看不见受害者:马尼兰的教会和妇女在津巴布韦民族愈合与和解中的政治暴力经历

IF 0.3 0 RELIGION
M. Manyonganise
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引用次数: 1

摘要

从2000年到现在,津巴布韦的政治历史一直以暴力为特征。2008年,当非洲民族联盟-爱国阵线在选举中被反对党民主变革运动击败时,这种暴力达到了顶峰。暴力导致数百人丧生,更多人致残、流离失所和/或遭受性虐待。在这种政治暴力的背景下,随着津巴布韦教会打破其沉默的文化,出现了各种教会团体,并试图谴责使用分裂政治和利用政治暴力作为政治利益的手段。2000年出现的一个这样的组织是马尼托巴省的一个教会论坛,名为马尼托巴省教会(CiM)。从一开始,国际监测组织就力求通过一系列活动治愈政治暴力的受害者,并实现马尼加莱各社区的和解。2008年的政治暴力导致了《全球政治协议》的签署,在该协议中,国家愈合与和解的问题被正式确定,关键的国家机构(包括教会)被恳求发挥其有意义的作用。然而,研究民族愈合与和解的学者注意到,在冲突后的国家,性别往往不是重建过程的一部分。本文试图做的是评估中国在参与津巴布韦国家愈合和和解进程中的性别方法,包括2000年以来的非官方层面和2008年以来的官方层面。根据原始的实证研究(焦点小组和访谈),本文展示了CiM如何采用一种一般方法来处理马尼兰的民族治愈与和解教会和妇女政治暴力经历111过程,这使得妇女的政治暴力经历变得不可见。据设想,这是告知教会将妇女的政治暴力经历带入“中心”的一种方式。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Invisibilising the victimised: churches in Manicaland and women's experiences of political violence in national healing and reconciliation in Zimbabwe
Zimbabwe’s political history from 2000 to the present epoch has been characterized by violence. This violence reached its peak in 2008 when ZANU PF was defeated at the polls by the opposition party, MDC-T. The violence resulted in hundreds of people losing their lives while many more were maimed, displaced and/or sexually abused. In this context of political violence, various church groups emerged as the church in Zimbabwe broke its culture of silence and sought to condemn the deployment of divisive politics and the use of political violence as a means to political gain. One such group that emerged in 2000 is a forum of churches in the province of Manicaland called Churches in Manicaland (CiM). From the onset, CiM sought to bring healing to victims of political violence as well as reconciliation of communities in Manicaland through a number of activities. The 2008 political violence resulted in the signing of the Global Political Agreement in which the issue of national healing and reconciliation became officialised and critical national institutions (the church included) were implored to play their roles meaningfully. However, scholars on national healing and reconciliation have noted how gender is often not part of reconstruction processes in post-conflict nations. What this paper seeks to do is to evaluate CiM’s approach to gender in its participation in the national healing and reconciliation process in Zimbabwe, both at an unofficial level from 2000 and at the official level from 2008. Drawing on original empirical research (focus groups and interviews), the paper shows how CiM has adopted a general approach to the national healing and reconciliation Churches in Manicaland and Women’s Experiences of Political Violence 111 process, which has made women’s experiences of political violence invisible. It is envisaged that this is one way of informing the church to bring to the ‘centre’ women’s experiences of political violence.
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