multicoloured circles in it.
Labeled as "Segregation".
The 3rd circle has blue circles inside of it, and
another circle inside of it with multicoloured circles.
And that's called "Integration".
The final circle has all the circles,
blue and multicoloured, inside of it,
which changes the entire
formation of what it looks like.
And that's called "Inclusion".
And I've worked in many non-Indigenous
organizations as an Indigenous person,
and it's... of course I'm the Indigenous person
who looks white, right?
So I get hired because I look like everybody else,
and I can easily fit into white culture.
Or so people think until they know me.
[ laughs ]
And so, what we're talking about here is
literally changing the structure of society.
So, not changing, not getting queer people to
be able to get married and join the military,
but what we're talking about
is getting rid of the military.
Changing the ideas of marriage. Changing our
ideas of what partnership and family looks like.
Thank you.
[ applause ]
[ Harsha Walia, No One Is Illegal ]
That was it! [ audience laughter ]
That visual's incredible.
Thank you to the organizers
and thank everyone for being here,
thank you Dean and Isabel and Anna
for really amazing presentations.
I want to start by acknowledging that we're on
un-ceded, occupied, Coast Salish territories,
lands of the Musqueam, Tsleil Waututh,
Squamish and Stó:lō people.
And also too, as other speakers mentioned,
to really understand in a deep way what it means
to root our work
within an anti-colonial framework,
and what it means to really truly be in alliance with
Indigenous struggles against settler colonialism.
And everything that that means, right?
It means multiple things.
It means fighting in defense of the land,
it means fighting violence against women,
it means fighting against prisons and police,
and the military,
and all of the aspects of settler colonialism
that seep into our lives and our societies,
and the ways in which we live here on Turtle Island.
I wanna pick up where folks were kinda left off,
and what people were talking about...
and particularly some of the stuff
that Dean was talking about
in terms of the co-optation of
queer and trans liberation movements
as well as women of colour movements,
particularly for imperial, capitalist,
and colonial ambitions.
And particularly to talk about that in the intersection
of immigration, both historically and currently.
Y'know, first I do want to say
that it's not new, right?
There's this kind of new framework
that's been developing,
particularly with homonationalism when we talk
about it, or pinkwashing when we talk about it,
but I really think it's important to understand
that this recent branding has a long legacy
and has a long history in terms of colonial politics.
And y'know in particular colonialism has
always cast people of colour communities
as barbaric, and savage, and backwards,
as you were mentioning Isabel.
And this is not new, right?
The kind of gay-saving rhetoric
and the ideology of it is also not new.
I'm gonna give some historic examples of that.
Most people think that that is a recent kind of...
a recent evolution of y'know "save the women!"
[ laughs ] but they've both always worked together.
And so the kind of "save 3rd world women", "save
women of colour" and y'know, "save 3rd world gays",
have always been attendant processes of colo-
nialism, and have always been part of that project.
And the thing that is most deeply
offensive and ironic about that of course
is that colonialism itself has imposed
the most hetero-normative, patriarchal system
on communities of colour, right?
Particularly through the Victorian era.
So you have this simultaneous
kind of rhetoric and discourse
of saving communities of colour, while at the
same time imposing the most rigid and oppressive
family and community and societal structures
on our communities, right?
So, there's nothing kind of new about this.
So I want to look at some examples,
particularly through a lens of immigration.
There's of course y'know a lot
of conversation that we've had,
Isabel laid out a lot of amazing history
in terms of pinkwashing,
Dean also talked about it
in the context of pinkwashing,
also the examples as we know of course
of the occupation of Afghanistan,
where, y'know, the entire rhetoric of occupation
and colonialism both locally and globally
has been rooted in this white saviour
industrial complex if you will,
but I also want to look at it through the lens
of immigration, which isn't often talked about,
and the ways in which state controls and border
controls are operating through these ways as well.
So, y'know, a lot of people here probably know
about the Komagata Maru, right?
So, the Komagata Maru was the ship in 1914
that turned, that was turned away
-376 predominantly Punjabi immigrants-
was turned away from the shores of
British Columbia, here on the west coast.
And y'know, that's known as a very obvious
example of anti-migrant history in Canada.
Y'know, the Tory government recently made
an apology -or a kind of half-apology-
for the Komagata Maru, in the same vein as
the apology for the residential schools,
in the same vein as the apology
of the Chinese Head Tax,
y'know, totally token, offensive, symbolic gestures,
but y'know, people know about the Komagata Maru.
The thing that most people don't know about
is the sodomy cases that were happening at the
same time as the Komagata Maru was happening.
So during 1909 and 1925, there was
a number of sodomy cases
that were being tried particularly
in the west coast of Canada.
And the largest proportion of men being tried
under sodomy laws at the time were Sikh men.
And in particular there was a really high profile case
in 1915... has anyone seen Rex Vs. Singh?
If not... check out the movie,
it's a really important movie, y'know,
that links and ties the connection between anti-
migrant sentiment and homophobia and transphobia,
and in particular with
the criminalization of communities
and the assertion of state power
in the act of criminalization.
And so in 1915, there was
a relatively high-profile "case",
where there were two Sikh men,
they were two Sikh millworkers,
and their names were Dalip Singh and [Naina] Singh,
and they were two men
who were tried for sodomy in 1915.
And this was a time of... right.. one year after
the Komagata Maru was turned back, right?
So, this is again happening in a period
when there's heightened
-particularly anti-Sikh anti-Punjabi,
anti-south Asian- sentiment in BC,
where newspapers are filled with y'know, "Turn back
the Hindus!", "Hindus are invading our shores!",
while at the same time there's also a simultaneous
crackdown on working class gay men,
in particular, working in the mills.
And so, the sodomy cases really are a confluence
of the ways in which the state
is simultaneously criminalizing under sodomy laws,
and simultaneously criminalizing
under anti-migrant laws.
And again, the largest proportion of men tried
under these cases during 1909 to 1929
were Sikh men, Sikh migrant men.
And so again I say that to show
kind of an historic trajectory,
of the ways in which the state has been
actively criminalizing communities of colour,
particularly queer and trans communities of colour
through state processes.
And so I wanna move quickly to the current context,
because again there's often a sense
that all of this is new.
And again in the current context we see
the same kind of thing, where on the one hand
the Canadian state is actively excluding
queer and trans communities of colour,
while at the same time it's upholding the myth
of being welcoming for persecuted
queer and trans folks from the global south.
And so we see that these
parallel discourses are necessary.
So one of them is the kind of homonationalist dis-
course; y'know, similar to the Israeli pinkwashing:
"We're so welcoming", "We're this bastion
of queer and gay rights",
"Western civilization frees everybody", y'know,
"Western civilization is where equality rests";
while at the same time, the reality on the ground
is one that is actively of persecution.
We see, particularly through immigration laws,
the ways in which heteronormativity
-and particularly an assimilation politic-
at various levels is being reinforced.
So one really kind of obvious on the face example,
is that until 2002 same-sex relationships
-so this is just same sex relationships,
we're not even talking about diverse
queer familial relationships-
same sex relationships were not even recognized
until 2002 under the Canadian immigration Act
as being able to be qualified
under the Family Class, right?
So this is 10 years ago, or how many years ago?
10 years ago, right?
This is very recent, in terms of
Canadian immigration policy.
But just to move to kind of more recent examples,
and then to talk about the ways in which homo-
nationalism has been an active part of Jason Kenney
-who is the current Minister of Deportation,
as some of us like to call him-
there's a number of ways in which we see...
I wanna talk about 3 of many examples,
I'll only give 3 examples ... of the ways
in which that active exclusion is happening,
and persecution is happening,
of queers and trans folks
who are trying to immigrate and particularly
claim asylum within Canada,
and then the final thing is kind of fortification of
homonationalism through the immigration system.
So the first is, y'know, the citizenship guide.
So the citizenship guide was a brand new citizenship
guide for Canada, espouses Canadian values...
and we find out through the citizenship guide
that Canadian values means
-absolutely no reference to
queer and trans liberation struggles,
it doesn't even mention same sex marriage.
But what it does have is a number
of recruitment ads into the military.
And this is the example of y'know
what Canada is presenting itself as,
in terms of for newcomers
and for people becoming citizens.
The Immigration and Refugee Board
has a number of new judges
that Jason Kenney and the
Conservatives recently appointed,
who are openly anti-queer judges.
Openly anti-queer.
One of them actually spoke at a fundraiser
that was an openly anti-queer fundraiser.
And he gets appointed by Jason Kenney,
to do what?
What kinds of claims is this person supposed
to be hearing? Anyone take a guess? ...
Yeah, basically, he is looking at claims
based on gender and sexual persecution.
And so this is the kind of system
that we have in place, right?
And the other thing that we have that y'know
completely continues to re-entrench
heteronormativity as well as
capitalist values and assimilative values,
is the Humanitarian and Compassionate
Claim in Canada right?
So this is like the claim that,
if you are trying to stay in Canada,
and your sponsorship has been refused,
or you're one of the many refugees who are
increasingly being deported by Jason Kenney,
or you're thrown into prison, as women and kids
are increasingly being thrown into prisons,
the Humanitarian and Compassionate Claim
is something you can apply for,
and you have to have an income,
if you have a spouse and children,
then that looks good,
if you're taxpaying, that looks good,
y'know so it's basically the system
where immigration is increasingly becoming
a tool of capitalism and colonialism
and oppression and heteronormativity,
in terms of the kinds of immigrants...
And y'know it's similar to
the examples that Dean was giving,
in terms of an immigration system that is
not based on justice, at all, right?
It's based on people who are gonna fulfill the needs
of the Canadian state and the Canadian economy.
But at the same time, so while we have this, y'know,
this level of persecution, oppression happening,
what do we have Jason Kenney do?
Jason Kenney sends an email to everyone
who ever signed a petition for Alvaro [Orozco],
who is a young, queer, Latino man in Toronto
who was facing deportation,
and he, he spams that email list...
-because when you sign those email petitions,
you give your email to Jason Kenney-
he sends every one of those people an email about
how Jason Kenney is helping queers in Iran to come
to Canada. So this is what Jason Kenney does.
So there's a number of policies that are
actively anti-queer, anti-refugee, anti-migrant,
but everyone who's advocating for queer liberation,
for queer rights, for migrant rights, for migrant justice
gets emails about how the Conservative government
is saving queers in Iran.
Which is, y'know, part of the pinkwashing,
the imperialist agenda of the Tory government,
but really of the Canadian state, right?
This is just its current formation.
So I just want to echo in ending, what everyone
has already said, right? Which is:
How do we imagine -and how do we particularly
because I'm talking about a lens for migrant justice-
how do we imagine a lens for migrant justice
that isn't dependent on people as labour,
or people as commodities?
That really truly respects and values
the diverse ways in which people are communing,
the diverse ways people are forming relationships,
the diverse ways in which
people imagine family, right?
Because one of the other things
that Jason Kenney has done
is to say that people can't bring
their parents and grandparents any more,
because grandparents are using our tax...
are using our healthcare, right?
So Jason Kenney is active in this immigration system,
is actually devaluing the various ways
in which people have families,
which include extended families
and doesn't just include your spouse, right?
It includes the ways particularly
for communities of colour,
in which family includes
many many people in our lives.
Listening to Anna talk it was making me weepy,
because I grew up not calling my mother
but two other women, my moms,
and when I tell people that here,
people think it's really bizarre,
and assume that my mother was not part of my life.
But... so how do we imagine
a kind of immigration system
where people are valued based on basic principles
of justice and dignity, right?
And also, an immigration system and a welcoming
of migrants that is fundamentally anti-colonial,
that respects that this land is not terra nullius,
this land has been in the stewardship, taken care
of by Indigenous peoples for a very long time.
There's Indigenous laws on these territories. How do
we respect and honour and live under these laws?
How do we pledge allegiance to Indigenous
sovereign law, sovereign Indigenous laws, right?
Rather than pledging allegiance to a
totally fucked up colonial capitalist system
that makes us believe that people are expendable,
that make us believe that the only way
to get ahead is to assimilate, right?
That the only way that we're gonna get ahead is by
buying into capitalism, by buying into colonialism,
by buying into cops and prisons
and sweatshops and apartheid,
rather than y'know, believing that we can actually
pledge allegiance to our communities,
and pledge allegiance to all our diverse families.
And pledge allegiance to the sovereign Indigenous
laws of these lands. Thank you.