Valentine's Day Can't Kiss Away Gender Fights
February 13, 2003
On
Valentine's Day 2003, three and a half decades after the rise of the feminist
movement, American men and women often remain bitterly divided. For many
men this division is today symbolized by the fact that thousands of Americans
are rallying to the defense of a Texas woman accused of killing her unarmed
husband in a jealous rage. Men are asking, "If what this woman did to
this man isn't wrong, what is?"
Part of the division between men and women is due to women's legitimate
grievances. But much of it is also caused by men's resentment that the
very real problems and disadvantages they face as husbands, partners and
fathers have been ignored by the media, our lawmakers and by society as
a whole. To achieve reconciliation between the genders, it is necessary
to address men's grievances.
Many divorced or never-married fathers struggle to remain a part of their
children's lives. According to the Children's Rights Council, a Washington-based
advocacy group, more than 5 million children each year have their access
to their noncustodial parents interfered with or blocked by custodial
parents. Since courts rarely afford men any physical custody of their
children and are often derelict in enforcing visitation rights, divorced
dads are often separated from the children they love.
Just as the feminist movement has been aided by many sympathetic men,
today it is women who are often leading the fight for equality and fairness
for men and fathers. Women constitute half the membership of the American
Coalition for Fathers and Children, the largest fathers' rights organization
in the world. These women, who are often the mothers, sisters or second
wives of divorced dads, have been instrumental in sponsoring shared parenting
legislation that would ensure that fathers have the right to remain a
part of their children's lives after a divorce or separation.
Another major concern for men and fathers is discrimination in domestic
violence-related matters. Most randomized, two-sex studies of domestic
violence show that women are as likely to attack their male partners as
vice versa, and studies indicate that women compensate for their smaller
size by their use of weapons and the element of surprise. Despite this,
misguided women's advocates have sold the government, law enforcement
and the public at large on the idea that domestic violence is a crime
committed almost exclusively by men against women. This view is so pervasive
that in the Texas case, in which a woman described as controlling and
abusive was charged with murdering her husband when he tried to leave
her, most Americans have failed to recognize what is in fact a textbook
example of domestic violence.
As a result of this societal misconception, male victims of domestic violence
face an agonizing dilemma. If they defend themselves or call the police,
they are often arrested and prosecuted for what is really their partner's
violence. If they do nothing, they allow the abuse to continue and possibly
escalate. The problem is particularly acute for fathers, since fleeing
their abusers leaves their children alone in the custody of a violent
individual, and taking their children with them can lead to a kidnapping
charge.
Many women have taken the lead in fighting these injustices, including
some within the domestic violence services community who have sometimes
risked scorn and even their careers to do so. Irene Navero, executive
director of the Queens Women's Network, has provided services and outreach
to abused men and, along with her colleagues, helped to sponsor a workshop
on male victims at the Queens Borough President's Task Force Against Domestic
Violence conference last October. The conference was reported to be the
first time male victims of domestic violence have ever been discussed
in a New York City agency's public forum on domestic violence.
Valentine's Day symbolizes not only the romantic bonds between men and
women but also the ways in which we need and depend upon one another.
It is for this reason that gender conflict, which cynics often portray
as a zero sum game, is actually something far worse. As leading men's
issues author Warren Farrell notes, when one gender wins at the expense
of the other, both genders lose.
For decades men who resisted equality for women were part of the problem,
and feminists were part of the solution. Today many feminists resist recognizing
men's and fathers' legitimate grievances and have thus become part of
the problem. But many other women have stepped forward to demand fairness
for men and fathers. They are part of the solution.