During
the last few months Indonesia’s official record on the humanitarian front has
been rather underwhelming at best. The execution of two Bali Nine members
alongside other drug offenders and the initial hesitation to accept Rohingya
refugees from Myanmar have seriously lowered the almost exuberantly positive
expectations many expressed when Joko “Jokowi” Widodo was inaugurated as
president last October.
The
most recent international outcry about the so-called “virginity tests” that
have been performed by the Indonesian Military (TNI) and police for what
appears to be decades, might now become another disappointment as Jokowi has so
far remained silent on the issue.Colloquially known as the two-finger test,
“virginity tests” have been condemned as a dehumanizing and potentially
traumatizing treatment by many human rights organizations for a long time.
During the simple procedure, a doctor puts two fingers
into a woman’s vagina in order to check whether or not her hymen is intact,
declaring her a virgin in the former case. The questionable rationale behind
the tests is to ensure the stability of military families. Whereas such
“virginity tests” might appear to be an absurd residue of a more oppressive
system that governed Indonesia until not so long ago, their intention actually
betrays a fundamental problem within a society in which poverty and lack of
education still often put unacceptable pressure on female reproductive rights
and women’s opportunities to express and experience their very own sexuality in
a fulfilling, positive and independent manner.
Like everywhere else in the world where the procedure
is performed, the tests themselves are merely a symptom of the rampant misogyny
that debilitates wide parts of Indonesian society.
Even when considered from a purely medical
perspective, the test does not serve its questionable purpose. The assumption
that a woman with a torn hymen must have had sexual intercourse is simply
inaccurate as a laceration can occur due to a myriad of reasons, including
disease and injuries. Yet, while such medical inadequacies might already
suffice to completely discard the procedure, they merely touch the surface of a
pervasive systemic problem. The invasion of privacy is severe and leaves many
women emotionally scarred.
Even though sanctions often appear to be absent for
women who “fail” the test, at least in the military, the performance of
“virginity tests” takes an extremely private part of a woman’s personal life
and, unacceptably, makes it relevant to her professional career. Such serious
violations of human dignity in the name of establishing high moral standards
might appear cynical at first glance, but their existence can hardly be
surprising given the widespread dictate of how a good and proper woman must
behave.
In the traditional patriarchal world order, a woman’s
body is considered her main asset and the majority of female gender roles are
defined through her sexuality as she is pushed along a preconceived life path
from object of male desire to motherhood. Because the female womb is crucial to
the continuation of patriarchal power, its submission was a cardinal aspect in
the establishment of the power structures essentially still ruling societal
life today. The most insidious and effective method of absolute control over
women has always been performed through their bodies, the most basic level
possible.
And since ancient times little — if anything — has
changed: even today patriarchal minds (which are not exclusive to men) still
strive to hold more or less absolute power over the female body. In this
worldview, women must not be granted the right to make decisions regarding
their own sexuality.
When the ostensible importance of not having sexual
intercourse outside of wedlock is discussed, it is therefore no coincidence
that it almost always happens in the context of female sexuality alone. To the
patriarchal spirit a woman’s social standing is almost completely determined by
her sexual conduct, by whether or not she complies with the oppressive rules
regarding her own body. If she does not, she becomes a “prostitute”. Whole
religious institutions were created by influential patriarchs of yesteryear in
order to strengthen this system of oppression.
And it seems to have worked rather well. Today we live
in the 21st century among robots and spaceships, and still female virginity is
considered something glorious, something sacred; instead of the unspectacular
thing that it actually is to anyone apart from the woman in question: the
rather mundane personal condition of not having had sexual
intercourse.“Virginity tests” are a patriarchal instrument to put women in
their place, to remind them that at the end of the day political participation
and the improvement of work conditions do not change the fact that their own
vaginas, uteri and in fact their whole bodies do not belong to them. Such tests
are institutionalized misogyny. Abolishing them will of course not magically
solve every problem women are facing in Indonesia today. It can only be a tiny
step in the right direction by slowly stabilizing hopes that Indonesia can
finally make another step forward on its long and onerous journey toward true
sex and gender equality.
The invasion of privacy is severe and leaves many
women emotionally scarred.
Markus Russin, Bogor, West Java _The writer, who holds
a master’s degree in psychology from Yale University in the US, is a freelance
writer and editor for various publications.
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