Cape Argus

Gender Based Violence – how can we stop it?

- Craig Wilkins Craig Wilkins is Founder of NPO Father A Nation.

WE LIVE in a world in which the abuse of women in some form or another has become commonplac­e.

Our response to this mass violation of human rights says everything about us as a society. We can be passive and do nothing; we can get angry and make a lot of ineffectua­l noise or we can dig deeply into the real reasons behind it and take whatever action is necessary to fix it. Gender Based Violence (GBV) is a threat against one half of humanity and an indictment against the other half. We need to act.

Violence against women is not a uniquely South African issue, but the scale of it in South Africa is in a league of its own. We have the worst levels of GBV in the world and the highest incidence of rape per capita on the planet. Quite understand­ably this has caused widespread outrage. We have seen angry

marches, social media rants, hashtags such as #noexcuse, #countmein, #menaretras­h and celebritie­s of all kinds speaking out. But how much does any of this do to truly cure the societal cancer that is GBV? It creates awareness, which is a very good thing, but mostly offers little in the way of real solutions.

GBV is overwhelmi­ngly perpetrate­d by men against women, which means it is male behaviour that needs to change, not female. Yet the problem is not men or masculinit­y; it is wounded men with a

distorted concept of masculinit­y. True masculinit­y loves, serves, protects and provides. The solution is to heal men and correct false notions of what masculinit­y is. Men are not born rapists or abusers, they become that way through brokenness, fatherless­ness, bad role modelling and distorted messaging about masculinit­y.

We don’t need to redefine masculinit­y, we need to rediscover it.

Telling men who are abusive that they are trash won’t change them. It may in fact make them worse.

Stigmatisi­ng men as deviant mostly serves to drive men further into darkness and alienate and disempower one of the greatest forces for good in society – the innate drive of men to protect. GBV is a human rights issue. It is not a war against men or a battle between the sexes – it is a war against broken masculinit­y. It is a fight to heal deep scars and honour the humanness and dignity of every man, woman and child.

Gender Based Violence is not something that will self-correct. It will take emphatic, strategic and sustained action based on an understand­ing of its true causes, to break the cycle. The action needs to be led by men. Men who are passive while GBV continues unabated are complicit in one of the greatest evils of our time. Men are designed to be dangerous, but never, ever to women, children or society; dangerous to whatever threatens women, children or society. Perpetrato­rs of Gender Based Violence should fear true masculinit­y. Abandonmen­t, abuse, prejudice and corruption should all fear true masculinit­y because true masculinit­y would never tolerate them.

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