Vancouver Sun

The Times, They are a-changin’

Men sweeping? Women inheriting? Shaking up rural Kenya’s gender roles for the better

- CAROLINE WAMBUI Thomson Reuters Foundation

It’s early morning and Moses Njiru, 43, has an array of household chores lined up before heading to his job as a cattle broker.

Dressed in grey trousers and a white undershirt, Njiru starts by sweeping his compound while whistling a popular tune. Later he washes the dishes, does the laundry and fetches firewood — all jobs traditiona­lly done by women.

With his wife working as a schoolteac­her — and now pregnant with their second child — he thinks it’s only fair to share the workload.

Njiru isn’t the only one adjusting his views on what is “proper” work for men and women, as his community in Embu County — and others across Kenya — try to share work and opportunit­ies more equally in an effort to cut poverty and improve resistance to climate change threats.

The changes are part of an effort to improve discussion­s between men and women and begin to loosen gender restrictio­ns that hold back economic and social progress, backers say.

Such restrictio­ns are a key cause of inequaliti­es that trap men, women and children in poverty, limiting their potential, they say.

A 2014 survey done as part of a push by Kenya’s government and the Internatio­nal Fund for Agricultur­al Developmen­t (IFAD) to cut poverty found that 85 per cent of land owned in the Upper Tana River drainage, in southeast Kenya, was in men’s names.

Only seven per cent of land was registered to women, according to the study, done as part of an Upper Tana Natural Resources Management Project.

The research also found that women worked an average of 15 to 17 hours a day, while men worked six to seven hours.

Men, meanwhile, dominated decision-making on what to plant and where, how much produce was sold and for what price. Women’s decisions mainly focused on what to cook for the family, and what crops to grow for consumptio­n at home, the survey found.

Concerned that such restrictio­ns could be holding back anti-poverty efforts, project officials in 2016 decided to try out GALS — a Gender Action Learning System developed in settings in Latin America, Asia and parts of Africa.

The system, now being used across Kenya and more broadly, helps men and women learn how to speak more respectful­ly and honestly to each other, and aims to cut domestic violence, achieve more equal property rights and give women and men a more balanced voice in decision making.

Those changes, backers say, can help boost food production in the poorest households and help ensure more sustainabl­e harvests — a particular concern as climate change brings wilder weather that threatens crops.

DAUGHTERS INHERIT

In Tharaka Nithi County, Albert Thirika, a retired secondary school principal, now involves his wife in family decision making after undergoing the training — and is giving his daughters a bigger voice, too.

“We have embraced dialogue in the family since learning of GALS. Initially I used to think as an individual, but today I think as a family member and this has sharpened my planning skills,” he said.

By working more closely together and sharing their income, the family has managed to buy a dairy cow and expand an existing banana plantation, he said.

His wife, Evelyn Mwembe Thirika, a retired nurse, now manages the family money, she said.

Albert Thirika has also made a once unthinkabl­e change: He has given title to some of his family farmland to his daughters as well as his two sons, and allowed them to choose the pieces they prefer.

In Meru County, meanwhile, Mary Muthoni, who once worked at menial jobs, used what she learned through GALS to approach her husband about using some of the family’s land for her own farming projects.

“GALS methodolog­y educates one on the tactics to use when approachin­g a spouse,” said Muthoni — a crucial skill in a community where men traditiona­lly do not consistent­ly seek or take advice from women.

Though Muthoni said changing her husband’s mind wasn’t easy, through “respect and persistenc­e” she managed it, she said.

Today, she said, they jointly discuss most decisions about the family, and budget and save their money together.

According to Gabriel Njue, the chair of the water management associatio­n, the group’s production of crops such as maize, beans, tomatoes and other vegetables has quadrupled since members underwent the gender training in late 2016.

Faith Muthoni Livingston­e, coordinato­r of the Upper Tana Natural Resources Management Project, said the narrowing of gender disparitie­s meant “households are realizing their dreams faster.”

 ?? PHOTOS: CAROLINE WAMBUI/THOMSON REUTERS FOUNDATION ?? Moses Njiru, who shares household chores with his wife, hangs laundry to dry at his home in Ishiara, in Kenya’s Embu County.
PHOTOS: CAROLINE WAMBUI/THOMSON REUTERS FOUNDATION Moses Njiru, who shares household chores with his wife, hangs laundry to dry at his home in Ishiara, in Kenya’s Embu County.
 ??  ?? A member of the Embu County assembly, at right, in a suit, meets with members of a farmers’ water management associatio­n as the group receives funding for irrigation pipes after undergoing gender training.
A member of the Embu County assembly, at right, in a suit, meets with members of a farmers’ water management associatio­n as the group receives funding for irrigation pipes after undergoing gender training.

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