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Scare Tactics Scare Tactics - Why are Liberian soldiers wearing fright wigs?
slate.com ^ | 8/1/03 | Mark Scheffler

Posted on 08/06/2003 9:12:04 AM PDT by Oorang

Scare Tactics Why are Liberian soldiers wearing fright wigs? By Mark Scheffler Posted Friday, August 1, 2003, at 9:56 AM PT

Bewigged fighter sends otherworldly message

Few things exemplify the chaos of Liberia more than the sight of doped-up, AK-47-wielding 15-year-olds roaming the streets decked out in fright wigs and tattered wedding gowns. Indeed, some of the more fully accessorized soldiers in Charles Taylor's militia even tote dainty purses and don feather boas. Why did this practice begin and what is the logic behind it?

The cross-dressing combatants blipped onto the Western press's radar screen right around the time the Liberian Civil War started on Christmas Eve in 1989. During Taylor's rebel siege on Monrovia in the '90s, his band of dolled-up marauders—aka the National Patriotic Front of Liberia—put on one of the most disturbing horror shows the planet has ever seen. Between 1989 and 1997, 150,000 Liberians were murdered, countless others were mutilated, and 25,000 women and girls were raped. The NPFL's shock-and-awe antics were apparent from the very start of the conflict. In an essay in Liberian Studies Journal, an administrator at Cuttington University College tells a story of Taylor's forces storming the rural campus during the initial stages of the war in "wedding [dresses], wigs, commencement gowns from high schools and several forms of 'voodoo' regalia. … [They] believed they could not be killed in battle."

According to the soldiers themselves, cross-dressing is a military mind game, a tactic that instills fear in their rivals. It also makes the soldiers feel more invincible. This belief is founded on a regional superstition which holds that soldiers can "confuse the enemy's bullets" by assuming two identities simultaneously. Though the accoutrements and garb look bizarre to Western eyes, they are, in a sense, variations on the camouflage uniforms and face paint American soldiers use to bolster their sense of invisibility (and, therefore, immunity) during combat. Since flak jackets or infrared goggles aren't available to the destitute Liberian fighters, they opt for evening gowns and frilly blouses.

The cross-dressing "dual identity" isn't just a source of battlefield bravado, though. Cross-dressing has deep historical roots in West African rites-of-passage rituals involving "medicine men" who would recommend wearing masks, talismans, and bush attire as a means of obtaining mystical powers. Rebels dressed in gowns and wigs and adorned with bones, leaves, and other "forest culture" trappings are practicing a modern variation on this technique of using symbolic "clothing" to access sources of power far stronger than their own. And in common Liberian initiation rituals—which exist in memory throughout the country, if not always in practice—a boy's passage to adulthood is symbolically represented by the donning of female garb. He must first pass through a dangerous indeterminate zone between male and female identity before finally becoming a man. A soldier dressed in women's clothes—or Halloween masks, or shower caps, etc.—on the battlefield is essentially asserting that he's in a volatile in-between state. The message it sends to other soldiers is, "Don't mess with me, I'm dangerous."

Liberia's adult warlords appropriated and updated these rites-of-passage rituals in order to form tight-knit proxy fighting forces. The strongmen persuaded impoverished youths to join their battalion by offering them the chance to be part of a secret society and attain supernatural powers. In a country where the young had few if any options, this was seen as an opportunity to "be somebody."

After Charles Taylor's Cuttington University attack, other offshoot Liberian militias vying to control the country embarked upon similar gender-bending rampages. One of the more notorious henchmen of the era was Joshua Milton Blahyi, a commander whose nom de guerre was "General Butt Naked." Hired for his ferocity by rebel leader and Taylor contemporary Roosevelt Johnson, his "Butt Naked Battalion" consisted of drug-fueled teens who went into battle in flowing dresses and colorful wigs. The general himself reportedly wore only laced-up boots and his weapon.

Not surprisingly, these troops became poster children for the war. Dressed in gowns and shower caps and "fortified by amphetamines, marijuana and palm wine [they] sashayed irresistibly for photographers," writes Bill Berkely in The Graves Are Not Yet Full: Race, Tribe and Power in the Heart of Africa. "Liberia's fifteen minutes of infamy seemed to spring full-blown out of the most sensational Western images of Darkest Africa."

Today, some 14 years after Taylor's troops first began their march toward Monrovia, Blahyi has put his clothes back on and supposedly found God. Prince Y. Johnson*, who tortured former Liberian president Samuel K. Doe to death in 1990 and recorded it on video, is talking about returning from exile in Nigeria with a promise to solve problems with "elections, not guns" once Taylor is gone. And Taylor himself is sitting in his Monrovian compound being shelled by new bands of rebels wearing bathrobes.

Correction, Aug. 4, 2003: This article originally misstated the name of the man who tortured and killed former Liberian President Samuel K. Doe. It was Prince Y. Johnson who tortured and killed Doe, not Roosevelt Johnson.


TOPICS: Crime/Corruption; Culture/Society; Editorial; Extended News; Foreign Affairs; Front Page News; Miscellaneous; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: africa; allyourtvs; arebelongtous; crossdressing; liberia; psyops
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I emailed this to my brother who has spent a lot of time (years) throughout Africa, for his job. This was his reply "Don't laugh. This is true - throughout Africa. They really believe this kind of stuff - even today!"
1 posted on 08/06/2003 9:12:04 AM PDT by Oorang
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To: Oorang
They want to grow up to be democrats.
2 posted on 08/06/2003 9:15:45 AM PDT by the gillman@blacklagoon.com (Everyone's pockets are stuffed with Chicom cash!)
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To: Oorang
Read Col. Mike Hoare's combat memoir "Congo Mercenary". The superstitions of African tribal warriors can get pretty crazy, and often grim.
3 posted on 08/06/2003 9:19:16 AM PDT by Seydlitz
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To: Oorang
Is this one of them?


4 posted on 08/06/2003 9:20:34 AM PDT by LouD (Genuine GOP Vigilante - Accept no substitutes!)
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Comment #5 Removed by Moderator

To: LouD
Hey, isn't it a little early to be posting that sort of pix? Ewwwwwwwww
6 posted on 08/06/2003 9:23:45 AM PDT by Oorang
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To: Oorang
According to the soldiers themselves, cross-dressing is a military mind game, a tactic that instills fear in their rivals.

Akin to the Scottish practice of flashing the enemy before a battle?

7 posted on 08/06/2003 9:26:19 AM PDT by jae471
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To: Seydlitz
Reference: Indian Ghost Dance Shirt ...it proved just about as useful at stopping bullets.
8 posted on 08/06/2003 9:26:20 AM PDT by 50sDad ("Can't sleep...clowns will eat me!")
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To: Seydlitz
Thanks for the recommendation. My brother mentioned that book as well. Don't know if I want to read it right away though.

To me the depressing factor is that there are so many people who rely on logical thought so little. How can they actually believe this kind of stuff. I know, different primitive culture, but, it still boggles the mind.

9 posted on 08/06/2003 9:26:27 AM PDT by Oorang
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To: LouD
Or is this one?


10 posted on 08/06/2003 9:29:55 AM PDT by Zavien Doombringer (Ain't nothing worse than feeling obsolete....)
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To: All; biblewonk
Though the accoutrements and garb look bizarre to Western eyes, they are, in a sense, variations on the camouflage uniforms and face paint American soldiers use to bolster their sense of invisibility (and, therefore, immunity) during combat.

Uh, sure. Kinda like donning a giant SUV for the daily grind gives the commuter a sense of invincibility. ;o)

11 posted on 08/06/2003 9:30:37 AM PDT by newgeezer (Just my opinion, of course. Your mileage may vary. You have the right to be wrong.)
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To: the gillman@blacklagoon.com
Add a few AK-47s and it would look like various sections of San Fransisco!
12 posted on 08/06/2003 9:35:57 AM PDT by aegiscg47
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To: Oorang
Though the accoutrements and garb look bizarre to Western eyes, they are, in a sense, variations on the camouflage uniforms and face paint American soldiers use to bolster their sense of invisibility (and, therefore, immunity) during combat. Since flak jackets or infrared goggles aren't available to the destitute Liberian fighters, they opt for evening gowns and frilly blouses.

I guess Slate couldn't get a former grunt to fact-check for them.

13 posted on 08/06/2003 9:35:59 AM PDT by Riley
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To: Zavien Doombringer
Is that a guy?!?
14 posted on 08/06/2003 9:36:57 AM PDT by Oorang
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To: Oorang
Yes, RuPaul
15 posted on 08/06/2003 9:37:38 AM PDT by Zavien Doombringer (Ain't nothing worse than feeling obsolete....)
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To: newgeezer
I'm speechless.
16 posted on 08/06/2003 9:37:57 AM PDT by biblewonk (Spose to be a Chrisssssssstian)
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To: Oorang
Scare Tactics Scare Tactics - Why are Liberian soldiers wearing fright wigs?

I think it's that "Queer Eye" show what done it.

17 posted on 08/06/2003 9:38:56 AM PDT by George Smiley (Is the RKBA still a right if you have to get the government's permission before you can exercise it?)
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To: Riley
Okay, you lost me. Since I'm not a "former grunt" fill me in, please. Thanks.
18 posted on 08/06/2003 9:40:59 AM PDT by Oorang
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To: Oorang
writes Bill Berkely in The Graves Are Not Yet Full: Race, Tribe and Power in the Heart of Africa.

Went to the Barnes and Noble link on that. The book sounds fascinating.

19 posted on 08/06/2003 9:45:31 AM PDT by hotpotato
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To: Oorang
The author of the article is apparently trying to equate the use of camoflage among Western forces, which has practical value and makes real-world sense with the silly-assed notion that wearing an evening gown will 'confuse the bullets'. Good fieldcraft isn't done to make people 'feel invisible'. It is done to acquire legitimate advantage, even if only a couple of crucial seconds in combat.

One of the two is a rational, thought-out countermeasure taken from years of experince, the other is a ridiculous superstition that is so demonstrably wrong that it should be abandoned after the first engagement. No comparison.
20 posted on 08/06/2003 9:53:15 AM PDT by Riley
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