|
South Africa: Enlisting Men for
Women's Equality
By Stephanie Urdang
May 9, 2008 - (Africa Renewal) When an older man
raised his hand to speak on the third day of a gender workshop in
Hoedspruit, a rural community in northern South Africa, Bafana Khumalo's
heart sank. As the facilitator of the workshop, which specifically
targeted men, he had already touched on concepts of manhood and
how gender inequality contributed to the sky-rocketing HIV rates
in South Africa.
Mr. Khumalo worried that the participant would deliver a lecture
on how equality between men and women is contrary to African culture
or how women's empowerment is dividing families. Older men are deeply
respected in rural communities, and he knew this man had the ability
to derail the workshop.
"Yesterday, after I got home," the participant began,
"I called my sons, I called my wife, and I explained to them
what we are doing in this workshop." He told his children that
things had to change in their home. No longer could their mother
arrive home tired from a day of work and be expected to cook, clean,
wash the dishes and clear up all on her own. It was simply unfair.
From now on, he told his children, they would have to contribute
to household chores. "You have to start cleaning and tidying
the house. You have to begin preparing dinner, so when your mother
comes home she can see that we have all contributed. I can't learn
to cook - I am too old. But I am prepared to wash the dishes."
For Mr. Khumalo, it was a significant moment. This participant had
accepted one of the main messages of the workshop: that the idea
of what it means to be a man is not innate, but shaped by society,
and can therefore be changed. As Mr. Khumalo points out, social
conventions equate manhood "with dominance and aggression,
with sexual conquest and fearlessness." Social norms also determine
the roles that men and women play. To change those relations, all
aspects of gender inequality must be addressed.
"I look back at this moment," he told Africa Renewal,
"and I realize we are getting somewhere. This story is repeated
again and again in every area that we have established our programme."
Across South Africa, such workshops are beginning to change attitudes.
Research by the South African Men as Partners (MAP) network shows
that 71 per cent of men participating in such workshops believe
that women should have the same rights as men, compared with only
25 per cent more generally. Asked whether they thought it was normal
to sometimes beat their wives, 82 per cent of workshop participants
said it was not, while 38 per cent of non-participants thought wife-beating
was normal.
'Need to be different men'
Mr. Khumalo is co-director of Sonke Gender Justice, a non-governmental
organization formed in 2006. It tackles two major issues in South
Africa: violence against women and very high HIV-transmission rates.
He was an activist in the anti-apartheid struggle, and after apartheid
ended he began working with the Lutheran Church in various capacities,
including as a pastor. His true calling, he realized, was to work
with men to help end violence against women. He developed workshops
and often ran them with Sonke co-director and co-founder Dean Peacock,
who returned to South Africa after more than a decade's work in
the men's movement in the US.
A South African woman whose daughter was raped and died of AIDS.
Mr. Khumalo was struck, he says, by how "hungry" men in
his workshops were to discuss violence against women and their role
in that violence. "They expressed a heartfelt need to be different
men, different fathers from the older generation of men."
Mr. Khumalo and Mr. Peacock strongly believe that gender equality
cannot be achieved through focusing on women's empowerment alone.
They also believe that men's behaviour and attitudes are driving
both the HIV epidemic and violence against women.
"Men's violence against women is not simply a result of men
losing their tempers or because they lack control," Mr. Peacock
told Africa Renewal. "They have been brought up to believe
and internalize a view of manhood that is equated with aggression,
dominance over women and sexual conquest. Men often fear that they
will be dismissed by their friends and their community as not 'real'
men. They will be regarded as 'weak' if they apologize, compromise
or share power. Rather than seeking ways to resolve conflict, they
resort to violence - not only against women, but against each other."
Rape, violence and HIV
According to numerous studies, South Africa has the highest incidence
of reported rape in any country. In 2006 the South African Medical
Research Council (MRC) surveyed 1,370 male volunteers from 70 rural
villages. It found that close to one in four of the men surveyed
had participated in sexual violence. Of the total, 16.3 per cent
had raped a non-partner or had participated in gang rape, while
8.4 per cent had been sexually violent towards an intimate partner.
Other studies have shown that the first sexual experience for many
adolescents and young women is unwanted. According to research by
the Witwatersrand University published in 2004, almost one-third
of sexually experienced women report that their first sexual encounter
was not consensual. That same year, the MRC reported that one woman
is killed every six hours by an intimate partner in South Africa
- the highest substantiated rate anywhere in the world.
Also in 2004, South African researchers reported in the respected
Lancet medical journal that women with violent or controlling male
partners are more vulnerable to HIV infection. The study postulated
that abusive men are more likely to have HIV and to impose risky
sexual practices on their partners.
Violence against women is not unique to South Africa, of course.
Worldwide, one woman in three experiences domestic violence.
Beyond women's empowerment
With the end of apartheid in 1994, the new government made achieving
gender equality a central goal. The 1996 constitution broke ground
internationally with its attention to the protection and promotion
of women's rights and gender equality. Besides affirming the right
of everyone to be equal before the law and to have the equal protection
and benefit of the law, it established a Commission on Gender Equality
to promote democracy and human rights for both men and women.
Some six years later, one of the commission members, Sheila Meintjes,
observed: "There's a realization that if we don't bring men
in as partners, we won't win the battle." That view guides
activists' current work with men.
Mr. Khumalo and his colleagues at Sonke believe that existing progress
towards gender equality will be derailed unless men also begin to
change. "The attitudes of men and the concept of masculinity
are linked to our patriarchal heritage," Mr. Khumalo says.
"In the course of our work during the 13 years of our democracy,
we learned a lesson. While a lot of emphasis was placed on the need
to transform gender relations between men and women, the major focus
was on women's empowerment." That focus on the oppression of
women made some men feel left out.
While work on women's empowerment remains necessary, Mr. Khumalo
adds, he also points to an unfortunate trend. "If a woman is
living in an abusive relationship," he explains, "then
to empower her with awareness of her rights . . . is not always
a wise thing. Women return from workshops with new clarity, wanting
to assert their rights. The result? The men begin to regard themselves
as the victims. Fearing the unknown, they become even more violent
towards their partners."
Risks of violence for men
It therefore is important, he continues, to show men that reducing
the power men exert over women has benefits for men as well. "It
makes us much less susceptible to using power in the negative sense."
Violence is not only dangerous for women. It has a damaging impact
on men themselves. The South African National Injury Mortality Surveillance
System reported in 2003 that roughly six times as many men as women
died as a result of homicide in South Africa (7,359 men and 1,197
women).
Mr. Peacock argues that this too is a form of gender-based violence.
"It is not just about men being violent towards women. It is
also about man-on-man violence, another way of asserting male dominance.
If men can understand that they themselves are dying in large numbers
because of this violence, then it provides them with an imperative
to explore alternative, more peaceful ways of expressing their masculinity."
There are other ways in which men's perceptions of masculinity adversely
affect their lives. Mike Matyeni, an organizer for Sonke Gender
Justice who is open about his HIV-positive status and was previously
active in both the Treatment Action Campaign and Men as Partners,
cites the links between cultural attitudes and HIV transmission.
Many men's perceptions of manhood, he told Africa Renewal, often
lead them to refuse to use condoms. Condom use, they feel, diminishes
their sexuality and their view of themselves as men.
Also, some argue that because they have paid a bride price when
they married, their wives have no right to tell them what to do.
Men also resist going to clinics to be tested or for treatment,
believing that would indicate "weakness" and leave them
open to taunts from their friends. Many therefore seek out the services
of traditional healers instead. Moreover, many medical practitioners
in the clinics are women, and men may feel it demeaning or embarrassing
to be treated by women. So they do not go even if they suspect they
are HIV-positive or are sick.
'One man can'
The first work focusing on men began in collaboration with women
in women's organizations. Agisanang Domestic Abuse Prevention and
Training (ADAPT), for instance, developed a men's programme to educate
men about domestic violence. This included improvisational skits
in township taverns and men's marches, one of which was attended
by then President Nelson Mandela. Over the years, men's groups began
forming to specifically address men's roles, responsibilities, attitudes
and behaviour.
This spurred a wider response. Government departments began different
campaigns. Civil society organizations arose, including Fathers
Speak Out, the Men as Partners network and the South African Men's
Forum. Trade union federations and faith-based groups also developed
programmes on gender equality and HIV. Their activities include
holding training workshops, staging dramas, promoting discussions
in informal taverns, painting murals that highlight the issues and
undertaking other initiatives that involve community members.
Sonke Gender Justice is trying to move beyond workshops and small
events to engage men - and women - in broader activism and campaigns.
The goal is to enlist many more organizations and communities and
to develop a national response. Sonke's One Man Can campaign is
one reflection of the broadened approach.
Funded by diverse donors such as UNICEF, the International Organization
for Migration, private foundations and South African government
departments, the One Man Can campaign is being implemented in all
nine of South Africa's provinces, and is gradually being taken up
in neighbouring countries. Its goal is to encourage men and boys
to take action to end domestic and sexual violence and to promote
healthy, equitable and mutually respectful relationships. By mobilizing
civil society, the campaign promotes change within families and
communities and advocates a stronger governmental response.
Getting off the sidelines
"We want men to be able to speak out and take a stand, not
watch from the sidelines and do nothing," explains Mr. Khumalo.
If a man sees a woman who has been beaten by a boyfriend or husband
or hears screams from the other side of a closed door, he needs
to act responsibly. "Women are afraid of us. They are afraid
to hear footsteps behind them in the night. We have to show them
that we care and that we will no longer accept the negative behaviour
of men towards them."
An underlying message of the campaign is that men can love passionately,
respectfully and sensitively. The complex and diverse messages of
the campaign go beyond statements of intention to suggestions about
how to build trust between partners and with women in general. They
promote awareness of how violence undermines women's ability to
fully and safely function. Developing clear communication between
men and women, whatever their relationship, is key to building respect.
Only then can men appreciate that "no means no," that
using condoms is important, that justice and rights are necessary
at both the personal and national levels and that the government
needs to do more to meet its constitutional obligations.
In appealing to men to get directly involved in ending violence
against women, the campaign also urges them to stand up for their
principles - and to not let friends pressure them into dis-respecting
and degrading women. It is up to men to break the cycle of violence.
Educating friends - and women
Men who have changed their attitudes and become active often speak
about the constraints of their upbringing. Zithulele Dlakavu, an
organizer for One Man Can and an actor, writer and director of educational
plays, recalls that his best friend was hostile to his work with
men. They had been close since adolescence, but his friend could
not understand why Mr. Dlakavu had changed so radically. "You
are not a man!" his friend told him.
Meanwhile, Mr. Dlakavu was disturbed that his friend beat his girlfriend.
Mr. Dlakavu intervened to educate his friend. His persistence paid
off. His friend no longer beats his girlfriend.
Male activists have found that it is not only other men who need
to change. Wives and girlfriends often deride men who offer to share
household responsibilities or make decisions together. In a discussion
three years ago in Soweto, a township outside Johannesburg, a group
of organizers spoke of the reactions of women to their work. One
had come home from a workshop, cleaned the house and prepared the
dinner. His girlfriend thought he was silently chastising her for
not looking after him or the house well enough. Another was castigated
by his wife when he asked her to make a particular decision: "Aren't
you man enough to make decisions anymore?"
Another overheard a young woman in a mini-bus say to her friend,
"I do things wrong. Of course he must beat me. How would I
know if he loves me if he doesn't beat me?" When the organizer
tried to explain to the young woman that no one has a right to beat
her, the women and other men in the bus shouted him down.
For Mr. Khumalo, like other activists, the passion for his work
lies in his hopes for a safer society, not only for his wife and
sisters, but also for his daughter. "I want to contribute to
a society in which I do not have to be my wife's protector,"
he says. "I want to contribute so that my daughter can walk
without fear of being violated by men. I want her to be able to
grow up and respect herself for who she is and live accordingly.
I want a society in which my wife and daughter are able to live
without such fears."
From:http://allafrica.com/stories/200805091084.html
|