
Well, we do not know if they had discussed it in the kitchen, the
living room and other room and the issue was not resolved, so they
decided to throw it out in the open so that we can debate about it.
While the Presidency has said that His Excellency was just bantering,
the 73 year old man is basically sharing what men (and women) his age
subscribe to.
Bihari gave a second interview where he told the journalist that the
wife is the one that takes care of the kitchen, the living room and the
other room – even if she’s working. He also said that his wife takes
care of him (although this is ambiguous).
In the generation of our fathers and mothers, there were strict
gender roles. Men provided for, and protected their families, while
women manage everything about the family. Although in many occasions,
the women worked in the farmlands of their husbands.
The president understood that these days, women go out and grind and it’s no longer what men used to do, and that’s a good thing, coming from a man whose generation have been taught that women should be home-keepers, while men do the working.
It reminds me of the Pastor Adeboye’s (a man in Buhari’s age range)
‘cooking and praying for one hour’ statement. Adeboye also talked about
men having a job (to provide for and protect their wives) before
proposing to marry.
Things have changed from the time these men grew up. These days, you can outsource everything… from cooking to cleaning, to childcare, and even childbirth. We are the turning point generation to imbibe the culture that now works into the next generation. Some women are the breadwinners of their families.
Culture is dynamic, what worked 50 years ago may not work now in light of the realities on ground.
Back to Buhari’s statement. For a political leader, he used the wrong
choice of words. Although like I said before, it was a show of how
families in his generation were run – something most of our parents can
relate to.
I asked someone about what she thought of the President’s statement
and she said “before nko?” Meaning he was right. The person went further
to explain that she didn’t mean that a woman’s role is restricted to
the kitchen and the other room, but that a woman is the one to take care
of the home. While some women these days may not agree with that,
others subscribe to this ideology. I have heard too many women say they
won’t allow another woman cook for their husbands. Their choice, their
family and I don’t think what happens in people’s families should be
turned into a social debate.
A man of the previous generation, during a marriage seminar one time
said, “I wash my wife’s undies and it is nobody’s business”. If a couple
decides to share roles in a specific manner, it is basically no one’s
business.
In this generation however, no guy/girl even wants a woman/man that
will end up as a parasite or a liability. Cooking or praying don’t seem
to matter these days and again, I think it’s none of any one’s business
how one intends to choose a partner or run their home. (Except of
course, one or both parties involved seek your advice).
Let me share a story with you. While I was a teenager, I was cleaning
the house and reminiscing about a teaching of Dr. Myles Munroe on
marriage. I said to myself that I won’t marry a woman who can’t cook. In
that teaching he said, ask yourself, ‘will you marry you, if you were
you?’ I realised my folly and made up my mind to improve my culinary
skills. Try to amswer that question whether you are married or not – I
believe this is a true test of equal opportunities.
We cannot take away the fact that women have been sidelined for so
long, and it’s a great thing that women are rising and shattering glass
ceilings, blazing the trail for others (women and men).
We shouldn’t take the president’s word as an insult on women, but as a pure description of how far we have come.
However, we should be careful of how we treat issues of the girl
child while trying to shatter such stereotypes (which I feel is not an
insult on women as most women of that generation subscribe to such
gender roles).
While we have to ensure that girls are well taken care of, we also
have to look at the boys who need care too. With all the girl child
interventions everywhere, there’s a tendency for boys to feel neglected.
Mind you, they are all children and equal opportunities should mean
equal opportunities.
We look at the negatives of telling a girl it is her role to take
care of her husband and family and why she has to learn how to cook so
that another woman does not take her place. Boys were also taught to be
the providers of their family and not to cry when he’s in pain because…
he’s a man. How devastating! While sometimes some of those teachings
were as a result of perceived importance of men over women (which is
very wrong), other times they are as a result of perceived gender roles.
Three girls beat me to clinch the first position three different
times while I was in elementary school and each of those times people
said (in pidgin English) ‘you allowed a woman beat you in class’. Even
at that young age I always thought, ‘she beat me because she got the
highest score, because she answered correctly, some questions that I
failed. I don’t understand why it’s a big deal because she’s a girl’.
Women need not be told these days to be ambitious, they know. Parents
these days are doing a good job raising their girls as well as their
boys to have big dreams and strive to achieve them.
Even in the generation where women were perceived to be sidelined rose women that did great things.
It is my opinion that teaching a child certain skills should be based
on the observable qualities of the child in question and not the
child’s gender. This, for me, should be so if we want to change this
ideology of women and “the kitchen and the other room” as well as men
and “being a man”. That being said, it is the responsibility of the
parents to bring up their children how they want.
However, we must understand that the ‘but you’re a man now, you
should know how to do this’ or ‘you’re a woman now, why can’t you do
that’ statement is a reflection of gender roles and we should not make
life more complex than it already is by trying to force people to change
what they think a man should do and what a woman should do. In
situations like this, it’s more about human relations than it is about
gender roles. If someone is not comfortable with whatever it is you say
or do (to them), and they tell you, you should be able to make
adjustments (when relating to them) and not make your position the rule.
It’s a secular and a free world. The strategy to win someone over has
also been tolerance, peace, and love.
Life has become too complex for all of that. Someone’s pregnant
fiancée is the baby mama to his step sister’s current boyfriend. When
the fiancée gives birth and his step sister and her boyfriend marries,
one child becomes the step child of two step siblings. Let’s be simple
and allow people live their lives and not shove anything down anyone’s
throat.
Finally, it is my opinion that men and women are equal but different. It shows physiologically and emotionally.
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