Afrowoman: History, Roles and Responsibilities
Mama Africa! I used to wonder where and how this name was derived and remember vividly asking my mum about the origin as a kid. I remember her saying “This coined name signifies Africa`s personification in terms of its ability to breastfeed her own children”.
History shows the significance of the African Woman over thousands of years making reference to her strength, passion, compassion, resilience, long suffering and so many other qualities that makes her idolized and revered by friends,families and the society in general.
Every African culture has a significant story or history portraying the role of the woman in her society. Ancient records show her as queen, goddess, scholar, diplomat, scientist, icon, prophet and freedom fighting warrior exalted with and sometimes above her father, husband and brothers. She is the epitome of multitasking balancing the needs of the husband with that of the children as well as other extended family members not to mention the society.
We have Historical African Women like Queen Nefertiti, Makeda the Queen of Sheba, Queen Ahmose-Nefertari, Queen Tiye, and Queen Nzingha, and the women warriors of Dahomey kingdom and even in recent times, Mrs. Funmilayo Ransome-Kuti(the mother of Fela Kuti the original pioneer of afrobeats, activist and human right activist) who championed the course on recognition of African Women in Nigeria in 1953 and founded the Federation of Nigerian Women Societies . According to Dr. John Henrik Clarke, “The first accomplishment of the African woman, in partnership with the man, was the creation of a functioning family unit. This major step in human development laid the foundations of the organization of all subsequent societies and institutions. In Africa the “woman’s place” was not only with her family. She often ruled nations with unquestioned authority.
Many African Societies still need to understand that the African Woman is not a figure head but an essential member of the family unit who creates equilibrium across it. A father earns his respect and honour among his children by treating their mother with respect and dignity. She in turn sings his praise to the children and he is revered and respected.
So how is the modern day “African Woman” stepping into the shoes of her ancestors? For one, the western influence and education have had positive and negative influences on the African Woman`s role (and I am not saying this as a male chauvinist pig but as a realist). The role of the African woman has evolved over the years due to (but not limited to)these factors which brings me to these points:
Should these apparent stimuli push the African Woman out of her lifelong role?
What happened to her duties inside the home which is very significant in the bigger society?
Do not get me wrong, we have a lot of African Women who are still aware of their roles and playing it to a T, but the question remains – what is going on with the ones that have lost the cause? Where did it all go wrong?
The African Woman needs to realize that she belongs to a lineage of Warriors, Leaders, Inspirers, Home makers and so on. She is the epitome of multitasking, a goddess who is respected at home and the world in general, a ruler and warrior. Her role with regards to the man is not a competitive one in which the man is the adversary, but rather an important partner (and vice versa) without whom her role cannot be complete.
African woman, take your rightful position of respect because you have earned it over time.
Please find some relevant read links below which you can also peruse. I would like some comments and other viewpoints regarding this issue.
http://afrikaworld.net/afrel/atr-women.htm
http://www.colorq.org/articles/article.aspx?d=2002&x=africanwarriors
http://www.globalaging.org/elderrights/world/2004/subsaharan.htm
This blog is now avaialble for downloads on your amazon kindle. Please visit http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B0086LIB6U to check out our blogpage for Amazon kindle, and click the like button to show your support.
Thank you.
Posted on February 2, 2012, in Africa and tagged Africa, african history, African Societies, african woman, african woman roles and responsibilities, africanwarriors, afrobeats, afrowoman: history, dahomey kingdom, Dr. John Henrik Clarke, Federation of Nigerian Women Society, fela kuti, funmilayo ransome kuti, home maker, http://afrikaworld.net/afrel/atr-women.htm, Makeda the Queen of Sheba, Mama Africa, Queen Ahmose-Nefertari, Queen Nefertiti, Queen Nzingha, Queen Tiye, roles and responsibilities, subsaharan, women warriors of Dahomey kingdom, www.colorq.org, www.globalaging.org. Bookmark the permalink. 4 Comments.
@photobotos.com: Thanks for visiting my blogspot. Please click the folow button to get automatic updates.
P.S : I loved the picture of the feeding Lions in Zimbabwe.
I believe that we are who we are because of the time we live in. Times have change and no one should expect women to stay who they were because in many societies, their roles have changed as well. We can only hold on to our tradition for so long but it get stained by new ways of thinking and new problems to solve. I agree the African woman back in day was strong and almost perfect but she lived in a time where she could be what she was. We can only try to do our best!
@Missjackee: Absolutely!The African woman has definitely evolved over the ages but some things have not changed…her basic instinct, her strength, her compassion to mention a few. We do live in modern times like you rightly mentioned and there is no doubt that we have to move with the times. The question however is “Is there a downward diminish in the woman`s role at this day and age?” Don`t get me wrong, i am not talking about sitting at home to cook for husband and kids etc but more like not viewing the man as the competitor but as a help mate, dedication to family etc Again not all African women fall into this bracket, but then what is the mindset of those that do and where exactly was this culture borrowed from? We loose our identity when we loose our history because our history determines where we come from but not neccessarily where we are going. The African woman signifies strength, resilience, compassion, support, and much more. Why have some of our women lost sight of the model? What role/s(if any) has the african man played in this whole evolvement? Let`s talk people! Let`s talk!
Thanks for your input 🙂
Reblogged this on Afrocentricity Unleashed.