|
RESOLUTION 1325
Full text
History & Analysis
Who's Responsible for Implementation?
1325
Anniversary
TRANSLATING
1325
UNITED
NATIONS
Women
and the UN
Security Council (SC)
Gender & Peacekeeping
1325 Monitor: Women &
Gender in the work of the Security Council
Gender Focal Points
PeaceBuilding Commission
WOMEN, WAR &
PEACE WEB PORTAL
UNIFEM
PeaceWomen
JOIN WILPF

|
|
THE CYCLE OF VIOLENCE: WOMEN ARE
KEPT TRAINED, YOKED AND TIED
By Bertha Shoko, Windhoek
November 25, 2003 (Media Institute of Southern
Africa - Windhoek) Two years ago the Ugandan nation was shocked
when its Vice President Dr Specioza Kazibwe revealed that she divorced
her husband because he beat her.
This confession by a high-profile person illustrates how domestic
violence is not just confined to those who are poor and uneducated.
Domestic violence cuts across class, education, race and other categories.
According to social commentators and psychologists, one in three
Zimbabwean women of all classes are abused in their lifetime.
Statistics obtained from the Contact Family Counseling Centre in
Bulawayo, Zimbabwe, reveal that some 300 women sought counseling
services because of relationship problems between January and June
2003. Of these women, 100 cited physical abuse by their spouses,
and 250 of the women who sought counseling were professional women.
The now well-publicised example of how hidden domestic violence
is among professional women in Zimbabwe is last year's murder of
Rutendo Jongwe.
A graduate of the University of Zimbabwe's Law Department, she was
killed by her husband, the late Movement for Democratic Change (MDC)
Member of Parliament and also a lawyer, Learnmore Jongwe. He died
in remand.
After her death, the Musasa Project, an organisation that counsels
women who are abused by their partners or spouses, revealed that
Rutendo had been their client.
The stories of her abusive relationship and her subsequent death,
illustrate how women, despite their education, profession and even
having knowledge of their rights, are still vulnerable to gender-based
violence.
Why does domestic violence cut across educational and social boundaries?
Because from a young age, women are socialised to persevere and
safeguard their marriages at all costs.
This form of education is far more powerful than the formal education
girls and boys, women and men receive later in life. Sociologist
Nomsa Nkala explains that women stay in abusive relationships because
socialisation produces " the woman in you and this is nothing
you can begrudge women for".
We are nurtured to be mothers. We are 'trained' to be kind, loving
and submissive. We are socialised to put everyone's feelings, especially
a man's, before our own.
Once we learn how to be 'good women', we teach the same to our daughters,
even though we want a better life for them. If a girl shows 'boyish'
traits such as speaking out, not letting others knock her around
and fighting back when provoked, mothers waste no time crushing
such behaviour. A young girl's spirit is quickly reined in and she
is admonished with warnings like: "no man will want to marry
you"!
As the young girl grows, at every step along the way, the messages
on how a woman should behave are reinforced by every institution
she passes through on her way to adulthood, until she is finally
crafted by society into a woman. Pre-marriage counseling, whether
within a religious institution, or culturally by the aunts or older
sisters, reinforces the woman's role of preserving the marriage.
Society is not satisfied until a woman is trained, yoked and tied
to the values that keep her in her place within the home and in
society.
As a result, married women remain in abusive situations to protect
their husbands and families. This is what they have been taught
to do.
Stepping out of a marriage means the woman has failed. Women in
African societies also can pay a high price for initiating a divorce
and divulging the secrets of their homes. Rutendo Jongwe paid with
her life when she decided to end her marriage.
Socialisation's hold on a woman's mind and heart is strong. And
it is this unlocked door which keeps women in the cycle of domestic
violence.
This social ill must be curbed through stronger legislation that
protects all of women's rights and which makes domestic violence
a punishable offence. It also must be tackled by more and more voices
which push it into the public, and by a vigorous campaign within
the homes to raise differently the women and men of tomorrow.
Bertha Shoko is a Zimbabwean journalist. This article is part of
the Gender and Media (GEM) Commentary Service which provides views
and perspectives on current issues.
Poll: A woman needs more than education and money to leave an abusive
partner. Do you agree? Or Disagree?
From: http://allafrica.com/stories/200311250616.html
|
|
NEWS
1325
PeaceWomen E-News
Country News Index
International News
Peacekeeping News
RESOURCES
Country
& Thematic
Civil Society, UN & Government
1325
Advocacy Tools
INITIATIVES
In-country
Regional and Global
1325 in Action
ORGANIZATIONS
Country-specific
International
LATEST
PEACEWOMEN UPDATES
PEACEWOMEN
NGO WEB RING
Women, Peace &
Security Community representing the diversity and depth of research, organizing
and advocacy on women, peace and security issues.
|