NewsDay (Zimbabwe)

Time to reflect on the boy child, commemorat­ing World Day of Boy Child

- Chaka Ruzvidzo ● Read full article on www.newsday. co.zw ● Chaka Ruzvidzo is a Producer/ Presenter of Bro Code aired simultaneo­usly every Monday from 1400hrs to 1500hrs CAT on Heart and Soul Broadcasti­ng Services Facebook page and NewsDay Zimbabwe Faceb

IN a world where focus has been on the vulnerabil­ity of the girl child and a plethora of the focus has been accorded to the feminine gender, boys are left at the mercy of support, care and attention that has been ticking like a time bomb as boys’ vulnerabil­ity is rearing an ugly head as seen on the status quo — boys being the huge number succumbing to drug and substance abuse. As such one, Jerome Teelucksin­gh (a prolific author, gender issues thought leader and founder of the November 19 Internatio­nal Men’s Day movement since 1999) proposed the commemorat­ion of World Day of the Boy Child or Internatio­nal Boys Day on May 16 each year.

Teelucksin­gh, at the inaugural Internatio­nal Boys Day movement on May 16 2018 said: “There is little room for debate when I write. We need to save the boy child. We need to protect the boy child from the harmful influences of society. There is an urgent need to focus on the home and school in order to save the boy child. The boy child lives in a turbulent social environmen­t that makes him vulnerable to a multitude of negative forces. If a boy child is neglected or fed a diet of hate and violence it is obvious he will develop into a teenager who is misguided and confused. And the crucial transition into manhood will be even more difficult.”

“Protecting the girl child is equally important. Some of us would be aware that since 2012, the United Nations marks 11 October as the “Internatio­nal Day of the Girl Child,” the obvious question is — why have we not dedicated a day that focuses on the boy child? We must not allow the continued imbalance of the gender scale. We cannot ignore that without a focus on both the boy child and the girl child, gender equality is not a reality.”

Hence, Internatio­nal Boys Day is meant to advocate for a paradigm shift to such a notion as both genders are equally important as noted by Warwick Marsh, founder of the Fatherhood Foundation and co-operating partner with Teelucksin­gh to promote Internatio­nal Boys Day, that: “Worldwide, boys are 50% less likely than girls to meet basic proficienc­y standards in reading, maths and science.” He cited that the simple goal of Internatio­nal Boys Day is to help every boy to become a man of honour and integrity so that he might be able to contribute in a vital way to his family, community, his nation, and the world.

Sadly, the United Nations and its organs have not up to this day officially recognised either the Internatio­nal Boys Day or Internatio­nal Men’s Day thus creating a vacuum for gender equality that needs remedy as mentioned by Helena Adutwumwaa a boy child advocate and founder of Concern for the Boy Child Initiative Ghana who is also the author of a book Dear Boy Child who noted, Empowering girls and neglecting boys is like pouring water into a basket.

Against such a background, current research worldwide shows that boys:

● Are worldwide 50% more likely to fail meeting basic proficienc­y standards in reading than girls.

● Are 100% more likely to be diagnosed with attention-deficit/ hyperactiv­ity disorder (ADHD — which is a chronic condition consisting of attention difficulty, hyperactiv­ity and impulsiven­ess) compared to girls.

● Are more likely to be the victims of violent crime.

● Are severely behind girls in school grades. Boys take 70% of D’s and failed grades.

● Have a suicide rate four times higher than girls.

● Are five times more likely to end up in juvenile detention.

While globally there is an inclinatio­n to amplify the dilemma that girls and young women are often trapped in, the predicamen­t that young boys are subjected to should neither be forgotten nor ignored. It is a fact that life for children who experience the cycle of abject poverty is just as tragic for boys as it is for girls. Unfortunat­ely, young boys oftentimes have little or largely no proper role models and the guidance that they require to grow up as men of integrity and purpose.

For over 25 years post the Beijing Declaratio­n and Platform for Action, civil society organisati­ons (CSOs) as well as government­s and the donor world have been prioritisi­ng the girl child at the expense of the boy child when drafting interventi­on strategies. Without trivialisi­ng such efforts that have brought tremendous improvemen­t to girls’ and women’s lives, most interventi­on strategies tend to exclude the boy child and place much focus on the girl child which is tantamount to creating a half-baked future generation.

This yawning gender equality gap follows an increase in cases of young boys who are experienci­ng abuse from older women, or their peers. Of late boys have faced forms of abuse that include sexual, physical, emotional, neglect, ritual killings, etc, and this has increased male vulnerabil­ity. The same is also said for grown men, who also face personal pressures, spousal or peer abuse that has had detrimenta­l effects or given rise to negative behaviour such as drug and substance abuse, vengeful violent behaviour, reckless sexual acts, or even suicides.

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