Lawyer and human rights activist Seodi White has long been an outspoken campaigner for gender justice in Malawi, a country where half its women are married before the age of 18.
As the head of the
Malawian chapter of Women in Law in Southern Africa (WLSA), White is at
the forefront of the battle against inequality, traveling around the
country to promote education and to stop young girls from giving up on
school and marrying in their early teens.
But the prominent
activist, who is herself the mother of a young daughter, is not only
concerned with the rights of teenage girls. She is also targeting
cultural practices that harm older, vulnerable women in Malawi.
'Widow cleansing'
One such custom,
prevalent in the southern tip of the landlocked country, is "widow
cleansing," a traditional practice in which a widow is expected to have
sexual relations, "in order to cleanse her," explains White.
"There is a belief that
if she does not sleep with someone, the spirit of her dead husband will
come and visit upon her and her family will be cursed," she adds.
White says that the
practice is not forced upon widows. Instead, she says, the tradition has
become so much part of the culture that widows themselves call for it.
"It's a mindset issue,"
says White. "Even the widows, they've told me, 'I don't want to die, I
don't want a curse to come to my husband.' They cry to be cleansed."
White says the
tradition, which involves unprotected sex, thus increasing the chances
of HIV infection, has been turned into a business.
"There are professional
cleansers in villages," says White. She says these men charge widows up
to $50 for their services, in a country where the minimum wage is less
than $1 per day.
In this country, to get ahead in life, to beat poverty, you need education.
Seodi White, WLSA
Seodi White, WLSA
In recent times, there
have been several initiatives by White's NGO, as well as other groups,
to try and
change the situation. One effort is to target the
"professional cleansers" in attempt to get them to change their ways.
"Some have actually come
out in the open and said: 'I used to be a commercial cleanser, I'm HIV
positive, I've stopped, it's not fine and I go village by village
telling other commercial cleansers to stop this, it's a risky taboo
behavior.'"
The power of education
A daughter of a
professor of English, White grew up in Malawi in a relatively privileged
family. She received her law degree in Botswana before moving to the UK
to focus on gender and development studies.
White saw first-hand the
difference that education can make to a woman's life, and that's why
all her efforts to promote gender equality -- from campaigning against
child marriage and domestic abuse to protecting widows' rights through
her work as a lawyer -- have been shaped by the transformative power of
education.
"In this country, to get ahead in life, to beat poverty, you need education," she says.
"I know the difference
between an uneducated woman in Malawi and a person of education, as I
am, and I decided to use my position to uplift others," adds White.
"I decided I'm going to
dedicate my life to dealing with injustice, just because I don't like it
when a structure or system puts others in poverty, puts others in a
position of inequality," adds White.
'The dispossession of widows'
Another campaign
spearheaded by White is the fight against the prevalent culture of
property grabbing, one of the most deep-rooted forms of discrimination
suffered by widows in Malawi.
White says that all
across the country widows are at risk of having their matrimonial
property taken by their late husband's relatives, often leaving them and
their children homeless.
"The way our family
structures are done is that when a man and a woman get married they are
not considered related," says White. "A man is still looked at by his
family as he is theirs and the woman is looked at by her family as she
is theirs."
White says this
entrenched culture, coupled with a prevalent assumption that women do
not have an earning capacity, has condemned many widows to acute
poverty.
"When the husband dies,"
says White, "his people, they come in and say, 'what did our son buy in
this house? Where is the stuff?' They don't look at the stuff as
belonging to the family."
WSLA fought hard for
more than 10 years to advance women's rights to keep their marital
estate, calling for reform in Malawi's inheritance laws. Its campaign,
which met strong resistance, finally succeeded in 2011 when the
country's parliament voted to make property grabbing an offense and
protect the spouse's and children's share in the deceased's assets.
"A law is a law -- it
might not be like it's working immediately, but it's got staying power,"
says White, adding that more needs to be done to raise awareness about
the reforms and to inform widows of their rights.
White says that despite
all the difficulties, it is victories like this that make her decision
to commit her life in the fight against gender injustice worthwhile.
"I've been working on this business for 15 years; They've been moments of hope," she says.
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