Black, Female, and Divorced: A Discourse Analysis of Wangarĩ Maathai’s Leadership with Reflections from Naleli Morojele‘s Study of Rwandan and South African Female Political Leaders
Abstract
:1. Introduction
“It is quite clear from this short discussion of divorce in Kenya that research is needed to better understand the issues surrounding women’s roles, marital relationships, divorce, and leadership in Kenya and quite possibly in other sub-Saharan African countries as well, particularly because I could not find literature dealing directly with divorce and the status of women and their ability to be effective credible leaders”(p. 210).
2. Prof. Maathai: “She Thinks Globally and Acts Locally”
3. Theoretical Framework
4. Women’s Destinies through Gendered Lenses
“Ululations were prayers to God. For a boy, the five ululations represented five things which God was requested to give a boy. They prayed that the boy should be brave, king, rich, medicine man, and seer or prophet. A girl’s prayer represented four things that she should be given by God, i.e., all the qualities above but bravery. A brave woman was seen as a source of fear in the Gikuyu community”(para 3).
5. The Impact of Marriage, Education, and Divorce on Maathai’s Leadership
5.1. Marriage
5.2. Education
“The surest way to keep people down is to educate the men and neglect the women. If you educate a man, you simply educate an individual, but if you educate a woman, you educate a whole nation”[66] (p. 105).
5.3. Divorce
“Divorce is a delicate accident in marital relationships. In the African situation, what constitutes a divorce must be viewed against the fact that marriage is a “process.” In many societies that “process” is complete only when the first child is born, or when all the marriage presents have been paid, or even when one’s first children are married. Marriage involves many people and not just the husband and wife (…). Once the full contract of marriage has been executed, it is extremely hard to dissolve it. If a dissolution does come about, then it creates a great scar in the community concerned”[34] (p. 145).
“The days that followed were very lonely and sad. I searched my soul constantly for reasons that Mwangi had decided to leave me. I knew he would blame me for the failure, even as the public too, would blame me: It is always the woman’s fault. I thought I had done everything: humbled myself, helped with his public role, served him, and loved him. I had tried to be a good mother, a good politician’s wife, a good African woman, and a successful university teacher. Is it that those were too many roles for one person to excel in? (…) Where did I go wrong? (…) I felt as if a close relative had died”[14] (p. 142).
“I am not a rebel, I cannot be a rebel. Even though patriarchy is very high in this country, I need the sense of belonging and respectability that comes with certain social structures, such as marriage, in order to be credible in fighting for women’s rights as human rights. I respect such structures and remain in them even as I challenge them and seek to change them”(pp. 207–208).
“I was not ready for a divorce and had hoped for reconciliation. I wanted a family and didn’t want another husband. But Mwangi did not share my feelings”[14] (p. 147).
6. Enriching Maathai’s Leadership Discourse with Reflections from Morojele’s Study of Rwandan and South African Female Politicians
“Yes, I was married like many people were married; but the other big thing about politics is you don’t actually have a life. You don’t have a life, your life doesn’t belong to you. It’s difficult: if I think of everyone that I know, there’s one couple that’s still married, otherwise every single person that I know is divorced”(p. 134).
“If you make blunders as a woman, it’s not taken as, ‘this minister has blundered’, it’s ‘this woman!’. And therefore, because society doesn’t expect much of us, just like the white people didn’t expect much of a black government, so we’ve got to be vigilant (…)”(p. 144)
7. Working toward Gender-Balanced African Societies
“For us there is no way we force things. What we do; we lobby. We lobby our fellow men, we discuss, you convince… That’s how we do it. When you try to force and use strength, a woman to a man, you’re worsening the whole thing and I think that’s why some parliaments are failing to get a good number of women in the parliament, because they want to force their way, so for us that will not work within Rwanda”[21] (p. 58).
“We have as society and as the ANC not worked very hard on the understanding of culture. We use it conveniently. When it’s convenient for us culture is static and it’s not dynamic, it does not change. When it’s convenient, culture is dynamic and it changes”[21] (p. 59).
8. Conclusions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Stuhlhofer, E.W. Black, Female, and Divorced: A Discourse Analysis of Wangarĩ Maathai’s Leadership with Reflections from Naleli Morojele‘s Study of Rwandan and South African Female Political Leaders. Societies 2022, 12, 23. https://doi.org/10.3390/soc12010023
Stuhlhofer EW. Black, Female, and Divorced: A Discourse Analysis of Wangarĩ Maathai’s Leadership with Reflections from Naleli Morojele‘s Study of Rwandan and South African Female Political Leaders. Societies. 2022; 12(1):23. https://doi.org/10.3390/soc12010023
Chicago/Turabian StyleStuhlhofer, Eunice Wangui. 2022. "Black, Female, and Divorced: A Discourse Analysis of Wangarĩ Maathai’s Leadership with Reflections from Naleli Morojele‘s Study of Rwandan and South African Female Political Leaders" Societies 12, no. 1: 23. https://doi.org/10.3390/soc12010023
APA StyleStuhlhofer, E. W. (2022). Black, Female, and Divorced: A Discourse Analysis of Wangarĩ Maathai’s Leadership with Reflections from Naleli Morojele‘s Study of Rwandan and South African Female Political Leaders. Societies, 12(1), 23. https://doi.org/10.3390/soc12010023