Sunday Times

CHANGING THE FATHERHOOD NARRATIVE

A South African dad speaks out about absent fathers, crime and the stigma of being a single male parent.

- By Gosiame Masike

Irecently had the opportunit­y to visit several schools in Gauteng. When I asked a small group of children about their experience of having a father in their lives, I was met with many blank stares. They simply didn’t have a response because they weren’t growing up with one. They’d never had a consistent father by their side.

The figures back this up. According to Stats SA, half of all South African children don’t live with their biological fathers. My experience working in the correction­al services space has taught me about its far-reaching implicatio­ns.

Absent fathers and crime

There’s a clear link between the access and relationsh­ip children have with their fathers and how likely they are to commit a crime — either as a child or later in life. Studies have shown that youths with the highest incarcerat­ion rates are those who didn’t have a father living with them. Among female inmates, more than half come from homes with absent fathers.

In my work with juvenile inmates in South Africa’s prisons, I’ve seen this first-hand. When you engage with these youths, when you start asking, “What happened? Why are you here?”, and learning more about their childhood, it almost always involves an absent, neglectful or abusive father.

Few of them have had a father to guide, support and encourage them, to show them right from wrong and to demonstrat­e this in his own actions. And it’s not just about biological fathers; the young people I work with tend not to have positive male role models in their lives generally. The men they do interact with often promote chauvinist­ic behaviour. In worstcase scenarios, they are misogynist­ic, abusive and violent.

When I was growing up, I was betrayed by the adult men I confided in when I hit adolescenc­e. Rather than counsel me through the changes I was experienci­ng, they revealed the secrets I’d shared, publicly — much to my humiliatio­n. I also thought beating a woman was normal. I witnessed it all the time. None of the men in my life taught me differentl­y. These kinds of incidents have an enormous impact on how young people learn to behave and what they believe to be acceptable.

Stigma and scepticism

South Africa’s long-standing and ongoing gender-based violence epidemic has inevitably led to a mistrust between men and women. It’s worth stating that while people of all genders perpetrate and experience intimate partner violence, men are most often the perpetrato­rs and women and children the victims. This epidemic, combined with traditiona­l patriarcha­l views on the roles of men and women which are entrenched in South African culture, has contribute­d to a scepticism towards single fathers.

I am a single father to a daughter and have attracted the unjustifie­d suspicion of my community over the years. Being a single father in South Africa is often seen as taboo, especially if the child is a girl. It’s simply not the norm. In the past, people around me have thought that I was hiding something. I’ve even had the police come to my door for no other reason than my neighbours thought my situation was unusual — and that something must therefore be wrong.

While I understand and will always support public concern about keeping children safe, I think we need to be careful about alienating and ostracisin­g loving, single fathers. This social stigma runs the risk of making a difficult situation worse. Instead, we should be supporting single fathers — or any father for that matter, and any parent or guardian. Being responsibl­e for a child is a challengin­g experience that can be made easier if parents are educated and guided.

I think South Africa is seeing signs of change. A new generation of fathers is emerging; men who are looking back at the behaviour of their own fathers and deciding to change the narrative. We don’t want to be absent or abusive. We want to be present, engaged, a force for good. We want to protect our children from harm, give them a fair chance in life, and guide them away from the influences that may lead them to crime and incarcerat­ion.

There’s hope for transforma­tion. But it is our collective responsibi­lity, in our families, communitie­s and broader society, to create it.

Gosiame Masike is the head of Heartlines’ department of correction­al services unit.

ABOUT HEARTLINES

Heartlines is a social and behaviour-change organisati­on that encourages people to live out positive values. It does this through projects that aim to spark conversati­ons about values and equip people to live out these values. Heartlines facilitate­s valuesbase­d training, workshops and motivation­al talks for companies, organisati­ons and groups.

ABOUT FATHERS MATTER

Fathers Matter is a Heartlines initiative to promote the positive and active presence of fathers in children’s lives. At the centre of the project are six anthology films set in various contexts around South Africa. Each short film is a compelling drama that explores the complexiti­es of fatherhood in South Africa today, where most children grow up in homes without their biological fathers.

 ?? ?? Picture: 123rf.com/djvstock
Picture: 123rf.com/djvstock

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