|
Back to Index
International
Rural Women's Day - Message from the Chairperson of the Women's
Coalition
Womens Coalition
October 17, 2005
Last week I
was contacted by a certain journalist who asked why out of nowhere
Zimbabwe had started commemorating International Rural Women’s Day
and if there is anything to celebrate given the rising poverty,
HIV and AIDS and its impact on women and other political, social
and economic challenges Zimbabwe is currently facing. Question after
question pointed out to the hopelessness of the Zimbabwean rural
women .I responded in the following way:
- Too much
comfort is bad. Every Zimbabwean has a rural home and this is
a birth place (rukuvhute) and one definitely will be buried there
in the rural areas mostly by rural women and girls . It is not
as comfortable as it is supposed to be because it is neglected
economically by all of us.
- The rural
home is where everyone goes to campaign during elections but never
goes back to develop. This is the support base for all politicians
whether they lose or win. So it is not true that the home is forgotten
completely, it is simply neglected.
- The rural
home is where 80% of our women live. They sweat on the lands they
do not own. They do not have any property rights. Patriachy is
in charge and in control of all of them. Their voice is subdued
and no one speaks on their behalf. But the women are there and
have developed some survival skills and have some coping mechanisms
in place
- The women
and girls are a source of cheap labour for the "urbanites"
who take a lot for domestic labour.
The rural women
and girls are only remembered when it comes to:
- Cheap labour
- Sex exploitation
- Source of
income as they provide inexpensive crops, cattle, hand made crafts
- Cheap provision
of raw materials
- Voting for
politicians to parliament
- NGOs designing
development projects on their behalf
- Mobilising
them to support projects that do not add value to their well being
- They are
a pathetic lot of victims who get very little from the elite’s
sympathy.
The list goes
on:
The women
and girls have remained steadfast. October 15 is a day that compels
heads of states and government to proclaim the Rural Women’s Day.
This day was conceptualised by a number of international organisations
in Beijing during the 4th United Nations World Conference
on women in 1994. It has now become a global campaign in raising
awareness on the important role of ensuring food security and developing
rural areas.
- It would
appear as Zimbabwean women have forgotten to commemorate International
Women’s Day yet 60% women are heads of households, 90% of rural
women on farms and rural areas form the backbone of the agricultural
labour force. The girl child in the one who does the hard manual
labour
- True survivors
of any harsh cultural, religious economic and political practice.
Their tears are known to fall from the eyes to the ground, a symbol
of brevity.
The list also
goes on :
I personally
feel that given the above, Zimbabwe should join the rest of the
world in celebrating International Rural Women’s Day. The rural
women and girls are the power base of every family, politician,
economist, government ,NGO etc .
It is evident
that on the question as to whether there is anything to celebrate
I am on optimist and I say yes confidently. The rural women and
girls
- Are resilient
and can withstand any abuse and yet they come out even stronger
- Have managed
to send their children to school who have graduated and become
professionals. Thousands of stories of mothers and sisters who
toiled day and night to send especially their boy children to
school give a sense of hope
- There is
no conflict they have not gone through. Rural women are survivors
of some of the worst conflicts and harmful cultural practices
as well as wars
- Are adaptable
to harsh living conditions and their face for hope is never lost
- Walk the
longest distances to school, hospital, market place ,borehole,
funeral and the rough feet in the sand give more inspiration to
most of us who have not struggled this much
The girl child
has been awakened to gender equality and equity. She is now part
of the Girls movement through the Girl
Child Network and her mother is also part of the same movement
for she missed it all as a girl –deprivation!!!!!
Just to wrap
my deep admiration for the rural girl child I wrote a special poem
entitled :
A special
dedication to the rural girl child
I see your
path through the hard footprints on the rough sand.
Each time I watch you walk to school hundreds of miles I count
each step forward.
Each step forward is each woman in future reaching potential.
They sang amazing grace, I sing amazing rural girl child.
I
see your strength in the rough feet, yet fit and so strong.
Fly
fly for the sky is the limit.
Rural girl
child, woman of tomorrow tell me of your strength
In
the face of rape, beatings, child labor and all evils you remain
vigilant.
Even the
deadliest grief of losing parents never engulfs you.
Tender love you give to those sick, weary and orphaned.
Boldly you follow the strong footsteps of your strong mother.
Like
mother, like daughter the struggle continues, Aluta Continua.
Every 15
October know we celebrate you the rural girl child.
The
future woman walking in the fullness of your potential.
A
new breed of women singing protest songs against rape perpetrators.
"Enough
is enough, kwatabvira kure muchingotibata bata hatichadi"
"Marapists,
tinobata misoro tichitsikatsika tichikanda uko."
Yes
use your rough feet, lift that strong hand and claim freedom.
There
is light at the end of the tunnel rural girl child, fight on.
Mobilize
and stabilize, a girls’ movement is born in Zimbabwe.
Fill
all villages with them- girls` clubs for they are a pillar.
This
poem know that is dedicated to you the rural girl child.
Make
music out of it, tell them the once poor rural, abused Betty Makoni
is big success.
You
too rural girl child is bigger success.
This
is the only gift I leave you, a poem wholly dedicated to you.
You
learn from it, pass it on and go tell it on the mountains.
That
the rural girl child is an empowered future woman.
(This poem is
dedicated to the rural girl child. It was written by Hazviperi Betty
Makoni, founder and Director of Girl Child Network in celebration
of the prize for women rural creativity she received from Women’s
World Summit Foundation based in Switzerland , Geneva. International
Rural Woman’s Day is celebrated on 15 October every year internationally.
This poem will be presented on the 15th of October in
Switzerland, Geneva by Betty Makoni, one of the five prize winners
to present her work in Switzerland Geneva on 15 October 2003.Go
go warrior…. And congratulations the girls of Zimbabwe as you are
the future women of Zimbabwe)
Happy International
Rural Women's Day. Visit
www.woman.ch
for more on the International Rural Women's Day
Visit the Women's
Coalition fact
sheet
Please credit www.kubatana.net if you make use of material from this website.
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons License unless stated otherwise.
TOP
|