REBLOGGED: Who is an African woman? @msafropolitan
In a failed attempt to reblog this article through WordPress, I had to manually recreate this bold blog post by the well-known and respected the blogger Minna Salami, also known as Ms. Afropolitan. A thought provoking and interesting account on how perceptions of what it is to be an African women are still very much outdated.
Please share your thoughts, and I strongly recommend visiting the stimulating and enlightening Afropolitan site.
When people ask me what I do, and I respond that I’m a blogger, and that I blog about topics that primarily concern African women, quite often they proceed to either tell me about an humanitarian or developmental cause they are involved with or have read about. Sometimes they ask me how my blog reaches women in African villages.
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They’re not ‘wrong’ to ask these questions and I do address women’s lives in rural Africa at times. However, these reactions imply that too often, the term “African woman” conjures a poor woman in rural Africa that automatically needs helping. The pitiable African woman. The one that mainstream media doesn’t tire of depicting. The one who indeed exists – although she has more agency often than allowed in depictions of her – who furthermore is a sister to other African women,and not this “Other” that we ‘inauthentic’ African women are saving.
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When such questions are posed, I find myself needing to be quite careful in explaining that women in rural Africa are not necessarily my target audience. This is foolish. It should not be offensive for me to say this! No one imagines that a European feminist blog must reach just one type of European woman. Most people who read this blog are based in urban cities, both in the west and the continent. Also, I myself being a Nigerian-Finnish, African-European, woman with strong ties to both continents, share stories and opinions that are based on my experiences. Therefore, people who read the blogs are likely to have cultural experiences that resonate to some extent with mine.
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It seems obvious that an African woman is equally the farmer who lives in a village in Ghana or one who has a high-flying office job in Kinshasa. She is the Togolese woman in a refugee camp in Israel. Or the Ethiopian woman in a luxury home in London’s Chelsea. She is the Namibian/German woman on social welfare in Berlin. She is – from a pan-African cross-continental stance which this blog has – the Dominican woman, the Brazilian woman, the African descendant in any part of the world who vests a part of her identity in the African continent.
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I’m tired of people immediately assuming that to blog about African women is to blog about charity work. I’m tired of this idea that African women can only be objects of pity. I’m tired of the notion that African women can or should only interact on select topics. African women bloggers should and do write about social media, sex, literature, art, pop culture, love, philosophy,fashion, food, hiphop and more. I’m sick and tired of the single narrative of African womanhood having such impenetrable power.
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What do you say? Have you had similar or dissimilar experiences?
… Read the full article on Ms.Afropolitan and share your comments here
Hi, I just came across your blog and I really love it and what you are about. I myself am Nigerian born and raised but I currently live in London, and the amount of ignorant comments I get are surprising.
I’ve just started my own blog and would love for you to have a look at it :)
http://www.blackandvanilla.blogspot.com
x
Hey!!! Awww thank you! I love your site and now following. I will stalk you in twitter if your on it and maybe we can collaborate on a blog post sometime :-) xx
You’re welcome :) Thanks so much for visiting my blog and following! I don’t have a twitter account yet but will create one soon! I would love for us to collaborate :)
http://www.blackandvanilla.blogspot.com
Amen to that. I’m stil recovering from the Olympiill be s where every kind of women from every kind of continent took part. in the modern world people can be of multipul origins and live in different continents and still be African women
I agree totally! I love Minna’s blog, she writes with such passion and is always on point. I too am sick of this stereotypes of ‘Africa’ that it is war torn and poverty driven. It is lazy and insulting to assume that every African country and city and town within that country is the same. People need to educate themselves.
I saw this and commented on Minna’s site. I only ended up with more questions. Who said African women are all black? Because that is what people often mean when they ask about African women. Is an African woman necessarily a woman of colour? What about white African women, or Asian Africans particularly from Uganda? Yes, they originated from Asia, but are they not African women who should have a voice too?