Ancestors guide LGBT+ South African healers to mend mental scars

Monday, 12 August 2019 00:00 GMT

Badanile Maci, a traditional healer known as a 'sangoma', lights a candle and imphepho, or liquorice plant, to greet her ancestors in Katlehong, a township east of Johannesburg, South Africa, June 7, 2019. THOMSON REUTERS FOUNDATION/Kim Harrisberg

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Widely respected by South Africans as spiritual guides, healers and counsellors, gay sangomas are also challenging the idea that being lesbian, gay, bisexual or transgender (LGBT+) is unAfrican

By Kim Harrisberg

KATLEHONG, South Africa, Aug 12 (Openly) - Smoke swirled around Badanile Maci as she crouched on all fours, clapping and chanting with half a dozen other sangomas - South African traditional healers - to greet their ancestors' spirits.

Widely respected by South Africans as spiritual guides, healers and counsellors, gay sangomas like 23-year-old Maci are also challenging the idea that being lesbian, gay, bisexual or transgender (LGBT+) is unAfrican.

"When we are together in our traditional ceremonies, we are free," said Maci, who knew she was gay at the age of 15 and brought her first girlfriend home a year later.

"Our traditional beliefs have created a safe space for the LGBT community ... We find the support we never had before," she said, sitting beside jars of dried leaves, twigs and herbs in her consulting room in Katlehong, 35km east of Johannesburg.

Sangomas - sometimes called witchdoctors - believe they are called by their ancestors to heal. By consulting with spirits and using rituals and natural medicines, they predict the future and help clients with problems from sickness to relationships.

In a country where lesbians are often subjected to the trauma of "corrective rape" to make them straight, and access to mental health care is limited, gay sangomas are finding their own remedies to achieve happiness and win social acceptance.

"I have had suicidal thoughts," said Nomsa Mokoena, a 33-year-old sangoma, recalling how her family rejected her when they found out she was a lesbian.

"But my ancestors have guided me through the worst of my depression," she said, from eMalahleni, about 140km east of Johannesburg.

Through advice from her ancestors in dreams, Mokoena was able to understand her depression, which she described as an "ongoing battle" but preferable to going to hospital.

"We find power in ourselves ... I don't have to be ashamed or live a lie," she said.

READ MORE: This is part of a series exploring mental health in a rapidly changing world

DOUBLE STIGMA

Africa has some of the world's most prohibitive laws against homosexuality, with 32 nations out of 54 criminalising same-sex relations, according to the ILGA, an LGBT+ rights group, with punishments ranging from imprisonment to death.

South Africa is the only country on the continent to allow same-sex marriage and its 1996 constitution was the first in the world to ban discrimination based on sexual orientation.

But homophobia and violence are an everyday reality, with four out of 10 LGBT+ South Africans knowing of someone who was murdered for their sexual or gender identity, South Africa's Centre for Risk Analysis think-tank has said.

"Lesbians are often gang raped before being killed in violent ways," said Ntsupe Mohapi, head of the Ekurhuleni Pride Organising Committee (EPOC), which started a Johannesburg Pride march a decade ago after two gay activists were murdered.

"Often survivors fear secondary victimisation by police if they report it, so they keep the trauma inside ... many turn to suicide and substance abuse."

There are no official statistics on suicides among LGBT+ South Africans but Maci said she loses a friend to suicide several times a year.

"I had a friend called Zinhle who was rejected by her family," she said. "She told me she was struggling over WhatsApp, but I didn't realise how bad it was until she took her own life."

Globally, sexual minority youth are 3.5 times as likely to attempt suicide as heterosexual peers, often driven by stigma, bullying, isolation and difficulties with self-acceptance, Italy's University of Milano-Bicocca found last year.

Nearly three-quarters of South Africans reporting mental illness - some 7 million people - never receive any treatment, according to the South African Depression and Anxiety Group, one of Africa's largest mental health support groups.

This is the norm across Africa, where governments spend about $0.10 per person on mental health, 25 times less than the global average, according to the World Health Organization, resulting in a severe shortage of mental health workers.

"Our hospitals are tackling HIV, diabetes, cancers. Mental health is put on the back burner," said Jan Chabalala, a Johannesburg psychiatrist.

"To be gay and to live with a mental health disorder is to live with a double stigma in South Africa."

Badanile Maci. a traditional healer known as a 'sangoma', adorns her feet with the tops of cans, used to create sound during her traditional dancing ceremonies in Johannesburg, South Africa, June 7, 2019. THOMSON REUTERS FOUNDATION/Kim Harrisberg

FREEDOM

Sangomas said they face pushback from some Christians who accuse them of practising witchcraft, but generally they command respect, and have the freedom to dress and act as they wish.

"When my ancestors take over my body, they can be either male or female," said 28-year-old Xolani Chamane, referring to the act of channelling his ancestors to give spiritual and medicinal advice to clients.

"When they visit, my gender is naturally more fluid," he added, wearing earrings, beads and a red, traditional skirt.

Although regional politicians have condemned homosexuality as unAfrican, women sangomas have had same-sex relationships for a century, often under instructions from their ancestors, according to research by the University of the Witswatersrand.

Simphiwe Mahlaba of the African National Healers Association, which promotes the sector, said he has registered a growing number of LGBT+ sangomas, although he could not provide figures as members were not asked their sexuality.

"We have no problem registering gay traditional healers," Mahlaba said. "As long as they are true to their ancestral beliefs, then we are happy to live side-by-side with them."

Gay sangomas said their status as community leaders also allows them to educate their clients.

"People don't come to me because I am gay, they just come to see a sangoma," said Chamane. "Then they see my mascara and my mannerisms and ask me, 'Is it possible to be a gay sangoma?' I tell them that it is, and slowly we are changing mindsets."

Badanile Maci, a traditional healer known as a 'sangoma', stands outside her home with other gay and lesbian sangomas in Katlehong, a township east of Johannesburg, South Africa, June 7, 2019. THOMSON REUTERS FOUNDATION/Kim Harrisberg

LGBT+ sangomas said they were better placed than most South African mental health professionals - who tend to be white and English-speaking - to support LGBT+ people struggling with anxiety, depression and suicidal thoughts.

"We need more psychologists, counsellors and social workers who have lived through what we have," said Maci. "This can start with traditional healers."

For Maci, it was a sangoma - her own mother - who helped her accept both her sexuality and her calling to become a healer.

At the age of 18, Maci's ancestors starting visiting her in her dreams, telling her it was time to learn about her "gift".

"My mom cornered me and asked me if I was sure this was what I wanted," said Maci, referring both to her sexuality and her traditional beliefs. "I told her I was, and she said I must never be ashamed of who I am."

Maci flicked through her phone, stopping on a video of hundreds of sangomas cheering her on while she danced to drums.

"These are my people," she said. "They allow me to be a proud lesbian and a proud sangoma. I can be both."

(Reporting by Kim Harrisberg; Editing by Katy Migiro and Lin Taylor. Please credit the Thomson Reuters Foundation, the charitable arm of Thomson Reuters, that covers humanitarian news, women's and LGBT+ rights, human trafficking, property rights, and climate change. Visit http://news.trust.org)

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