Finally I was able to see that if I had a contribution I wanted to make, I must do it, despite what others said. That I was OK the way I was. That it was all right to be strong.
Wangarĩ Maathai

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Finally I was able to see that if I had a contribution I wanted to make, I must do it, despite what others said. That I was OK the way I was. That it was all right to be strong.
Wangarĩ Maathai
African Female Empowerment in Taking Root: The Vision of Wangari Maathai (Lisa Merton, 2008).
“The only autonomy that matters is from the neck up.” ― Wangari Maathai
In Kenya, there was once a stream under a large fig tree where a child once played. Her mother called it “the tree of God”. After many years have passed, Wangari Maathai returned to the stream where she once played as a child and found that the tree had been cut off and the stream had disappeared into the soil. The fig tree, which is one of the national trees of Kenya, was replaced with a stone building; a church.
In 2004, Maathai won the Nobel Peace Prize for her efforts as a human rights and environmental activist in Kenya. In 1977, she founded the Green Belt Movement, which emerged under the National Council of Women of Kenya, and dedicated most of her time to restore the damages done to the environment after a century of colonial exploitation and decades of political corruption.
Wangari Maathai. Retrieved from www.environmentalafrica.com
Lisa Merton’s Taking Root: The Vision of Wangari Maathai tells the story of Maathai and her female counterparts and their resistance to environmental and political oppression in Kenya (Hunt, 2014, 235). In the beginning, their fight was dedicated to bettering the lives of rural women who struggle to feed their families as a result of deforestation, but it later became about more than just the survival of the eco-system.
Merton’s film explores the efforts of the “ecofeminist” human rights activist who grasped things by their roots in order to better the lives of Kenyans through embracing the culture that existed prior to colonial occupation (Hunt, 2014, 235). Maathai, who dedicated “her life’s work to fighting for environmental justice, gender equality, and democratic governance”, describes deforestation and resource exploitation as a “colonial legacy” that was embraced by corrupt politicians who ruled in the post-impendence era (Hunt, 2014, 235).
The “colonial legacy” presents itself in the tale of the fig tree, where the national identity is cut down from the roots and replaced with a set of beliefs and behaviors brought by European colonialists, i.e. the church building. This shows that deforestation is not the issue, but is rather the consequence of a brutal colonial occupation and its system of immoral principals that allow the state’s claim over ownership of land.
Wangari Maathai. Image by Lisa Merton, retrieved from http://takingrootfilm.com/press-kit/
The film shows how Maathai’s efforts, along with the support of many women, helped resolve the resource conflict among Kenyans through the simple act of planting trees, and later with planting ideas of taking one’s own rights, especially women’s rights.
Female empowerment is the essence of the film and is perhaps the essence of the power of civil society in Kenya. Eventually, these women became involved in state politics and started taking action and participating in protests that demand the freedom of political prisoners who were accused of spreading anti-government ideas. Eventually, the Green Belt Movement, which started as a movement that empowers women to change their lives by challenging gender and environmental oppression, became an all-inclusive educational seminar that teaches people how to fight for their civil rights by challenging corrupt political systems.
Sources:
Hunt, K. P. (2014). "It's More Than Planting Trees, It's Planting Ideas": Ecofeminist Praxis in the Green Belt Movement. Southern Communication Journal, 79(3), 235-249.
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In honor of International Women’s Day, truGround recognizes Wangari Maathai, she was the first African woman and first environmentalist to be awarded a Nobel Peace Prize, for "her contribution to sustainable development, democracy and peace". She was also the first Eastern African woman to receive a Ph.D. in 1971. Her work addressed women’s rights, poverty, and the environment. Maathai is also famous for inspiring the United Nations Billion Tree Campaign, which resulted in over 12 billion trees being planted world-wide in its first 5 years.
veränderungen bewirken.
Auch wenn ich gerade in Moskau bin, beschäftigen mich viele der Entwicklungen Zuhause.
Vor einigen Wochen habe ich zum Beispiel gelesen, dass die beiden Straßen Lüderitzstraße und Nachtigalplatz im Wedding umbenannt werden sollen. Der Grund dafür ist, dass sie nach Männern benannt sind, die aktiv den deutschen Kolonialismus in Afrika vorangetrieben haben. Seit vielen Jahrzehnten sind ihre Namen dort schon verewigt und ehren sie. Und machen wir uns hier nichts vor! Obwohl ich schon öfter die Ausrede gehört habe “Solche Namen sind doch ein geschichtliches Mahnmal und keine Anerkennung”; ist es doch totaler Quatsch. Diese Männer wurden damals für ihre Taten damit geehrt, dass Straßen nach ihnen benannt wurden. Es grübeln auch die wenigsten von uns, wessen Namen eigentlich unsere Wohnorte tragen und was diese Personen alles angestellt haben, um so etwas zu verdienen. Dazu solltet ihr auch wissen, dass der Wedding insgesamt ein ziemlich Afrika-lastiges Straßennetz hat, mit gelegentlichen Kleingärten”kolonien”, die gerne nach afrikanischen Staaten benannt sind. Deswegen kämpfen zivilgesellschaftliche Gruppen im Wedding gegen diese koloniale Kackscheiße und bieten zum Beispiel Führungen an, wo der Imperialismushintergrund der Orte im Wedding erläutert wird, oder kämpfen eben dafür, dass unser Zuhause nicht mehr die Menschen huldigt, die darin verwickelt waren. Aus diesem Grund habe auch ich mich an der Aktion beteiligt, einen neuen Straßennamen vorzuschlagen. Eine Jury im Bezirksamt wird zum Schluss entscheiden, wie die beiden Orte in Zukunft heißen werden. Ihr könnt eure Ideen übrigens auch noch bis zum 25. Februar einreichen!
Meinen Vorschlag für die Straßenumbennenung möchte ich nun hier aus meiner Mail an das Bezirksamt zitieren: “ Ich möchte die großartige Kenianerin Wangari Maathai vorschlagen, eine Umweltaktivistin, Politikerin, Wissenschaftlerin und Friedensnobelpreisträgerin. Frau Maathai hat sich damit auf vielen Gebieten engagiert, die heute zu den größten globalen Problemen gehören und nach einer kollektiven Lösung verlangen. Als Politikerin strebte sie nicht nach persönlicher Macht, sondern kämpfte für die Gleichstellung der Frauen und gründete mit „Green Belt Movement“ eine Organisation, die sich für soziale Gerechtigkeit und Umweltschutz einsetzt. Dafür erhielt Frau Maathai 2004 den Friedensnobelpreis sowie eine Reihe anderer internationaler Auszeichnungen. Afrikanische Frauen wie Wangari Maathai sind im deutschen Raum stark unterrepräsentiert und verdienen es, im Wedding eine Erwähnung zu finden.”
Falls ihr mehr über starke Frauen aus Afrika erfahren wollt, klickt HIER.
Wangari Maathai Institute wPOWER Partnership Officer Job 2016
Wangari Maathai Institute wPOWER Partnership Officer Job 2016
Scaling up the wPOWER Hub at the Wangari Maathai Institute for Peace & Environmental Studies University of Nairobi
Position title: wPOWER Partnership Officer
Background:The Green Belt Movement International (USA) has received a grant from the U.S. Department of State, Bureau of Oceans & International Environmental & Scientific Affairs (OES) to support the creation and scaling up of the wPOWER…
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Wangari Maathai Institute Monitoring & Evaluation Officer (wPOWER Hub) Job 2015
Wangari Maathai Institute Monitoring & Evaluation Officer (wPOWER Hub) Job 2015
Scaling up the wPOWER Hub at the Wangari Maathai Institute for Peace & Environmental Studies University of Nairobi
Position title: Monitoring & Evaluation Officer Background:The Green Belt Movement International (USA) has received a grant from the U.S. Department of State, Bureau of Oceans & International Environmental & Scientific Affairs (OES) to support the creation and scaling up of the…
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