Former Femnet chairperson Njoki Wainaina speaks during an interview with
Sunday Nation on the December 14, 2013. Ms. Wainaina was among the
Kenyan women Malawi President Joyce Banda acknowledged during the Kenya
at 50 celebrations at the Kasarani Safaricom stadium on Jamuhuri day.
PHOTO | EMMA NZIOKA
Members of the dot.com
generation assembled at the Kasarani Safaricom stadium for Kenya’s 50th
birthday celebrations may have been bewildered by one of the names
Malawi President Joyce Banda mentioned when she was given the podium.
It
turns out that at that ill-co-ordinated fete, Africa’s only second
woman president was ambushed to say a word, and in the process went on
to acknowledge “lots of friends here”, who included Njoki Wainaina,
Charity Ngilu, and Beth Mugo — starting with Mama Ngina Kenyatta, whom
she thanked for an unnamed favour.
While Cabinet
Secretary Ngilu and nominated Senator Mugo are well-known political
figures, many in the 20-30-age bracket, which forms the UhuRuto support
base that thronged Kasarani, must have wondered just who Njoki Wainaina
is.
And yet, Ms Wainaina is one of the kingpins of
Kenya’s women’s liberation movement, especially from the point of view
of the UN Decade for Women Conference held in Nairobi in 1985.
Together
with Dr Eddah Gachukia — one of Kenya’s first two nominated women MPs,
who served in the Third Parliament — child rights activist, Dr Pamela
Kola and Prof Norah Olembo, Ms Wainaina was pivotal in both the
formation of Femnet — the organisation that takes credit for the
resounding success of the meeting that resulted in the Nairobi
Forward-looking Strategies for the Advancement of Women.
Femnet
stands for ‘feminine network’, a term coined by Zambian gender analyst
and activist Sara Longwe. It was preferred to the mouthful African
Women’s Development and Communication Network, which is still the
organisation’s official name. Ms Longwe was the Femnet chairperson from
1997 to 2003.
The Femnet story is captured in the
recently released book, HerStory, written by Ms Wainaina, who was the
organisation’s founding co-ordinator and later chairperson of its board
from 1992 to 1995.
Tellingly, the book’s foreword is
penned by Malawi President Joyce Hilda Banda, who says in the opening
paragraph: “...my own personal, professional and political growth,
struggles, challenges and victories have parallels with the FEMNET
HerStory. As we reflect on the journey we have come on the last 30
years, we see a clear pattern of growth and development that is
reflected in the personal, national, sub-regional and global
achievements of the women’s movement.”
It is ironic
that although Ms Banda cut her political teeth in Kenya — the same with
Liberia’s Ellen Johnson-Sirleaf, who spent 12 years here in exile
during the turbulent reign of dictator Samuel Doe, a Kenya woman is yet
to get anywhere near State House.
The dismal
performances of Mrs Ngilu and Prof Wangari Maathai in the 1997 General
Election, followed by the equally poor showing by Ms Martha Karua in the
March 2013 elections is a statement of deep prejudice against women’s
leadership in Kenya.
Talking to the Sunday Nation on
Saturday, Ms Wainaina explained how the roaring success that was the
Nairobi conference shook the country’s patriarchal base so much that
while other African women left with what they described as ‘the Nairobi
Spirit’, then President Moi started using women to destroy the women’s
movement.
“Moi was so afraid — he started with
Maendeleo ya Wanawake Organisation (the oldest women’s grassroots
movement in the country) — to destroy the gains of the women’s
conference… The line he used was ‘beware of the elite woman’— and brick
by brick, he used Maendeleo to destroy other women.” Maendeleo was in
fact co-opted into Kanu, assuming the infamous Kanu-Maendeleo ya
Wanawake name.
But she does not spare the Mwai Kibaki government. which she considers as having been the worst for women.
The
woman who was pivotal to the formation of the Men for the Equality of
Men and Women of retired Presbyterian cleric Timothy Njoya — and similar
movements in the southern African region, had a message for the men:
“You are the first beneficiaries of the empowerment of women.”
Ms
Wainaina is now in a new ministry called Kingdom Building that seeks to
address the enigma that although Kenya is said to be more that 80 per
cent Christian, there is still much evil in society.
So, how exactly does she relate to the Malawi Head of State? “She is very close to me. The main thing I do for her is to pray.”
So, how exactly does she relate to the Malawi Head of State? “She is very close to me. The main thing I do for her is to pray.”
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