[image: Logo Venezuela Analysis] “Now is the time!”: Struggle for Sexual
Diversity in Venezuela

Aug 21st 2012, by Susan Spronk, Jeffery R. Webber - The Bullet
[image: Maria Gabriela Blanco (Spronk and Webber)]

Maria Gabriela Blanco (Spronk and Webber)

*Under Hugo Chávez, there have been many gains in the struggle for
liberation, including for lesbians, gays, bisexuals and transgendered
people (LGBT). Discrimination on the basis of sexual orientation was
outlawed in the 1999 Labour Organic Law but anti-discrimination proposals
were dropped from the 1999 Constitution due to pressure from the Catholic
Church; same-sex couples cannot marry or adopt children and several
proposals that would have advanced such struggles were defeated in the
Constitutional referendum of 2007. There have always been diverse political
currents within the LGBT community, but three years ago, the first
revolutionary LGBT collective was formed. We caught up with one of its
founding members, activist María Gabriela Blanco, at a meeting of
the Alianza Popular Revolucionaria (Revolutionary Popular Alliance, APR) in
Caracas.*

*Susan Spronk and Jeffery R. Webber (SS and JRW):* Can you tell me about
how you became involved in the collective?

*Maria Gabriela Blanco (MGB):* The collective was founded on August 13,
2009. I became involved as an activist years ago when I was working for the
government-run publishing house, *Fundación Editorial El perro y la
rana* [Editorial
Foundation The Dog and the Frog]. There were six of us who worked at the
Editorial [who identified as queer] who were also militants in the *Partido
Socialista Unido de Venezuela* [United Socialist Party of Venezuela, PSUV]
and formed an electoral battle unit (patrulla). We also participated in the
organization of workers´ council initiatives. Many of us studied together
at university and some of us met our partners there.

One of the first struggles that we were involved in that more explicitly
focused on gender identity and sexual orientation was the gender equality
law that was debated in the National Assembly. The members of the Assembly
called for participation by lesbians, gays and transsexuals; one of the
deputies called for our participation because she wanted to include an
article in the law which forbids discrimination on the basis of sexual
orientation and gender identity. We saw this as a great opportunity because
we have generally been invisible in the Revolution. But there are still
many members of the National Assembly, even those who identify as
Chavistas, such as Marelis Peres Marcano, the president of the commission,
who say things like, “This is not the right time to discuss such matters
because we are talking about the family, men and women.” But Deputies Flor
Ríos and Romelia Matute spoke out in favour of our struggle, arguing that
sexual identity is fluid and changes over time.

The whole process of debating this law was very annoying because it took so
long, six months sitting at the table with no results. The members of the
National Assembly had to deal with pressure from all sides, from
collectives representing lesbians, bisexuals, transsexuals and gays from
the right and from the left; at that point there were very few queer
collectives on the left. There was only one that was serious, the Divas de
Venezuela, which has since joined us. We did not win in our battle for the
gender law. We interviewed one of the deputies who supported us, and she
told us that we needed to organize and fight.

We were tired of the fact that after 7-8 years of revolution no one was
talking about sexual diversity; the revolution is still too conservative.
We decided that we needed to do something about it. We contacted one
collective but it was clearly a right-wing organization and then we found
Divas de Venezuela, which is not an organization that works in a ‘ghetto,’
[she means wealthy neighbourhoods] but one that works right in the heart of
the struggle in the barrio ‘23 de enero’ [a poor neighbourhood in Caracas
with a long history of revolutionary struggle]. There we found a
transsexual dance teacher (called Rummie Quintero) who works with children;
she is very well respected in the community. We started to meet with her
and to organize.

Amongst us there are many artists, such as a graphic designer and writers.
The six of us worked with Rummie, and two or three other queers came along
who joined us. We started to paint graffiti in public places in the shape
of a clock, which instead of hands had symbols of women with women or men
with men to indicate that “Now is the time!” We have created different
images that express our diversity and our commitment to revolution,
especially to vindicate the struggle of transsexuals because within the
patriarchal system that we live in (even more than the capitalist system
because patriarchy came first), this struggle is one of the most oppressed
amongst us.

Now many others have also joined us from other struggles, such as the
*Movimiento
de Pobladores*, or Poor People's Movement (MP) and the campesino movement.
We are also part of the APR, which brings together a variety of different
movements. Our struggle is not just about diversity; everyone talks about
‘diversity’ since the NGO boom. Transsexuals such as Rummie argued that she
does not feel included in this language about ‘diversity’ since it is
fundamentally about gender identity. So we decided on the name *Alianza
sexo-género diversa revolucionaria*; we added the ‘revolutionary’ part
because we are Chavistas.

We are also clear that we are not defined solely by our sexual orientation
and gender identities. This aspect of our identity is the last thing that
defines us, because we are also women [and men], afro-descendants,
indigenous, poor, and Chavista, but we see our struggle as part of the
struggle against the capitalist system that oppresses us. This makes us
different from other right-wing queer collectives that only focus on
orientation and identity. For example, there is a famous activist called
Tamara Adrián, a transsexual who argues for the right to change our names,
but she is wealthy. Our struggle is also a class struggle. Our priority is
the most oppressed people – the lesbians, gays, bisexuals, trans and
heterosexuals who are also working-class.

Sometimes other Chavistas criticize us for being ‘anarchists’ because we
criticize the government, but we are drawing attention to the
discrimination that exists within our movements and the institutions of the
state. It is the whole system that needs to change; this change will
require more than a law. But we have had some successes in legal battles.
We had good experiences working with the renters’ movement to discuss a law
related to housing. They invited us to the debate because we had been
working with them already. This was a really great experience because there
are now two articles in this law prohibiting landlords from discriminating
on the basis of sexual orientation and gender identity. The popular
participation law also makes reference to the principle of
non-discrimination. The right wing cannot say that there have been no
advances for queers. There have been many victories and advances in our
struggle under Chávez.

We are currently based in Caracas, and most of our members are from the
city. We have a listserv of about 24 people, but there are about 15 of us
who are active in person on a regular basis. It is a strength that most of
us work, but it is difficult to find a time when everyone can meet. Every
Monday evening we meet at the Plaza Bolívar – almost religiously – at the
same time. Everyone is welcome to join: lesbians, gays, bisexuals,
poly-amorous people, transsexuals, and heterosexuals, too. Now we publish
our own political bulletin. We also have a column in Todosadentro, which is
a weekly magazine published by the Ministry of Culture, and in Epale,
another publication in Caracas. We are writing about sexual sovereignty and
sovereignty over our bodies in these columns. We also participate in a
radio show called “In Check” [En Jaque] that takes place at 2PM on
Tuesdays, every second Tuesday, which we help to co-produce. We have also
made appearances on feminist TV shows such as, “Fallopian Tube” [El
Entrompe de Falopio], which runs in Caracas and on national television, and
a radio program, “Diverse but not Perverse” [Diversos No Perversos], which
airs on National Venezuelan Radio.

*SS and JRW:* Chávez has been talking about ‘socialism’ in Venezuela since
2005. What does ‘socialism’ mean to the collective?

*MGB:* This is a difficult issue for the collective, not because of the
process itself but because Latin America remains very sexist (machista).
Not to be too pessimistic, but Venezuela remains very patriarchal. Speaking
of the election campaign, for example, there was a bad joke insulting an
opposition candidate [a male] as being ‘feminine.’ But it is not correct to
make fun of the ‘feminine.’ In the same revolutionary process with a
President [Chávez] who identifies as a feminist, who identifies this
process as a socialist and feminist process, or as a feminist and socialist
process, this is a contradiction. So we have to encourage critical
reflection amongst our compañeros, in our neighbourhoods and in our
workplaces, to identify this contradiction that they are making fun of the
‘feminine.’ After all, at the base of homophobia is a kind of sexism, to
suppose that anything that is feminine about a man is a kind of weakness.
This is how we started to approach the problem.

In 2010 Chávez called forth the homosexuals, the youth, to join the process
(‘el proceso’). While he was saying this we were recording it, sending it
to each other as text messages, and we put it on Facebook. Obviously the
right made fun of this. But this kind of discrimination crosses political
lines, whether you are revolutionary of not. It affects the left and the
right. Once you are in the kitchen, a left-wing sexist is the same as a
right-wing sexist, even though there shouldn't be sexism (machismo) on the
left. After that moment we had even greater resolution in giving our
support to Chávez. He called for us to struggle the same way that he called
for the participation of the afro-descendants, the campesinos, the
fishermen and the fisherwomen. The fact that he named us meant that our
struggles are recognized, although before we would march without anyone
seeing us.

Once we formed the ASGDRe, we decided that our first march would be with
the Poor People's Movement (MP). We made our own 3-metre sign that had our
name and called for the right to housing for same-sex couples and the right
to live in dignity. We also carried a
flag<http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8vn_7DDAD7k> with
rainbow colors. We wanted other people to see us for who we are, and since
we have articulations with militants in all different movements, they gave
us their support. For the first half hour we were really tense but we
managed to get over it and just march. The rainbow flag did not have
anything written on it. But the signs did say something and we marched with
them. Now people make rainbow flags of 100 metres and everyone marches
behind them. You will see the flag in barrios such as Antímano, in Petare
[poor neighbourhoods in Caracas].

We support Chávez because even in his Plan 2013-2019, he talks about how we
queers have lived in a situation of repression and that the only way out of
this state is to overcome the capitalist system [she refers us to article
5.3.3.2 of the electoral platform]. This consumerist system that we live in
has caused a lot of divisions, even amongst us queers. We discriminate even
amongst ourselves. The gay and lesbian bars in Caracas, for example, do not
let in transsexuals. They suffer total discrimination unless they have
money. So, rich transsexuals such as Tamara Adrián (who I mentioned
earlier) can get in but other compañeras, no. So she makes a denouncement
about human rights but it does not advance beyond that. Of course, this is
not to say that she has not done good things.

But before, these gay ‘ghettos’ were the only places that I could go
because I had to hide. I had to adopt another personality when I was with
my family or at the university; spaces for us would open at 4 or 5 in the
afternoon – these spaces with shaded doorways, with no light inside, and
music so loud that no one could talk. Most people would go there to meet
someone like them. But now that I am Chavista, I am out to part of my
family and I go to conventional places.

Once I was with my partner in a shopping centre – again, this will not
happen to you if you have money – and they told us that, “This is a family
establishment.” We paid the bill but they had the police escort us until we
had left the shopping centre. So what is the Venezuelan state doing so that
everybody can enjoy public spaces<http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iQ36W5A7eXs>?
In the PDVSA Estancia [a recreation centre owned by the state oil company]
they will not let same-sex couples hold hands because they say that it is a
“place for families” and that “there are children present.” Che talked
about how revolution is about love. We are not having sexual relations when
we are simply holding hands!

These problems are not the fault of the revolution but the legacy of the
bourgeois state – at least now we have the advantage of having a
collective, to be able to understand what is happening. We are fighting so
that this ‘socialist’ system recognizes diversity. We are fighting so that
within our popular movement there is diversity of thought but unity in
action – this is the idea behind the revolution. But we still have
structures of the state – this state which is not socialist – that are
going to repress us. We have to know who we are with and who we are
against. There are still a few things about which we need critical
reflection. PDVSA is the economic arm of this rent-dependent,
petroleum-producing country. But we have to join the debate because there
is no way that we can beat this capitalist system if we cannot debate
others from the popular movement. And our strength is that we have spaces
in which popular education (formación popular) is taking place. These are
not academic workshops, but popular spaces in which we learn from the
people, like the communal councils.

*SS and JRW:* What is the importance of the elections on October 7, 2012?

*MGB:* In this movement there is broad agreement that we are not playing
around, that we are finally declaring our independence, as argued by José
Martí. If we win these elections it is going to deepen the process. This
process has many problems since we are in a transition. There are still
many vices of capitalism. I am twenty-eight years old; I was born in
capitalism and I have the same vices. I have never known anything else. But
now we are talking about other forms of property, other ideas.

Right now I work in a social production enterprise, trying to work with the
communities to socialize property and production. I am not only a
homosexual [she says laughing]. And although we have control over the
political because we have the government, we do not have control over the
economic. Chávez has told us this same thing many times. It is no secret.
But we are advancing with this new model of production and management, and
advancing in how we see ourselves as workers and as producers; we are not
going to have these discussions if Chávez leaves.

We have to work to guarantee the vote. The reason that the President is
there is that he is the figurehead who moves us emotionally, who unites
those of us from the base, who inspires the popular movements. He is
carrying the process but we are responsible for it. Without a doubt, there
have been so many gains and a million demands; our movement is not yet as
advanced as others such as the campesino movement, or the movement of
renters. I do not know anyone who has been unaffected by this process: a
friend who received a new house because theirs was destroyed in a flood,
another who has participated in one of the missions. Here we have free
education. There is free health care, even if it is not the best (although
Michael Moore shows how the U.S. claim to the best health care is a lie).
The media outside of Venezuela misrepresents this process; Chávez is the
most democratic president this country has ever had. •

*Susan Spronk teaches international development at the University of
Ottawa. She is a research associate with the Municipal Services
Project<http://www.municipalservicesproject.org/> and
has published various articles on working-class formation and water
politics in Latin America.*

*Jeffery R. Webber teaches politics and international relations at Queen
Mary, University of London. He is the author of Red October: Left
Indigenous Struggles in Modern Bolivia(Haymarket, 2012).*
 ------------------------------
*Source URL (retrieved on 21/08/2012 - 4:35pm):*
http://venezuelanalysis.com/analysis/7191


[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]



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