Men all around Australia are clamouring for women to cease
identifying them with other men. Women all around Australia are clamouring for
women to cease identifying men with other men.
We may indeed be heading towards a post-gender society, but there is no
sign that our communities are becoming less influenced and maintained by Patriarchal norms.
Let’s break that down a little. Perhaps not all men are those
kinds of men. Perhaps not all women are those kinds of women. But we are all
human beings. Not all human beings rape and murder other human beings, but all
human beings who have been raped and murdered are (or rather WERE),
nonetheless, human beings who were raped and murdered by other human beings. I
don’t wish to be raped or murdered, and I wish no other human beings would be
raped and murdered by other human beings. Implicit in those wishes, is the
third wish, that human beings would cease raping and murdering other human
beings. I’m not sure that expresses the issue in a succinct manner that is
easily understood by all human beings. Yet how could I express it with more
clarity?
It is possible to separate the two crimes – rape, from
murder. I believe we have moved beyond the point where rape is tantamount to
murder, where a raped human being can be said to be “better off dead”, than being
condemned to live ever more under the stigma, shame and eternal isolation that
signals a human being who has been removed from community, rendered useless and
worthless because another human being raped that one and then discarded that
one, like used up rubbish.
With regards to sentencing a human being who raped another
human being, the Law and Justice system of Australia has probably not altered
the legal view of rape as being “as serious as murder”, but I am content, for
now, to sideline this issue, due to the paltry number of human beings who are
ever sentenced and punished because they raped other human beings. Rape is
commonplace. Many adult human beings routinely rape young human beings as part
of their bedtime routine. Please note – this statement in no way condones the
fact. Nor does this statement in any way accuse your husband, your step-father,
your son, your brother, your uncle, your grandfather of being guilty of rape.
It is simply a statement which in my experience as a human being is true.
This being the case, how does one define rape? The common
definition of rape is to separate it from sexual intercourse between human
beings, identifying the disparity of power between those human beings, as well
as, of course, the issue of consent, and emotional terrorisation of the human
being who is raped by other human beings. The concept of rape has also become
broader, and flatter, incorporating a hierarchy of degrees of violation,
determined not by the raped human being, nor necessarily even by the human
being(s) who chose to rape another human being, but for the purpose of legally defining
the extent to which one or more human beings raped the other human being, in
order to place parameters around the severity of the punishment that might be meted
out to the rapist human being(s), should it be proven that the alleged rape
took place. Such parameters involve particular body parts and orifices, whether
a rape was successful, or thwarted by the human being who tried to stop the
other human being from raping them; the number of attempts made, whether
objects were used to assist the rape, and to assist the rapist(s) in subduing
the human being who was being raped, the location, time and circumstances
around the rape. Suffice it to say that rape and murder are clearly not one and
the same crime.
Those human beings gifted with the task of supporting raped
human beings through their recovery and life reclamation will tell us there is
little discernable difference in the effect of rape on the raped person,
according to the various measures of severity as set out above.
After all, it is bad enough to be a human being who has been
raped by another human being or – indeed by a group of other human beings, but
the annual count of Dead Women (sic!) would be so much higher, if every rape
that occurred, resulted not only in the loss of status, relationship, physical,
mental and emotional health, power, employability, faith, safety, etc., but
also death.
Does death require a definition? Does murder require a
nuanced set of conditions? The result, for the dead human being, is the same,
every time, isn’t it?
No, every rape does not end with death of the raped person.
I am thankful for my life. Every such trauma and crime inflicted upon individuals
and the community (for who is not affected by the media reports?) adds weight
to the burden that more than half of all human beings carry, as a result of the
prevalence of rape. What was done to me, shapes my life, pares down my
potential, cuts me ever down to size, and that is in spite of my resilience and
my determination not to play victim. I am not and never will be the human being
I might have been. There is no self-determination for human beings who have
been burdened with the effects of rape, and the possibility of being raped,
except within those boundaries imposed by our own psyches in the context of our
broader societies and civilisations. So if it is possible to nuance death by
reference to those parts of oneself that were brutally removed, cast off,
crushed and suffocated out of existence, a raped human being is partially dead.
When news reports about the murder and rape of Eurydice Dixon began appearing in my news feed, I began to feel more oppressed, more
fearful and more outraged than ever. While it is true that involuntary
silencing of story is toxic and dangerous, the manner in which these
brutalities are related to the wider public continues to be sickeningly beside
the point. Yes, the issues of language are vital, and need to be examined.
There was one particular article that I can no longer find, which described how
the human being Eurydice Dixon had been “left to die alone in the cold”. Bile
rose from my normally cast iron stomach, when I read these words. I saw red. I
needed to go outside and gasp for some fresh air. Really? Would it really have
been more humane, if Eurydice Dixon’s rapist had sat, holding her hand, as she
died? Is the fact that Jaymes Todd raped her, of more human interest, than the
fact that he murdered her? It seems so. Nowhere, can I find any information of
how Eurydice Dixon died. These details are suppressed. Why? Is it out of a
sense of decency and to protect rapist and dead woman and their associates,
from further distress?
Other than adding weight to the burden of fear and shame that
more than half of human beings carry with us day and night, such nuanced silences
surrounding atrocities change nothing. She is still dead.
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