FIVE LIES THAT AFRICAN WOMEN BELIEVE

Posted by Social Matters , Tuesday, June 23, 2015 8:01 AM


As a woman I times feel guilty off playing roles that men are supposed to play. I have been made to feel guilty of playing leadership roles, having an opinion, having sexual feelings and most importantly having dreams. There are times when I ask myself ‘Am I not supposed to have dreams other than those of domesticity? But my heart burns up with dreams from the time I was a little girl; surely I did not put them there?’ There are lies that women are made to believe but they remain that, lies. They include: -
1.     Women cannot be leaders: - when the Nancy Barasa incident happened, one of my male friends wrote on facebook ‘that is why women can never be leaders.’ It’s easy to  forget that male leaders have done worse, they have been accused of rape, they have several wives, they have fathered children all over, they are involved in drug trafficking, they are busy defiling and impregnating young girls but one woman messes up and the whole country declares ‘women cannot be leaders.’ Society tends to hold women on a higher scale than men, thus women leaders are walking on egg shells most of the time. This is a lie, women can be leaders. When women stand for what they believe they called arrogant and are bundled out of public offices.

2.     Women in power tend to act like men: - This is because strong, aggressive, bold, and powerful are all characteristics that are engendered, in simple terms, these terms are more masculine that they are feminine. This is not true, if you are in power you will act differently than other women, just like men in power act differently than other men. Being bold and aggressive and standing for your rights does not make you ‘man’ it just makes you a strong woman. This lie is propagated by people who think women are nurturing and so in leadership they are also supposed to be meek and mellow.

3.     Women are their worst own enemies: - women are home wreckers, they steal each other’s men, they backstab each other. This is a lie. Adultery is consensual. The man and the woman involved are guilty. If your husband moved in with someone else, blame him, after all, he took the vows with you. It’s amazing how Bien of Sauti Sol can proclaim his love for a married woman and no one is shouting ‘home wrecker! Prostitute! Gold digger!’ What are they saying to him ‘kutangulia siyo kufika.’ ‘If she was meant to be yours…’ Now imagine if a woman did the same, declared their love for a prominent person who is married ‘prostitute, gold digger, home wrecker.’ It would cause an uproar! She would be subjecting herself to endless abuse. In fact it’s okay for men to have standards where potential wife must be beautiful, hardworking, a good cook, and ready to pop them babies but when women declare their standards, hardworking = lazy woman, gold digger, good looking men = no wonder she is single. Perfect men don’t exist women are told, but perfect women exist, society tells us.


4.     Women are weak; - I once went to Turkana a couple of year ago with an Eritrean archeologist, and from the word go, he was uncomfortable with my gender. When we got there, he took his time to remind me I was female and practically useless to him. I was hurt, did he come all the way from Eritrea, wait the U.S. to tell me, I was weak. He further showed me who he thought was the strongest guy in the group and then he said ‘I would have rather have one of him than two you.’ He went on ‘I am sorry, you may not like it but that is the truth, you are weak.’ Not that he had seen me working or anything but he just assumed. I think I cried a bit, I was really hurt, observe first and then judge. The good news is that one week later, he apologized. He said ‘you actually work hard and pull your weight.’ I am not bragging but I made sure when the vehicle was stuck in the sand, I was there pushing it, I carried my field equipment, I walked for 22km without tiring during archaeological explorations, I simply worked my butt off in the hot Turkana sun. Soon I was part of the team, I was no longer weak. I was a valuable team member. Women are not weak, remember in the Kamba community women were long distance traders, presently African women carry so much weight in their life time and so they are likely to suffer from brittle bone diseases in their old age more than men. You are not weak!

5.     Women are not sexual creatures: - what a big lie. Women have been taught to mask their sexual fantasies because we are women. The only time women are supposed to be open about their sexual feelings is if they are commercial sexual workers. Women cannot say they want sex, they can only hint and we all know men do not get hints. There are women addicted to porn and sex but may not be able to get help because those are male problems. After all women don’t want sex.



We need to stop judging women based on cultural stereotypes. Yes the world is going to hell and we are all to blame not women!

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