Women
hold up half the sky.
-
Chinese Proverb
This
proverb goes to tell how important women are in the development of the world,
and this write up is an attempt to look at the extent to which deeply
entrenched pronatalist thinking robs us of the potential of a large number of
women; potential that would have served to develop humans and economies.
Pronatalism
is an attitude or policy that is pro-birth, that encourages reproduction and
exalts the role of parenthood above a number of things, thus making being a
parent a measure of value, especially for women.
What
I’d like to make clear before moving on is that this does not mean that a
non-pronatalist society is against reproduction and parenthood, but that they
do not see those as markers of success, wealth, or value, of humans.
Coming
home to Ghana, women carry the weight of a pronatalist-minded society and have
been suffering under it for years, bringing along with it so much deep-seated
corruption, one does not know where to begin to mend things. Let me break this
down.
1.
THERE
ARE TWO REPRODUCTIVE SYSTEMS INVOLVED!
It
is interesting to note that, should a couple be married for a while (beyond two
years, mostly) and haven’t had a child yet, questioning eyes quickly turn to
the woman. The husband himself may first of all question the woman, and demand
that she gets checked up (not that they both should get checked up).
We
forget that making babies involves the reproductive systems of both the man,
and the woman. The forgetfulness has been passed on from generation to
generation, the sad thing is that even some women themselves forget. And so, we
carry the weight of a ‘responsibility’ to ensure that babies are made. What
does this do to women? We place motherhood on a pedestal and measure our values
by it, prioritize this ‘responsibility’ above all else, and bend over backwards
to ensure that we join those who society acknowledges as ‘Real women’. I will
always say this…pronatalism is the reason why you find that the majority of
those who patronize prayer camp and camps of herbalists and spiritualists, are
women. Why? It will surprise you to find out the most reported ‘problem’ by
these women are ‘childlessness’ and ‘delayed marriage’.
The
frenzy to be married before or by a certain age is related to their ‘biological
clock’. They need to be married at or by that age so they can have children.
They are not fulfilled if these do not happen. So you find women of good
health, working age, of zero productivity to their own selves, and to the
community, the country, because they spend almost all their waking hours,
either in prayer camps, or moving from herbal doctor, to herbal doctor, or from
spiritualist to spiritualist. A lot of money goes into such endeavours too. So
at the end of the day, there is zero contribution to development, from these women (whereas they
would have contributed massively, otherwise).
2.
HIS
CHROMOSOMES, NOT MINE!
Now
let’s assume a woman marries, and starts having children. There is another
burden the woman carries even when she isn’t unmarried by a certain age, or
childless after years of marriage. This burden is the sex of the children she
bears. I did a bit of work on sex-selective abortion (in Azerbaijan) and female
infanticide, sometime last year, and it brought out the stark reality of our
misconceptions.
From
since I was old enough to understand certain things, it is the woman who is
questioned, when all the children she has had, are the same sex. It is much
worse when all the children she has had are girls. There are, and have been,
instances where the man’s family brings another woman in, who supposedly is to
come in to bear him sons. I get a headache just thinking about the extent of
this generational ignorance in many parts of the world.
The sex of
a child is determined by
two chromosomes, X and Y. A female is XX, a male is XY. Since women have no Y
choromosome, they always contribute an X chromosome to the baby. The sex is determined by
whether the sperm that fertilizes the egg is carrying another X or a Y.
So
all these cases where another woman is imposed on a couple to bear the man sons,
gives me sleepless nights! If we are bent on placing ‘senseless’ blames, we
have been daft for too long then, placing the blame on the woman, making the woman
have more children than she truly desires just so she can have another sex, or
in the case of sex-selective abortion, making a woman feel compelled to abort a
particular sex, and go through the trauma of it, when she has nothing to do
with the sex of the child.
Now
let me make this clear before I’m misconstrued, I am only bringing out this
whole ‘it’s not a woman’s chromosome that’s responsible business’ because of
this weight that is on women due to ignorance. This is not a call for a blame
shift, for even if it were our chromosomes, do we handpick them ourselves, or
it is a natural, biological process? And so seeing now that it is not even our
chromosomes in the first place, the point is, it is the man’s, yes, but does he
do sii sii sii (eenie meenie miney
mo) during the process? NO! So even they the carriers of the determinant of a
child’s sex, CANNOT AND MUST NOT BE BLAMED!
It
is heartbreaking to see what goes on over clear ignorance! The contribution of
this craze to maternal and child mortality, to an increase of maternal-related average
number of years lived with disability (taking post-birth chronic debilitating
conditions into consideration), is disturbing, to say the least. Really, I
could go on and on, but let me stop here.
3.
FAMILY
PLANNING.
The
Ghana Demographic Health Survey in 2008 estimated that contraceptive usage
among married women decreased from 19% to 17%, which translated to 123,000
married women at risk of unintended pregnancies.
Motherhood,
or parenting in general, is (supposed to be) a selfless act. Making the
decision to have children demands a lot of sacrifice, including, for the woman,
putting yourself at risk of a number of complications that contribute to
maternal mortality. Considering the health of women, plus the health of the
children being born should be priority in deciding how many children you’d want
to have, when you’d start having them, and how you’d space the births, as a
couple. This brings in contraceptives, which are available as aids to whatever
plan a couple settle on, that puts both mother and the children planned to be
had, under minimal risks.
Sometime
last year, I attended a community workshop on Marital Rape, in Jamestown. My
heart hurt, hearing the women open up about how difficult it is to have their
fertility needs met (I use fertility here in the technical demographic sense).
Some of the revelations were that some of them were unable to enjoy post-partum
abstinence, which doesn’t only ensure that they are fully healed and ready for
sex with their spouses after childbirth, but also serves as a traditional
contraceptive method.
They
added that some husbands would force themselves on their nursing wives barely a
week after delivery (whether vaginal delivery or caesarian). Some husbands
would order their wives to discontinue breastfeeding (for the reason that it is
interferes with their ‘sexual needs’). Prolonged breastfeeding promotes good
health of the child, as well as post-partum amenorrhea (which is another
natural contraceptive).
Some
husbands do not allow their wives to be on contraceptives, some women
themselves are against any contraceptive at all be it modern or traditional.
There have been a lot of brainwashing against the use of them. I remember
reading a tweet in which the person said she was shocked to find a large crowd
gathered somewhere in town with someone giving a talk on how usage of
contraceptives equals murdering children. There are too many myths surrounding
family planning. I mean, look at what this person was saying against it.
Basically, family planning checks the number of children born, and that doesn’t
sound pleasant in the ears of a society soaked neck-deep in pronatalism.
Therefore, family planning becomes an evil thing, an enemy of ‘progress’ that
must be frustrated into inaction. Pronatalist, because the health of the woman
is not priority, not even the health of the children being born, really. It is
the idea of having the children, that’s it. Really, because
High
fertility (number of children ever born to a woman) has a strong relationship
with child mortality. This is because a child born 18/fewer months after the
birth of a previous child has three times the chance of dying from one
complication or other, compared to one born after 2-3 years’. Children born to
women nearing the close of the average reproductive years of 15-49 are also at
risk of complications, some of which leave lifetime effects to be dealt with.
So
what is important to us? The wellbeing of the woman? Or she has become an
object of reproduction and that is all that matters?
There
have been a lot of policies put in place to work towards the reduction of the
total fertility rates of developing countries. A lot of these policies
concentrate on family planning – the availability and accessibility of them.
There have been extreme policies like the one-child policy in China (now up to
One family, Two children) which was strongly enforced to inhuman levels, a lot
of the time. Some have focused on putting more girls in school, etc. In our
part of the world, a lot of work has to be done to change mindsets, demystify
reproduction, roles in there, reproductive health, etc. More women will channel
their potentials to the development of themselves and their community,
fertility will decline, creating a demographic dividend that the country can
take advantage of. We underestimate the contribution of women to development,
we underestimate the potential. We have misplaced priorities.
Women
do hold up half the sky, and there is so much, so much rot that is sitting on
how much more women can hold up. Too many women are buried under it.
The
question then is, how do we begin to dig ourselves back up? The sky is falling.
THE AUTHOR
Amma Konadu is a young poet, writer, blogger and
literary enthusiast. She was an English Major in The University of Ghana and is
currently doing her postgrad studies at the Regional Institute for Population Studies,
University of Ghana. Her research interests are in Gender, Religion and Sexual
Reproductive Health and Risk Issues. She blogs personally at ammakonadu.wordpress.com,
is the editor-in-chief and runs a book review column at theampedhub.com and co-runs a
Christian Women Blog at c2bghana.WordPress.com
Half the sky. i remember. i need to share this knowledge
ReplyDeleteThat book, huh? I should start sharing some of the real life stories in there.
DeleteWell written piece. So much to learn from the article.
ReplyDeleteMy thoughts exactly @nene, a lot to learn, great job!
ReplyDeleteEducative
ReplyDeleteYour reproductive system is extremely sensitive and without a healthy reproductive system, it can be very difficult to get pregnant. Many women suffer from infertility. Excess Vaginal Fluid
ReplyDelete