Mexico's Street Brigade: Sex, Revolution, and Social Change
- Opinión
What purpose is there, in classic revolutionary logic, in covering thousands of kilometers to meet with a handful of whores and crossdressers? What can such alliances offer to strengthen the "accumulation of power," any professional politicians' central task? It seems obvious, from a cost-benefit analysis, that this type of effort should be useless. However, Subcomandante Marcos has been committed to this kind of meeting since January of last year under the auspices of The Other Campaign (La Otra Campaña), with the understanding that it means looking for new ways of doing politics. It passes through places that are far from the madding crowd and takes place with actors who, like indigenous people, understand social change as an affirmation of difference.
A Question of Charm The sale of condoms is the main source of financing for the diverse projects of the Mexican Sex Work Network. Choosing the type of condom alongside design and name becomes a form of claiming ownership of the instrument of work and protection, and was left up to the ideas of prostitutes and transvestites. "When we began the AIDS-protection program," remembers Elvira, "we realized that price was one of the main problems. For older ladies, to spend 25 pesos on a condom was to invest almost everything they had charged the client." Firstly they looked for donations from the State, which through CENSIDA, the organization dedicated to the fight against AIDS, donated them 60,000 condoms a month. "But when we began to report cases of corruption they reduced that to 3,600 condoms." They began to visit various distributors and factories and found that, in exact opposite to what market laws should indicate, buying in bulk raised the prices. They got in contact with a manufacturer who agreed to sell to them at the same price as to pharmacies and other distributors. "We nearly fell over in shock. He sold us condoms at 75 cents (about US$.07) each but in the pharmacies they're 12 pesos ($1), that is 15 times the price of the cost," Elvira says. The Network began to distribute condoms at the price of one peso each, and with that profit they managed to subsidize almost all the projects, but particularly the clinics that consumed the bulk of their resources. "Before putting them on sale we spoke to the compañeras, we did workshops to see what they wanted, because some condoms smelled very bad or irritated because they contained harmful substances. They themselves suggested the name "El Encanto" (The Charm) to the three-month long debate process in which hundreds of sex workers chose between 20 brands." The brand had to be attractive for both the client and for themselves. Currently, they sell three million a year. But the transvestites decided not to use the chosen condom because it wasn't suited to their needs. "They said it's very thin and they were right, because it was designed for vaginal use and it would break when they used it." They found a stronger and more lubricated condom and started the same debate as the women had had. In the end they decided to print the rainbow of sexual diversity on it, and a pink triangle. "They chose the name Triángulo (Triangle) because that's the symbol with which the Nazis stigmatized homosexuals, so in that way they adopted it as a tribute," says Elvira. They failed with the female condom. A few years ago they began to import it from England until a multinational company realized that the Mexican market was growing and withdrew the Network's permission to distribute. In effect, the market is very monopolized. "While in the world there are 67 condom factories, there's just one for female condoms. We have to wait for there to be more competition," says Elvira, with irony. Subcomandante Marcos is El Encanto's most famous supporter. In Mexico there is a long history of "condom fairs." In November 2005 the 50th National Condom Festival was celebrated in Mexico City's central plaza and in various states local annual fairs are held to raise money for organizations linked to sex work. Recently the first "virtual condom store" made its debut on www.elencantodelcondon.com. Brigada Callejera de Apoyo a la Mujer (Women's Supportive Street Brigade) is a Mexican collective that has managed, in the last 15 years, to weave a wide net of social work with prostitutes and transvestites, called the Mexican Sex Work Network. This has meant transcending the "victim" role and becoming people who want to be recognized as workers by their peers, not seen as beings who have "fallen" into the world's oldest profession through ignorance, poverty, or submission. A quick look at what they have tackled so far reveals a deep work of emancipation. |
Education, Clinics, and Condoms
A differentiating characteristic of the Network is that its members don't want to depend on the State, although they are constantly criticizing it. Street Brigade began its work 15 years ago, its base a group of sociology graduates from the National Autonomous University of Mexico (UNAM). The small initial nucleus—Elvira Madrid, Jaime Montejo, and Rosa Icela—began to weave a net that now reaches 28 of Mexico's 32 states. Over time they chose to work in a horizontal form, but not for ideological reasons. "The government co-opted many state coordinations, a habitual practice in the political culture of this country, so we saw that the best way to work is horizontally, in an assembly style, and trying not to have representatives," Elvira points out.
The Network encouraged women to form cooperatives to avoid dependence and to make themselves the bosses of their sources of employment. They rented hotels and shared the profits among the members. The first were the transvestites who formed the cooperative Angeles en Busca de Libertad (Angels Searching for Freedom).
"The cooperative hotels exist in various states but some of them failed because the members would end up replicating the same behavioral patterns as the ones they were organizing against," Rosa comments.
But the star project, the one most valued by the workers, are the clinics. Two clinics already exist in Mexico City and are self-managed and free of charge. They were born from the corruption and discrimination of the state organisms that only provided them with services through bribery. Moreover, Elvira indicates, "Getting tested scared them because it could mean loss of income, given that when a girl has AIDS there are state governments that will put her photo up in hotels so that they don't give her a room." On the contrary, in the Network clinics tests are voluntary and confidential, emphasizing education. "The majority of sex workers are illiterate and many are indigenous. For this reason we dedicate most of our efforts to education, to the point that most of the participants in the Network are health promoters and educate their peers, which is much more effective."
The clinics, one of them situated in the center of the city right in the "red light district" offer colposcopies and pap smears and also electrosurgery because, as Rosa says, "in Mexico papiloma viruses (HPV) cause more deaths than HIV." While inefficient public hospitals have two-month waiting lists for being seen and one year waiting lists for surgery, the Network clinics' results are ready in just a week.
The prostitutes and the transvestites seem enthusiastic about "their" clinic, where they often bring their partners, and where some even drag their clients. "The main part of our work is respect. We don't ask why they got infected, rather we concentrate on educating them so it doesn't happen to them again, so they aren't just patients any more, so they begin to be active participants in their health care," Elvira says. The project is rounded off with a food program for people with limited resources or who for some reason can't work, a school assistance program for the kids, and another to help mothers finish school.
The Network's projects are financed by "social condom marketing." Condoms are sold at different prices depending on the ability and responsibility of the buyer, and represent 85% of the Network's income. No one is salaried and the only people who are paid for their work are the doctors. "We don't agree with sex work, but it exists and will continue to exist, and in the meantime we have to do something. We were an abolitionist group but later we saw that it wasn't about saving anybody, but really about working together," Jaime intervenes. For those who are looking for alternatives to sex work, there are productive projects, the most outstanding of which are handicrafts, production and sale of clothing, and condom stores. Although some projects have turned out to be unviable, as families collaborated they managed to keep two-thirds of the attempts open.
Survival in the Jungle
In 2004, the members of the Street Brigade came into contact with the Health Collective for Everyone (Colectivo de Salud para Todos y Todas), university students who coordinate health projects in the autonomous Zapatista communities in Chiapas. For two years they worked with a group of health promoters in the communities, indigenous people chosen by their neighbors to specialize in sanitary assistance. "One of the first challenges was breaking the fear of supposed cultural resistances about the subject of contraception, sexual and reproductive rights, and sexually transmitted diseases," they relate.
During these consultations and workshops they chose the themes that would later resurface in the elaboration of a long and densely-named manual: The Other Campaign of Sexual and Reproductive Health for the Indigenous and Peasant Resistance in Mexico. Over 270 pages, this text, full of detailed illustrations designed for work with indigenous women, covers the usual issues like anatomy and physiology of the reproductive organs, use of contraceptives, pregnancy, sexually transmitted diseases, and other illnesses. They also speak of abortion, although the catechists condemn it. "Samuel Ruiz, a man who is very close to the indigenous people, toured the communities when the Zapatistas decriminalized abortion, saying that it's a crime," Jaime remembers.
But there are sections imbibed with diverse currents of alternative health. One of these concentrates on "women's bodily autonomy," which covers education on how to avoid illnesses, choosing how many children to have, and how to enjoy one's sexuality (almost a taboo among indigenous people). Bodily autonomy supposes, according to this manual, the exploration of the senses, connection with language to do with the body, and the different reactions of the body in extreme situations. Collective and self-massages link this to a holistic conception of health and curing.
National Sex Work Day: Battling Sexist Violence Crime and aggression against sex workers are everyday occurrences. On July 11, 2006 a group of soldiers raped 14 dancers in Castaños, Coahuila—the perpetrators remain unpunished. In the La Merced area of Mexico City, in just 15 days last July four sex workers were murdered. At the commemoration of the first anniversary of the Castaños rape incident, the Mexican Sex Work Network began to celebrate the National Day of Sex Work as a way of drawing attention to the violence and discrimination that prostitutes and transvestites suffer. A Network report manifests its rejection of the "tolerance zones" imposed in various cities, as they are "a system of control that legitimates sexual, economic, and psychological exploitation of minors and adults who are linked to commercial sex." However, the Network maintains that after seven years of monitoring, it found that among the main crimes against sex workers are forced disappearances and the kidnappings and sexual exploitation of their children. |
The development of this manual meant overcoming more than a few obstacles. In regards to family planning, three strikingly different community experiences emerged: repressive and authoritarian government schemes, the religious ban on contraception, and "the guerilla wish to populate the earth with little guerilla sons." From three different angles, these three policies overlooked women's wishes. The manual is used by hundreds of educators working in tens of Zapatista-constructed clinics, in over a decade, in the thousand supporting communities.
As opposed to what the sociologists thought at the beginning of their work, say Elvira and Rosa, the women of the Lacandon jungle communities were eager about contraceptives. And little by little they open up about other things. "We work in the promotion of sexual and reproductive health as a practice of liberty and not as an imposition or a prohibition. For this reason we also live out the principle of respect for people who are gay, lesbian, bisexual, and transgender. It's not easy, but we're starting to see male couples walk hand-in-hand through their communities. Or women making the decision to divorce when before Zapatismo it had been the parents who found them marriage partners. This is social change, and what a change."
Can Transvestites Change the World?
Can indigenous people? Half a century ago, one of the founders of so-called "scientific socialism," wrote that the proletariats could change the world because they had nothing to lose "but their chains." Today, the heirs of those proletariats are rebellious at the hour of losing privileges like steady work and retirement, they refuse to pay taxes, and they strike to avoid being charged the tax on their income.
Marcos himself hints at this in his epilogue to the manual, laying bare how the alliance between health and sex is one of the strongest nuclei of social control. "Capitalism converts health into a market good, and health administrators, doctors, nurses, and all the apparatus of hospitalization or health distribution are also turned in to a type of foreman of this business, turning the patient into a de facto client, from whom the object is to get as much money as possible from without necessarily giving more health back in return." It seems to be no coincidence that, along their dependency-breaking road, the Zapatistas have run up against the area of prostitute health and organized transvestites, groups that have been forced to take control of healthcare into their own hands. Seen in this light, some people belong in the "disposable" category, barely even having chains, material or symbolic, to lose.
Translated for the Americas Program by Nalina Eggert .
Raúl Zibechi is an international analyst for Brecha, a weekly journal in Montevideo, Uruguay, professor and researcher on social movements at the Multiversidad Franciscana de América Latina, and adviser to social groups. He is a monthly contributor to the CIP Americas Program (www.americaspolicy.org).
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