Heteropatriarchy’s Blame Game: Reading Genesis 37 with Izitabane during COVID 19

The COVID 19 pandemic compounded the insecurity and vulnerability experienced by LGBTIQ+ people who remain confined to their family homes during the lockdown in South Africa. LGBTIQ+ people are often referred to as Izitabane, a term that gives derogatory expression to the othering, stigmatisation an...

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Bibliographic Details
Authors: Van der Walt, Charlene (Author) ; Davids, Hanzline R. (Author)
Format: Electronic Article
Language:English
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Published: SA ePublications 2022
In: Old Testament essays
Year: 2022, Volume: 35, Issue: 1, Pages: 32-50
Standardized Subjects / Keyword chains:B Contextual theology / Bible reading / COVID-19 (Disease) / LGBT / Patriarchate / Patriarchate (Motif) / Bible. Genesis 37
IxTheo Classification:FD Contextual theology
HB Old Testament
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Summary:The COVID 19 pandemic compounded the insecurity and vulnerability experienced by LGBTIQ+ people who remain confined to their family homes during the lockdown in South Africa. LGBTIQ+ people are often referred to as Izitabane, a term that gives derogatory expression to the othering, stigmatisation and exclusion experienced by LGBTIQ+ people in African contexts in general and African faith communities in particular. As the pandemic unfolded, faith leaders reached out to their flock via social media through online worship services and daily devotions. In some instances, these devotions sought "theological clarification" for the pandemic and in the process evoked violence towards the LGBTIQ+ community who were held responsible. In order to engage critically and creatively with these life-denying realities and to search for impulses of hope and life, an episode from the Joseph narrative found in Gen 37 has been appropriated as a reflective surface in the development process of Contextual Bible Study resources engaging the African faith and sexuality landscape. Building on insights gained from employing the tools of Queer Biblical Hermeneutics to read Gen 37, the final part of the essay describes the Contextual Bible Study developed jointly by the Ujamaa Centre at UKZN and Inclusive and Affirming Ministries and offers it as a resource for Izitabane to resist normalisation, correction and annihilation when the Biblical text is used in a life-denying manner. https://doi.org/10.17159/2312-3621/2022/v35n1a4
ISSN:2312-3621
Contains:Enthalten in: Old Testament essays
Persistent identifiers:DOI: 10.17159/2312-3621/2022/v35n1a4