Some
people I meet nowadays have started calling me mzee (elder). Perhaps it
is because of my bald head and salt-and-pepper hair, whatever's left of
it.
When they address me as mzee, it is probably out of deference and respect for age, as is wont in many of our communities.
But it is also condescending.
The mzee reference is a stereotype. It denotes entrenched social
perception of reaching a stage of decline and weakness, I should be
socialised with with some sympathy. It presumes there are things I now
cannot do.
It is a worldwide issue that
when it becomes a problem it is termed ageism, defined as prejudice or
discrimination on account of a person's age.
It therefore resonated when Sir
David Attenborough, the affable British naturalist celebrated for his
epic TV series, was recently being presented with the 2019 Chatham House
Prize by Queen Elizabeth II.
The Queen made made a remark referring to their age – they are both 93 – that provoked some chuckles from the audience.
She noted Sir David’s unequalled “ability to communicate the beauty and vulnerability of our natural environment.”
And for “your many talents,” she
went on with a kind of triumph, “one can’t help but feel that for those
of us of a certain generation, we can take great pleasure in proving
age is no barrier to being a positive influence.”
You would not expect Her Majesty
would gripe about ageism. And, it was precisely because of this that
her remark provoked some polite laughter in the audience. It is doubtful
her children and grandchildren or most Britons would hold prejudice
against their Queen on account of her age.
Yet such is culture and its
prejudices to demean the elderly that the Queen should be concerned
enough to you accomplishments of her friend to strike one against ageism
with relish.
Ageism is widespread everywhere
in the world, in the developed and developing countries. It results in
discrimination, neglect, abuse, and violence against older people. You
may find them discriminated in employment, receiving biased health care
and and being portrayed in the media as caricatures.
According to HelpAge, the
majority of older people live in poverty or extreme poverty and are
denied the right to make decisions about their personal finances,
property and medical care.
Many older people have no access
to, or choice and control over, the care and support services they may
need to live independent lives.
In large swathes of Africa,
older persons are killed due to superstition with accusations of being
witches. They are also killed because of greed in order to take or
inherit their property. And they are neglected as a burden and
unnecessary cost because of poverty. Such cases have been recurring in
Kenya and Tanzania. But are common across the continent, particularly in
East, West and Central Africa.
The Queen and Sir David may be
beyond all these, but you can see my apprehension of starting being
called Mzee when police regarding older persons is largely inadequate in
East Africa and the continent as a whole.
Last July Kigali hosted the
Continental Sensitisation Seminar on the Ratification of two Protocols,
one of which was the Protocol on the Rights of Older Persons in Africa,
where 53 Member States of the African Union were invited.
The Protocol was adopted by the
African Union at its 26th Summit Meeting in January 2016 in Addis Ababa.
What remains now is its ratification and domestication by the member
countries.
Many existing efforts to make
old people's lives easier are similar to the Rwandan organisation
NSINDAGIZA, an affiliate of HelpAge, which advocates for older people's
inclusion in sustainable development efforts.
Others include homes for the elderly. These efforts are woefully inadequate, by they do their bit.
In the meantime, the language we
use referring to old people ensures they stay down. As a conveyor of
meaning, it feeds assumptions and judgments that lead to the
stereotypes and discrimination.
Social media is particularly
pernicious. Facebook for example. A much quoted instance carried in the
professional journal, The Gerontologist, looked at 84 Facebook groups
focused on age-related topics. Two thirds of the groups "excoriated"
older individuals, 27 per cent infantilised them (i.e., treated them as
if they are children), and 37 per cent urged banning them from
activities such as driving and shopping.
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