Thomas Sankara on the Emancipation of Women
An internationalist whose ideas live on!
by Nathi Mthethwa
Introduction
"...We, who have walked with giants know that Moses Mabhida belonged in
that company too". (O.R. Tambo at Mabhida's funeral)
I am certain that those who knew and struggled with Sankara would have expressed
similar sentiments at his funeral. Sankara's insight on the complimentary role
between National Liberation Struggle and a socialist construction is demonstrated
by his thoughts on a variety of social motor forces and sectors of revolution
like the working class, youth, peasants, intelligentsia, women etc.
August 4, 1983 witnessed a popular uprising in one of the poorest Western African
country of the Upper Volta, thus ushered in potentially one of the most far-reaching
revolutions in African history. The leader of this revolution was Thomas Sankara
who became the president of the new revolutionary government at the age of thirty-three.
Upon the triumph of the revolution the country was renamed Burkina Faso.
For the next four years the Burkina revolution, carried out the most ambitious
programme that included land reform, fighting corruption, reforestation to halt
the creeping desert and avert famine and prioritising education and health.
For this programme to succeed, the government pressed on with the organisation,
mobilisation and political education of especially the working class, youth,
peasants and women. The government also focused on solidarity with freedom struggles
around the world - from solidarity with the battle against apartheid in South
Africa to friendships with the revolutionary movements in Cuba, Nicaragua, Palestine,
Western Sahara and so forth.
On October 15, 1987 Sankara was assassinated in a counter-revolutionary coup
that destroyed the revolutionary government and thus destroyed the acceleration
of the program of change in that country. Ironically, a week prior to his death
Sankara addressed people about the slain Cuban revolutionary leader, Che Guevara
and said that "while revolutionaries as individuals can be murdered, you
cannot kill ideas."
Sankara has become a symbol to all those who were inspired by the Burkinabe
revolution and who are committed to the total liberation of Africa and indeed
of all humanity the world over. For the purpose of this pamphlet we will confine
ourselves on his thoughts on women' s emancipation.
Sankara's Thoughts on Women's Emancipation
>From his experience as a revolutionary leader and convinced of the need
for a Marxist - Leninist understanding of human society, Sankara explained the
origins of women oppression and the importance to eradicate it.
Dorotea Wilson, a then member of Nicaragua's National Assembly and a Sandanista
leader, paid tribute to Sankara's speech against women oppression, thus: "This
speech is not just a declaration of principles. It also shows a profound understanding
of, and active solidarity with the struggle of women which in fact belongs to
and involves all of humanity." (Referring to his speech to a rally in Burkina
Faso's capital of Ougadougou on March 8, 1987, commemorating International Women's
Day)
Thomas Sankara, putting his case before thousands of women, moved from the point
that the revolution cannot triumph without the emancipation of women. Whilst
the night of August gave birth to an achievement of freedom, honor, dignity
and happiness, he argued, this was selfish happiness for something crucial was
missing: woman. She has been excluded from the joyful procession. Though men
had reached the edges of the great garden of revolution, women were still confined
within the shadows of anonymity. He further charged that nothing whole, nothing
definitive or lasting could be accomplished in Burkina Faso, as long as women
are kept in condition of subjugation, a condition imposed in the course of centuries
by various systems of exploitation.
Men and women of Burkina Faso were urged to profoundly change their image of
themselves, for they were part of building a society that is not only establishing
new social relations, but is also provoking a cultural transformation, upsetting
the relation of authority between men and women and forcing each to rethink
the nature of both. In order to achieve this, which was immediately acknowledge
as formidable but necessary task, you need correct tools to equal the task.
"The human being," he said, "this vast and complex combination
of pain and joy, solitary and forsaken, yet creator of all humanity, suffering,
frustrated and humiliated, and yet endless source of happiness for each one
of us, this source of affection beyond compare, inspiring the most unexpected
courage, this being called weak but possessing untold ability to inspire us
to take the road of honor, this being of flesh and blood and of spiritual conviction
- this being women, is you.
You are our mothers, life companions, our comrades in struggle and because of
this fact you should by right affirm yourselves as equal partners in the joyful
victory feasts of the revolution. We must restore to humanity your true image
by making the reign of freedom prevail over differentiations imposed by nature
and by eliminating all kinds of hypocrisy that sustain the shameless exploitation
of women."
The first step is to try and understand how this system works to grasp its real
nature in all its subtler, in order to then work out a line of action that can
lead to women's total emancipation.
The evolution of society and the worldwide status of women Dialectical materialism
has shed light on problems and conditions women face, which is part of a general
system of exploitation. Dialectics defines human society not as a natural, unchangeable
fact, but as something working on nature. Human kind does not submit passively
to the power of nature, but takes control over it.
This process is not internal or subjectively in practice, once women ceased
to be viewed as a mere sexual beings and we look beyond their biological functions
and become conscious of their weight as an active social force. In essence the
difference between men and women revolves around biological functions, of which
women have more functions than men, anyway.
The importance of dialectics lies in having gone beyond essential biological
limits and simplistic theories about our being slaves to nature and having laid
out the facts in their social and economic context. From the beginnings of human
history, humankind mastering of nature was extended beyond his or her bare hands
or his or her physical organisation. The hand reached out to the tool, which
then increased the hand's power. It was thus no physical attributes alone, musculature
or the capacity to give birth for example that determine the unequal status
of men and women. Nor was it technological progress as such that institutionalised
this inequality. It was rather the transition from one form of societal evolution
to the which institutionalised inequality breeding exploitation of women by
men. From slavery, feudalism, capitalism etc. the common denominator has always
been the subjugation of women folk.
Frederick Engels explained that for millennia from Paleolithic to the Bronze
age, relations between sexes were positive and complimentary in character. He
(Engels) further charged that relations were based on collaboration and interaction,
in contrasts to the patriarchy, where women exclusion was generalised characteristics
of the epoch. Engels traced the historic enslavement of women to the appearance
of private property, when one mode of production gave way to another and when
one form of social organisation replaced another. So, for eight millennia property
was handed down from a woman to her clan, unlike now where property is from
father to son, a historical and contemporary patriarchy.
Humankind first knew slavery with the advent of private property. Man, master
of his slaves, land, cattle and in addition elevated himself to be the woman's
master. This was the historic defeat of the female sex. It came about with the
appearance of the division of labour as a result of the new mode of production
and the revolution in the means of production.
The patriarchal family emerged with the father as head, within this family the
woman was oppressed. The family was founded on the sole and personal property
of the man. Reigning supreme, the man satisfied his sexual whims by mating with
slaves. Women became his booty, his conquest in trade, for he benefited from
their labour power and took his feel from myriad of pleasures they afforded
him. For their part, as soon as masters gave chance, women took revenge in infidelity.
Thus adultery became a "natural" counterpart to marriage. It was the
woman's only self-defence against domestic slavery to which she was subjected.
Her social oppression was the direct reflection of her economic oppression.
The status of women will improve only with the elimination of the system that
exploits them. Through the different stages where patriarchy has triumphed there
has been close parallels between gender, class and racial oppression. Her status
overturned by private property, banished from her very self, relegated to the
role of child raiser and servant, written out of history by philosophy and the
most entrenched religions, stripped of all worth by mythology, woman shared
a lot with a slave who was nothing more than a beast in human face.
It is not surprising therefore that in its phase of conquest, the capitalist
system should be the economic system that has exploited women the most brazenly
and with the most sophistication. The woman, whatever her social rank, was crushed
not only within her class, but by other classes too. This was the case even
for women who belonged to the exploiting classes.
The Specific Character of women's oppression
Women's fate is bound up with that of an exploited male. However this solidarity
must not blind us in looking at the specific situation faced by womenfolk in
our society. It is true that the woman worker and man are exploited economically,
but the worker wife is also condemned further to silence by her worker husband.
This is the same method used by men to dominate other men. The idea was crafted
that certain men, by virtue of their family origin and birth, or by divine rights
were superior to others.
We must pay close attention to the situation of women because it pushes the
most conscious of them into waging a sex war when what we need is a war of classes,
against gender oppression, against racial domination, wage together side by
side. This war is one we can and we will win - if we understand that we need
one another and are complimentary, that we share the same fate and fate and
in fact that we are condemned to inter dependent. In order to win this war women
must see themselves as part of an organic whole offensive against retrogression
in society, not as a separate entity having to wage a struggle belonging to
them alone.
The man, no matter how oppressed he is, has another human being to oppress:
his wife. To say this is without any doubt to affirm a terrible fact. When we
talk about the vile system of apartheid, for example, our thoughts and our emotions
turn to exploited and oppressed blacks. But we forget the black woman who has
to endure her husband as well.
There are plenty of examples of men, otherwise progressive who live cheerfully
in adultery, but who are prepared to murder their wives on the merest suspicion
of infidelity, yet thing nothing of seeking so called consolation in the arms
of prostitutes.
There are also those more or less revolutionary militants - who don't accept
that their wives should also be politically active, or who allow them to be
provided it is during the day only, who will beat their wives because they went
to a meeting or a demonstration at night.
Oh! These suspicious jealous men! Said Sankara. What narrow mindedness! And
what a limited partial commitment! For is it only at nights that a woman who
is disenchanted and determined can deceive a husband? What about on 'revolutionary"
who will remark on a woman as a "despicably materialist", "manipulators",
"gossip", "clowns", jealous" and so on. Maybe this
is all true of women, but surely it is equally true of men. When you are condemned,
as women are, to wait for your lord and master at home in order to feed him
and receive his permission to speak or just to be alive, what else do you have
to keep you occupied and to give you at leas the illusion of being useful? The
same attitudes are found amongst men put in the same situation.
Gender elitism: another enemy of women's liberation
The continued oppression of women can as well be worsened by some other women
who use women oppression to climb the social ladder. They use the gender ticket
for narrow material benefit which has no bearing to the course of women's emancipation.
The different neo-colonial regimes, Sankara wrote, that have been in power in
Burkina have had no better than a bourgeois approach to women's emancipation,
which brought only the illusion of freedom and dignity. It was bound to remain
that way as long as only few petty bourgeois women from the towns were concerned
with the latest fade in feminist politics - or rather primitive feminism which
demanded the right of women to be masculine.
Thus the creation of the Ministry of Women, headed by a woman, was touted as
a victory. Asked Sankara: "Did we really understand the situation faced
by women? Did we realise we are talking about living conditions of 52% of Burkinabe
population, away from town in the rural areas? The high and fast life of town
has to be normalised to take into account of all women concerned with fighting
hunger, disease etc."
Concluding remarks
It is evident form this account that the struggle against women oppression is
a struggle that belongs to all humanity. Thus it is the fight for gender equality,
which is interwoven with class and national questions. The generation of giants
like Thomas Sankara, Samora Machel and O.R. Tambo have pointed to the correct
path - that the liberation of women is not an act of charity but a pre-requisite
for the triumph of any revolution. This is the commitment of the ANC to fight
for a non-sexist society with the same vigor used when we fought against apartheid
system.
The future is revolutionary!
The future belongs to those who fight!
Forward to a non-sexist society!