Colonial sexual violence (North America)

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Colonial sexual violence in North America refers to the systems put in place by Europeans through settler colonialism that enforces gender divides, support sexual exploitation, and use patriarchy as a means to control the Indigenous population.[1] These systems not only affected men, women, and two-spirit people differently, but disrupted traditional ways of living in a negative manner which thus removed their identity.[2] As settler colonialism is an ongoing effort, these systems have remained in place and continue to perpetrate harm today as seen through generational trauma related to the residential school system, MMIW, and the Indian Act. Indigenous scholars emphasize the need for community healing and traditional practices to heal the collective traumas, and experiences of sexual violence, enacted through settler colonialism.

The English people who came to North America promoted "proper" sex, meaning the purpose of sex was reproduction. Protestant churches promoted that sexual relations outside of marriage were sinful. This led to one motive for marriage to express sexual lust to be compliant with church policy. [3]

When Spanish settlers arrived in colonial North America, they brought the idea of private property. Prior to their arrival, indigenous people typically did not believe control over other's sexuality was possible. When Spanish settlers arrived, they believed rape was a right of conquest and expected captives to engage in sex without consideration to consent. [4]

Patriarchal systems[edit]

Patriarchal systems are designed to keep an unequal power imbalance in society. This power imbalance favours men and disenfranchises women, making them second-class citizens. Patriarchal systems are designed to benefit cis-gendered white men; patriarchal systems intersect with identities such as race, sexual orientation and ethnicity.[5] These ideas on how humans should organize themselves blend into political, social and religious teachings and shape how an individual sees themselves within society. These systems can only function when the majority share and participate in a common ideology; everyone participates in the patriarchy regardless of their race or gender.[6] When Europeans colonized North America, they arrived with pre-existing social organizations and enforced them through violence.[5]

Patriarchal systems develop male-centric ideologies on sex, gender and gender representations, men decided how the world should be, rather than looking to others and their experiences.[6] This system stresses the importance of gender roles, how a man is to look, think, and feel become opposite to that of a woman. Patriarchy is present in every sphere of human life and can control aspects of life outside the social.[6] The patriarchy also plays strongly into what is considered desirable in women. Within this system, a good woman is a godly woman who stays home and provides motherly care for her children. She is pure and obedient to her husband and shares in his religious and political beliefs.[6] This hierarchy is essential for control, and within patriarchal systems, one has varying levels of control. For example, a white woman living in England has more control than a woman of non-European descent. This is very important for understanding how this oppressive system affected colonized people in the past as well as in the present.

Role of masculinity[edit]

Colonial sexual violence affected men in different ways than it affected women. In many traditional Indigenous societies, the man's role was to provide for and protect their communities which gave them an identity.[2] Skills in these areas were taught and performed by young men, and their successes were celebrated by older male role models. This created a positive sense of masculinity and manhood within Indigenous communities grounded in traditional Indigenous beliefs such as kindness, community, and equality.[2] When European systems were forced onto Indigenous groups their ways of life and identity changed to conform with European ideals.[7]

Patriarchal systems, heteronormative ideals, and race science introduced by European colonizers were used to differentiate between the "civilized" European and the Indigenous "other".[8] Colonial masculinity, masculinity rooted in violence, conquest, and superiority, was only able to exist because there was an “other” to socially dominate. Indigenous masculinity was considered weak because of the sexual perversions that it allowed and this was used to create an image of Indigenous people as inhuman and justify the violence perpetrated against them.[7] Implementing these systems disempowered Indigenous men and the adoption of colonial masculinity allowed for the acceptance of sexual violence in Indigenous communities because women no longer had the power to protect themselves and men were trying to prove their masculinity was on par with the colonizers.[9]

Sexual violence in North America[edit]

Many scholars comment on the strong connection between colonialism and rape. Some argue that rape was uncommon among Indigenous communities before the arrival of Europeans.[10] This has to do with the patriarchal society that Europeans enforced onto many Indigenous communities and the change from Indigenous matriarchs to Indigenous patriarchs. The patriarchy of Europeans promoted the idea of nudity with sexuality; therefore Indigenous women were seen as lewd and impure.[10] Sexual violence against Indigenous women ties in closely with the need for control and power: when an Indigenous woman is raped it is seen as permissible and necessary due to the understanding that Indigenous women are less than white women and bordering on inhuman.[11] There were many instances where colonists openly proclaimed that Indigenous women were sinful and that there was no such thing as a virtuous Indigenous woman.

Sexual violence was also used as a way further instill control over, and divide, Indigenous and white women. By creating narratives of the murderous Indigenous man, white men were able to demonstrate their superiority over and further dehumanize Indigenous people.[11] This has continued into the present day: Indigenous women are raped twice as often as any other minority group.[11] Studies have also proven that most of these rapes are committed by white assailants.[10]

Affective control and childhood sexual abuse[edit]

Emotions were weaponized beginning in the 1960s to create internalized colonialism and control Indigenous populations through inward control and shame, rather than physically violent acts.[1] Through forced enrollment in residential schools, Indigenous children were taught that their culture, beliefs, and ways of being were wrong and that only conforming to whiteness would save them from their uncivilized ways of living and knowing.[1] This turned children against themselves and their communities through identity stripping and brainwashing. Children who were subjected to the residential school system came to feel ashamed of who they were due to teachings that were acts of cultural genocide. The hierarchy of power was deeply engrained in the minds of Indigenous children, with dominant societal views reiterating the idea that Indigeneity was shameful and less than others.[1] Assimilation was framed as the only way to move forward and be an acceptable and accepted citizen.[8]

Within these schools, sexual abuse was widespread and served as discipline as well as social teachings regarding their place in the world. Sexual abuse removed their bodily autonomy, reinforcing that they have little say in their own lives, and created the narrative that they exist to please others.[1]

Abuse stemming from residential schools continues to be seen today through generational trauma and continued cycles of abuse. This further harms Indigenous people as it shows itself as addictions, broken families, lack of community or family connection, shame, and cultural distance.

Combatting colonial sexual violence[edit]

Indigenous scholars agree that combatting the continued colonial sexual violence must be done collectively as a community and encompass traditional Indigenous healing practices. There are continued challenges for Indigenous people due to racism and the resistance from society to accept two-spirit and queer people.[12] Racism and heteropatriarchy were built together and rely on one another to continue existing, creating, and upholding that idea of  "other" within society. As Tompson Highway explains, "if the colonial project was to succeed, we are not supposed to be here" showing the resilience that Indigenous communities hold and the steps being taken towards accepting two-spirit people and decolonizing sex, love, and gender within their communities despite the cultural genocide enacted.[12]

Geraldine King speaks of the need to reconnect to the land, community, and ceremony to break the cycle of collective trauma and cultivate love.[13]

References[edit]

  1. ^ a b c d e Million, Dian (2013-09-26). Therapeutic Nations: Healing in an Age of Indigenous Human Rights. University of Arizona Press. ISBN 978-0-8165-3018-2.
  2. ^ a b c Martino, Wayne; Greig, Christopher John (2012). Canadian Men and Masculinities: Historical and Contemporary Perspectives. Canadian Scholars' Press. ISBN 978-1-55130-411-3.
  3. ^ McCurdy, John Gilbert (2020), Pennock, Caroline Dodds; Antony, Robert; Carroll, Stuart (eds.), "Gender and Violence in Early America", The Cambridge World History of Violence: Volume 3: AD 1500–AD 1800, The Cambridge World History of Violence, vol. 3, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, pp. 255–273, doi:10.1017/9781316340592.014, ISBN 978-1-107-11911-6, retrieved 2023-11-17
  4. ^ Whyatt, Robin (2023-03-02). "Violence Against Native Women Has Colonial Roots". Progressive.org. Retrieved 2023-11-17.
  5. ^ a b Facio, Alda (2013). "What is Patriarchy?" (PDF). Retrieved March 12, 2023.
  6. ^ a b c d Johnson, Allan G (2005). "The Gender Knot: Unraveling our patriarchal legacy" (PDF). Retrieved March 12, 2023.
  7. ^ a b Innes, Robert Alexander; Anderson, Kim (2015-11-06). Indigenous Men and Masculinities: Legacies, Identities, Regeneration. Univ. of Manitoba Press. ISBN 978-0-88755-477-3.
  8. ^ a b Toews, Owen (2018). Stolen City: Racial Capitalism and the Making of Winnipeg. Treaty 1 Territory and History Métis Nation Homeland: ARP Books. pp. 9–14. ISBN 9781894037952.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location (link)
  9. ^ Tallbear, Kim (May 5, 2021). "Protect Indigenous Women". All My Relations (Podcast).
  10. ^ a b c Gerolami, Giselle (2015). "The Beginning and End of Rape". Against the Current. Retrieved March 20, 2023.
  11. ^ a b c Smith, Andrea (2005). Conquest: Sexual Violence and American Indian Genocide. South End Press. pp. 1–16. ISBN 978-0-8223-6038-4.
  12. ^ a b Ayed, Nahlah (November 21, 2022). "Ideas with Nahlah Ayed" (Podcast episode "Indigenous Sexuality and Gender").
  13. ^ King, Geraldine (May 5, 2021). "All My Loving Relations". All My Relations (Podcast).