Mansir was 16 when he first got seriously in trouble for
wearing a dress. Mansir was 16 when he first sat behind an army truck and
posed, against his will for a picture that would go viral in Nigeria and
beyond, in spaces he did not inhabit, spaces he probably would never inhabit.
Mansir was 16 when he first became a terrorist disguised as, in the words of
the Nigerian army, a she-man.
In my head I have conversations with him, in a virtual space
far from his home in Mando, Kaduna where he has his home, his family, and his
dresses. I ask him why, in my head, not because I want to know why but because
I know this is the question people asked when they were told that he was no
terrorist, that he planted no bomb, that what he had was no disguise when he
went out to see what was happening in the chaos that followed the blast in
Kaduna. I know it is a stupid question, just like I know it is stupid when
people ask me why I like a certain color or why sometimes, I like to paint my
nails. When people ask, I just say, life is too short not to paint your nails
at least once.
Zubeida however, has ideas, even though she may not be sure.
She has ideas about spirits, bad spirits inhabiting her son’s body, whispering
terrible gender non-conformist ideas – veils and dresses and eyeliner. She has
tried to heal him, rid his body of spirits. Spirits who could not protect him
when he was stripped almost completely naked and beaten and wounded and paraded
before the world as the face of the most hated group in Nigeria – a group that
delights in taking lives and planting fear in the hearts of people. Spirits who
could not whisper into the ears of the soldiers that took him away to their
barracks and tell them that Mansir was just a boy, curious and afraid. Spirits
that could not stop the army from tweeting his photo to a mob baying for blood.
Spirits who could not make the army apologize when, after months of
interrogation, they let him out through the back door.
I do not even know if Mansir has any ideas of his own, just
like I do not know if he knew what was happening to him as they tore his
clothes and slashed his back and dragged him away. I would show him his photo
in that tweet from the Nigerian army and tease him about not knowing how to
apply the eye pencil on his brows, but he might not find it funny. I would not
find it funny.
Mansir is 17 now. Mansir is back home now, with his mother. He
dropped out of school after the school fees were hiked and Zubeida could no
longer afford it. Not many people read that he was released. People read the
scandal but hardly ever read the resolution of that scandal because there are
always new exciting scandals to read about. And reading that a scandal is not
true is not so sexy.
I read someone call Mansir a homosexual in a newspaper article.
This is not one of the questions that I would ask him, because like the
question of why he likes wearing dresses, I think it is stupid to be concerned
about his sexuality. Our rigid gender roles and rules make people unable to
understand how a male who likes women could also like wearing dresses. From the
moment we are born we are told that boys should wear blue and want to be
doctors and engineers and strong and masculine. We are told that boys don’t
cry. That boys who cry act like girls. That boys don’t play with toys or speak
a certain way. We are told that men who don’t conform must be homosexuals and
that homosexuals are bad, bad people. Perhaps Mansir likes dresses as well as
girls. I do not know. I do not care.
But if I could I would want to hear his own questions. I
imagine he would want to know why the people who claim to fight for human
rights said nothing about his plight. I imagine he would wonder: is it because I like wearing dresses? Does
wearing dresses make me less human? And if he does ask, I am not sure I can
answer. I will not be able to explain why people showed no empathy even when it
was established that he was not the bomber; why some people tweeted that if he
was not being silly and wearing dresses, he would not have been mistaken for
the bomber in the first place. I only know what I think: that Mansir deserves
an apology from the Nigerian army. I only know what I hope: that Mansir will be
able to afford to return to school soon; that Zubeida is able to afford to
change the life of her son through education. I hope that Mansir someday is
able to find a community that will not treat him like an animal for wanting to
wear a piece of clothing that humans have decided only women should wear. I
hope that his 18th birthday will be better than his 17th.
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