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Joyce
no cause for rejoicing
Everjoice
J Win
December 24, 2004
http://archive.mg.co.za/nxt/gateway.dll/PrintEdition/MGP2004/3lv00000/4lv00001/5lv00015.htm
In Shona culture
we believe that November is an inauspicious month. You don’t get
married or brew beer for the ancestors during that month, otherwise
you will be cursed. And indeed, bad things do happen in November.
First Yasser Arafat died. Then Condoleezza Rice was named new United
States Secretary of State. And just when we thought nothing worse
could happen, Joyce Teurai Ropa Mujuru was made vice-president of
Zanu-PF.
One can’t help
but be angry with little text and e-mail messages congratulating
me and all Zimbabwean women for Mujuru’s election as Zanu-PF’s new
vice-president. A crucial distinction must be made: there are female
persons; then there are women’s women. The only thing Mujuru and
Rice share with other women is biology.
My sisters may
chide me, but how else is one supposed to greet the elevation of
a woman who publicly declared: "There is nothing like equality
[between men and women]. Those who call for equality are failures
in life"?
Mujuru was lauded
by the patriarchal media when she made this assertion at a Salvation
Army church women’s meeting in 1998. She has not been known to speak
out for women’s rights issues in public, in Parliament (where she
has sat since 1980), or in any notable forum (the short stint as
minister for women’s affairs notwithstanding).
Women have entered
the political arena in Southern Africa in increasing numbers. We
have learnt that unless we are present and participate equally at
decision-making tables, our needs will not be adequately met.
But we have
also learnt that it is not enough to simply want to be there. It
is no longer sufficient just to talk about balancing the numbers.
Those of us in civil society who are called upon to support women
in leadership, need to know why we are supporting them.
I do not want
to work with radar-less women who seem to think that politics is
a value-free science, or those who abuse office. What we need are
women who will use their leadership positions to liberate themselves
and other women. Trading on their biology alone is not good enough.
I am angry with the kind of women who at every other time in their
lives forget they are one of us, and remember their vaginas only
when it suits them.
Women in leadership
or aspiring to leadership have often argued, validly, that other
women do not support them. But if these women make their views known
so publicly, like Mujuru, should we celebrate them as our own? If
they don’t bring in a different vision or values to those that currently
prevail, why should anybody be congratulating them about their election?
Why should I be asked to vote for other women, when all I am getting
is same old, same old?
Mujuru has her
own liberation war history credentials. Despite a number of newspapers’
attempts to cast her as a front for her husband, the woman has been
there, done that, and was overdue for higher office. She has been
in Cabinet since 1980.
Yet still we
have to ask: Why is Mujuru being elevated at this particular moment?
What is it that Robert Mugabe and his men have seen in her that
they had failed to see in 24 years? What if she does succeed Mugabe
and must clean up his mess? Once again we could see a woman being
brought in when things are so bad that she ends up getting the blame
when nothing changes for the better. This gives grist to the mill
of those who say: "See we told you, what can this woman do?"
The expectations
of women have been raised. "This one," they think, "will
finally stand up for our rights."
I am certainly
not holding my breath. As many would say in Shona, "Mujuru
murume pachake" [Mujuru is a real man]!" She can stay
one of the boys, but we need a few good women with whom we can identify
and support as our own.
Everjoice
J Win is a Zimbabwean feminist. She is currently International Women’s
Rights Coordinator with ActionAid. She writes in her personal capacity
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