photograph 1: Funmilayo-Ransome Kuti in her twenties
Abeokuta Women’s Union (1947)
In the early 1940s, the British government tried to implement a series of price controls and confiscation of food goods as a way to offset shortages due to World War II. In Abeokuta, the government was seizing rice from market women. In September 1945, three members of the Abeokuta Ladies’ Club (ALC, an organization led by Funmilayo Ransome-Kuti), and three members from the National Union of Teachers (NUT) went to the district officer for Abeokuta to demand an end to the seizure of women’s rice. Following this action, several protest delegations were sent to the district officer (DO), assistant district officer, and the Egba Native Administration Council and nothing changed. Eventually, the ALC held a public press conference. Daily Service, a publication, wrote an article about the demonstration, quoting AWU leaders: “We the members of the Abeokuta Ladies’ Club, on behalf of all Egba women, appeal to the press of Nigeria to help to bring the seriousness of the position [of the market women] to the attention of the authorities before it is too late.” Shortly after the article was published, the confiscation of rice ended. The victory brought about more membership to the ALC. And in March 1946, the Abeokuta Ladies Club became the Abeokuta Women’s Union (AWU).
The AWU continued to apply pressure by putting together a list of demands which included the end to flat-rate taxation of women, the abdication of the Alake (the head of traditional local authority, put in place by the British), the end to the Sole Native Authority (SNA) and a more representative system of government that included women. As time went on, the AWU documented the current Alake’s, Ademola II, abuses of power ranging from his leasing of land that did not belong to him to expatriates, his support of food and price control, the violent enforcement of regulations, and inappropriate sexual relations within the dipeomu system—a system whereby women can leave their husbands and reside in the Alake’s palace. The AWU also demanded for better public services such as proper sanitation, medical and educational facilities.
Throughout 1946, the AWU sent several petitions to the Alake and hosted many meetings and demonstrations. However, in late 1946, the Alake decided to increase the flat-rate tax on women. In response, the AWU relentlessly held a series of mass demonstrations, sent petitions to colonial authorities, and letters to editors of major newspapers throughout 1947 and 1948. This resulted in multiple arrests, a lot of harassment, and a variety of bannings (of Funmilayo Ransome-Kuti) as retaliation. Eventually on January 3,1949, Ademola II abdicated as Alake. Nonetheless, the struggle wasn’t over.
On January 15, 1951, Ademola was reinstated as Alake and in 1952, the Central Council voted to restore the water rate tax on women. In return, the AWU continued to send petitions and hold protests. Finally in 1960, the water rate tax was abolished. In conclusion, the Abeokuta Women’s Union has an impressive and extensive history of political demonstrations for women’s rights and power.
Highly Recommended Reading/Sources: Johnson-Odim, C., & Mba, N. E. (1997). “Lioness of Lisabi” The Fall of a Ruler. In For women and the nation: Funmilayo Ransome-Kuti of Nigeria (pp. 66-94). Urbana: University of Illinois Press.












