The Folly of Ignorance! -
02-28-2002, 08:23 PM
Does anyone share this morons' insight?
[copied from the E A Standard letters page.]
IT'S DOMESTIC MISUNDERSTANDING NOT WIFE BEATING
I refer to an article, The world has changed man by Mwingirwa Kithure in the East African Standard (February 20, 2002).
I agree that women are beneficiaries to a greater extent of these recent transformations.
However, I disagree with the writer when he portrays an African man as a villain and a very selfish being, yet these are the things that held us together then and now.
Secondly, the traditional man did not batter his wife but corrected her using the accepted norms not beating her senseless hence rendering her immobile.
There is nothing new about wife beating. Even during our great grandfathers it always happened. And it continues to this day even among the elites.
Then it follows that wife beating does not occur before or immediately after marriage. It is the normal aftermath of a domestic misunderstanding, which the writer wants to make it look like a male initiative.
Sociologists say that wife beating takes a cycle: First, a build up of tension, then violent explosion and, finally, a period of feeling sorry with apologies that bring lovers to their normal course.
This scenario is evident in Rugandas The Burdens where Wamala and Tinka after a domestic squabble iron it out in the reverie way. Some shed tears - common among women - which can even move mountains! Whether these tears are real or unreal it is hard to tell since it is said that when a woman says No she means a yes.
Usually domestic quarrels start as soon as the wife is pregnant whether times have changed or not. Some women to go through a kind of mental disarray irrespective of their social status during this period.
Why is it impossible for a modern woman to change a man? The truth is that most violent quarrels in our homes are started by our women.
A man for instance comes home tired like a dog. More often than not there is no welcome. Food is hardly ready. This forces the husband to walk to the nearest bar to take one or to a nearby church for kesha (overnight prayers) as he waits for the meal to be ready. It is while in the bar or in the church that a man finds one who will offer a loving smile with greetings.
In some homes, men live with their wives as strangers. Yet the same women will appear so charming to neighbours.
On the other hand some men are to blame for the quarrels as they marry women with low formal education and in the course of time with advancement in career they stumble on a highly educated girl: young and no doubt cute. His wife at home becomes virtually an enemy.
Against this backdrop, wife beating, should be encouraged at the family level and families should be left to resolve their domestic disagreement on their own.
If it goes beyond the elbow, then counselling should be encouraged and not divorce notices as the writer suggests.
Rotumoi Lomariwo,
Kalabata.
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