He was loved and admired all over the world for helping to end apartheid and heal the scars of a divided nation.
But in his fight for total freedom, the liberation leader also devoted himself to another cause — the empowerment of women.
Here are five things Nelson Mandela did to advance female equality in his quest for justice.
1. Gender agenda
Although Mandela made tremendous strides
in his battle to bring down apartheid, he recognised early on in his
Presidency that no major success was possible without gender equality.
“Freedom cannot be achieved unless women have been emancipated…
Nelson Mandela
At the opening of the first parliament
in 1994, President Mandela declared, “Freedom cannot be achieved unless
women have been emancipated from all forms of oppression… Our endeavors
must be about the liberation of the woman, the emancipation of the man
and the liberty of the child.”
With the representation of women in
South Africa’s parliament jumping tenfold from 2.7% during apartheid to
27% after the first democratic elections of 1994, Mandela took action by
appointing over a third of women to his cabinet.
And today, females make up 44% of the
country’s politicians — not far off from the government’s goal to reach
“50/50 Gender Parity” by 2015.
One of the most prominent appointments
was Frene Ginwala as the Speaker of the House. She secured this position
throughout his presidency as well as the first term of President Thabo
Mbeki.
2. Women of anti-apartheid era
In his celebrated autobiography “Long Walk to Freedom,” Mandela acknowledged men weren’t alone in the anti-apartheid movement.
In fact, the ANC Women’s League played a critical role.
One of the most memorable moments came
on August 9, 1956, when 20,000 women marched to the Union Buildings in
Pretoria to protest legislation requiring black women to carry passes in
urban areas.
“The women were courageous, persistent,
enthusiastic, indefatigable and their protest against passes set a
standard for anti-government protest that was never equalled,” Mandela
wrote in his book.
Almost 40 years after the protest, in 1994, he honored those women by declaring August 9 Women’s Day, a national holiday.
3. Constitutional justice
For Mandela, democracy and gender equality were far from separate issues.
“We ought to imprint in the supreme law of the land, firm principles upholding the rights of women.
Nelson Mandela
In 1995, at the time of drafting South
Africa’s constitution, he said, “As a tribute to the legions of women
who navigated the path of fighting for justice before us, we ought to
imprint in the supreme law of the land, firm principles upholding the
rights of women.
On International Human Rights Day in
December 1996, Mandela signed the final draft of the country’s
constitution granting South Africa’s women one of the most comprehensive
set of rights in the world.
South Africa’s Constitution, states “The
state may not unfairly discriminate directly or indirectly against
anyone on one or more grounds, including race, gender, sex, pregnancy,
marital status, ethnic or social origin, colour, sexual orientation,
age, disability, religion, conscience, belief, culture, language and
birth.”
It even called for the establishment of
the Commission for Gender Equality, with the vision to create a “society
free from gender oppression and all forms of inequality.”
4. UN Convention
In 1993, a year before Mandela became
South Africa’s first democratically-elected president, the country
signed the United Nations Convention to End All Forms of Discrimination
Against Women.
Two years later, the rainbow nation later ratified the treaty while he was in office.
Often referred to as an ‘international
bill of rights for women’, the convention set out to end all forms of
discrimination against women and still is yet to be ratified by the
United States.
5. Speaking up for women
In 1996, Mandela gave a compelling
speech on South Africa’s Women’s Day, calling for full equality and an
end to sexual violence against women.
Not blind to the challenges ahead, he
remarked: “As long as women are bound by poverty and as long as they are
looked down upon, human rights will lack substance.”
“As long as outmoded ways of thinking
prevent women from making a meaningful contribution to society, progress
will be slow. As long as the nation refuses to acknowledge the equal
role of more than half of itself, it is doomed to failure.”
But Mandela also went beyond rhetoric
and took political action to improve the lives of women. During his
presidency, he introduced free prenatal and postnatal care to mothers in
the public health system as well as free health care to children up to
the age of six.
Though he was a firm believer in
advancing women’s rights, today South Africa faces many challenges, in
terms of violence against women. In fact, over the years, Mandela often
expressed his dismay over the struggle to achieve equality for women.
However, this hurdle didn’t stop Mandela
and his third wife Graca Machel. The pair continued to work on this
issue after he retired from office. And, while the rainbow nation has
not yet fully lived up to Mandela’s vision, he will remain an
inspiration for all working towards social justice.
Source PUNCH.
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