News and Opinion News My Ancestors Knew Me - Maverique Z. My parents made me come out to them after I got diagnosed with severe depression.Well, maybe “made me” is an over exaggeration but they cried and begged me to tellthem anything else I was holding back from them. So, I came out. I was immediately hitwith the “This isn’t God’s plan” and “It is a Western import” rhetoric. I was raised Christian, I was raised homophobic, and because my parents are critical ofthe whole damn world, I was raised to have a critical view on everything. And afterreading a lot, I came to realise that if anything was imported, it had to be homophobia. Ifanything was not God’s plan, it had to be the unprecedented levels of queerphobiaacross the African continent. Stories about queerness in Africa are often fraught with pain. We share stories of kito, ofqueerphobic attacks, of parents who disown and friends who betray, and of pastors whopreach hellfire. That is very unfortunate, as we have a much richer queer history andpresent than what dominates the news. Rarely do we share stories of homebuilding andcommunity finding. Of retracing our steps and finding our roots. So, where is this queerness in our history? Well, I will start with my favourite:alternative gender identities among the Swahili. The third gender in Kenya is known asmashoga. They wear women’s clothing, perform at wedding ceremonies, playinstruments typically associated with women, and are as a result sometimes likened toEuro-American drag queens. Woman-woman marriages were also documented among the Igbo and Yoruba ofNigeria, the Lovedu of South Africa, and the Nandi of Kenya, among others. These wereusually done for economic benefit where a richer, older woman would marry a younger,less wealthier one. This union is legally, socially, and symbolically recognized as amarriage, with the expectation that the woman who pays the bride price will provide forher wife and that the wife will bear children. The best part is that despite it beingignored or condemned by foreign anthropologists, officials, and the religiousinstitutions they brought with them, it is still practiced in parts of Africa today. Then there are also the mine marriages in South Africa, the yan daudu among theHausa, the chibados in Ndongo kingdom of Angola, and the ashtime of Maale culture insouthern Ethiopia, among many others in various cultures. In reading and digging deeper, I discovered that across the continent, manycommunities held space for diverse gender identities and sexual orientations. Notnecessarily in the way we think of queerness today, but in the form of real experiencesthat definitely defy the rhetoric of it being “un-African”. That said, if you had told me years ago that I would find healing and calm throughresearch papers and academic books of all things, I would have scoffed at you. Butknowledge, regardless of the form it comes in, can be balm. I did not find hundreds ofacademic texts. I only found a few, but those few carried me and made me feel lessalone. They reminded me that though rejection from the world might spell loneliness, itdoesn’t have to spell disconnection. Disconnection from knowledge, from history, orfrom the fact I am not a mistake. This essay is a part of my way of reconnecting. This is for queer people like me who are still being told they are too Western, toostrange, too different. It is for those of us who have had to leave home to find home, beit literally, emotionally, or spiritually. It is a love letter to the ancestors who lived boldlyin bodies that colonisation later tried to erase. And it is a reminder that queerness andAfricanness are not at odds. So now when I hear people cry that queerness is a Western import, I have to stop andask: Whose history are you reading? Because the real history, my history, was notimported. It was erased. The thing about history though is that it can always be rewritten. We get to edit it andadd our own experiences. After all, our “is” gradually becomes our “was”. People nowmay be able to feign ignorance and say we have no queer history in Africa, but thatexcuse will not hold up for much longer. Our existence will not be glossed over oromitted. We exist fully in the here and now, partying at raves, chanting slogans in the streets, orparticipating in queer discourse online. Holding hands with our partners in public orcuddling with them in front of a movie at night. Volunteering at queer organisations or quietly liking their posts on social media. History has proved our presence, the present witnesses our experiences, and the futurewill tell our stories. About the Writer Maverique Z. (they/them) is a queer and maverique writer from Nigeria whose work explores queerness and identity, often through a Nigerian lens—as shown in their work published in Minority Africa. When not writing, they’re crocheting, studying, or spending time with their bunny. They hope their work feels like home for others, the way their favourite works have been for them. Keep up with them at https://maverique.carrd.co// Manage Cookie Preferences