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Magda Rakita

Photographer + Filmmaker
      
"You can't see your soul, but you can feel it."
Location: Cambridge, UK
Nationality: Polish/British
Biography: Magda Rakita is a documentary photographer based in Cambridge, UK. She works with the media and NGO’s worldwide; her personal projects focus on health and social issues that affect women, children and the older generation. In 2013, Magda... MORE
Public Story
"You can't see your soul, but you can feel it."
Copyright Magda Rakita 2024
Date of Work Nov 2017 - Dec 2017
Updated Apr 2019
Topics Belief, Documentary, Faith, Gender, Minority, Photography, Religion, Spirituality
"You can't see your soul, but you can feel it" ("The Last Bissus")

 

It was the first time when someone referred to my difference as a gift, and even as I try to embrace it the best I can, it took me by surprise. It took a moment to realize Bissu Wa Nani was talking about my intersex variation. Although intersex is not about identity but biological characteristics, it was a reminder, that if I really wanted to experience this kingdom of five genders over coming weeks I had to leave behind the western way of thinking, definitions and the temptations to compare.

 

Born intersex, with a body that defies simple biological divide between male and female, I am acutely aware of the challenges faced by those who do not conform to binary distinctions. But to distinguish between only male and female seems to be a fairly recent, and also distinctly Western, phenomenon. Many traditional cultures have long recognised multiple genders and sexes. People with intersex bodies, or identities that did not match their biology, were often considered blessed. It was thought they could “see both side of the mountain”, able to bridge the gender and sex divide. Binary social roles of male and female were often introduced and imposed by colonial regimes and Christianity.

 

In the Bugis society in South Sulawesi in Indonesia, traditional gender systems still exist. Bugis recognise five genders: male, female, calabai (male living as a female), calalai (female living as male), and Bissu. Bissu is considered to be the embodiment of male and female elements and this causes it to be seen as a gift, allowing Bissus to communicate with the Deity, whose gender is unknown. Given this unique ability, Bissus traditionally served as spiritual leaders, advisors, and healers.

 

Today they exist on the margin of a traditional yet open and tolerant Muslim society, where they are both accepted and respected. Their roles, however, are slowly losing significance, especially with the advance of radical Islam, and increasingly they must turn to cultural performances, and entertainment, to survive.

 

This project documents the daily life of Bissu Wa Nani – current leader of Bissu community, and hi/r circle of other Bissus and their contributions to local society. Their tradition is likely to disappear within a generation, with fewer people pursuing such traditional roles, even as they are an unparalleled celebration of diversity. Currently, only eight Bissus remain in South Sulawesi and last inauguration ceremony was performed in 2002. 

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