Fulata Moyo Explained

Fulata Lusungu Mbano Moyo is a Malawian systematic and feminist theologian who is an advocate for gender justice. Moyo has written over twenty-eight journal articles.

Early life and education

Fulata Mbano was born in northern Malawi, a member of the Ngoni people from Mzimba District.[1] Her great grandfather, Songea, was a warrior chief. Her name, Fulata, means she was born feet first.[2] Her father started his own church after he was not accepted in mainline churches due to his polygamy.

Moyo is a survivor of childhood sexual abuse.[3] She grew up in a small village called Engcongolweni Lazaro Jere and went to school in the nearest town, Ekwendeni. She attended a Roman Catholic high school, Marymount Girls Secondary School, before going on to study education at the University of Malawi, Chancellor College.

Moyo completed a master's degree in Christian thought, systematic and feminist theology from the University of Zimbabwe in 1993. [1] She earned a PhD from the School of Religion and Theology at the University of KwaZulu-Natal in South Africa in 2009, with a focus on ethics, gender and religion. [4] [5] She was a research fellow at Yale University's Center for Interdisciplinary Research on AIDS. She has also trained as a mediator and studied Viktor Frankl's Logotherapy.[5]

Career

Moyo served as a member of the faculty at the University of Malawi in the Department of Theology and Religious Studies, and became a teaching assistant in the School of Religion and Theology at the University of KwaZulu-Natal as she worked on her PhD. [6] She was trained in Contextual Bible Studies when she became involved in the Tamar Campaign, which sought to address violence against women and children using contextual study of the Bible.[6] She undertook a six-years of ethnographic research in southern Malawi, hoping that the existing matrilineal system would "translate into something of a matriarchy - where women had as much final say as the men in a patrilineal society", but was disappointed to see the pervasiveness of patriarchy even in a matrilocal system that also embraced Christian values of justice. During her research in 1999 to 2005, the Malawian communities experienced the peak of the HIV/AIDS epidemic, which impacted intergenerational women much more than men. This reality also shaped her research into becoming more about gender and sexual justice. She applied for ordination in the Presbyterian Church but was "silently refused."

Moyo worked for the World Council of Churches as Program Executive for Women in Church and Society (which later became a Just Community of Women and Men) [4] from 2007 until 2019.[5] She was based in Geneva but worked with the 350 member churches in at least 110 countries. [7] She encouraged churches to adopt the "Thursdays in Black" campaign against rape and violence, which was inspired by the Mothers of the Disappeared in Argentina who protested at the Plaza de Mayo on Thursdays, Women in Black in Israel and the women in Rwanda, DRC and Bosnia who were already articulating their experience of rape as a weapon of war.[7]

For the 2016–2017 academic year, Moyo was a visiting lecturer on Women's Studies and African Religions at Harvard Divinity School,[4] where she developed an Ethic of Care to help religious communities respond to women who had survived sex trafficking.[7] She also worked with Elisabeth Schüssler Fiorenza on feminist hermeneutics.[8] In 2018, she was appointed to an independent expert panel to review UNAIDS policies and processes for addressing and preventing harassment.[9]

In 2020, Moyo founded "Stream", a US registered NGO that supports and mentors survivors of sex trafficking, which in 2021 was registered in Malawi as Thimlela-STREAM to focus of prevention, protection and mitigation of human trafficking that focusses of the survivors starting with Chindindi and Ndonda communities in Mzimba District, northern Malawi. In Malawi, Mzimba is one of the hot spots of human trafficking that has also become a human trafficking corridor between East Africa and South Africa.[5]

Moyo is a member of the Circle of Concerned African Women Theologians, first participating in Nairobi and then restarting the Malawi chapter. She served as the Pan-African general coordinator of the Circle from 2007 to 2013. As a member of faculty at University of Malawi, she served as the Secretary of the Board of Diploma in Theological Studies in 1996, and a Deputy Director of the Center of [1] She was General Coordinator from 2007 to 2013.[6] She is also a member of the Community Voices in Peace and Pluralism in Africa, and the Board of Life and Peace Institute in Sweden.[5] [7] She is the Vice President of the AfriAus iLEAC Board, a member of the Board of Women International Peace Center (WIPC).[5]

Writing

Moyo has written and published widely in five languages.[10] Her writings have predominantly addressed religious and cultural influences on gender construction and women's sexuality.[6] She argues that religious scripture must be interpreted in the context of women's experiences, which will help raise awareness of issues that dehumanize women.[11]

Moyo was a contributor to AfricaPraying : a handbook on HIV-AIDS sensitive sermon guidelines and liturgy, published in 2003.[12] She co-edited Women Writing Africa: Eastern African Region, published by Feminist Press in 2007.[4] She has been a guest editor for the Ecumenical Review in 2012 and the International Review of Mission in 2015.[4]

Award

Named a Human Rights Defender in 2013 in the Human Rights Defender Initiative, Carter Center USA.[13]

Selected publications

Journal articles

Book chapters

Desmond Tutu, Humour and Social Justice, Sarojini Nadar, Tinyiko Maluleke, Dietrich Werner, Vicentia Kgabe & Rudolf Heinz (Eds),Ecumenical Encounters with Desmond Tutu: Visions for Justice, Dignity and Peace, Regnum Books/UWC Press, 2022, (p139-143)

Lockdown and Sexual Exploitation, Chammah J. Kaunda (Ed.), World Christianity and Covid-19: Looking Back and Looking Forward, Palgrave Macmillan, 2023, (pp133-149).

Personal life

Moyo was married to Solomon Moyo until his death from liver cancer in 1999.[14] She has written about her experience of widowhood.[8]

Notes and References

  1. Book: Fiedler, NyaGondwe. A History of the Circle of Concerned African Women Theologians 1989-2007. 2017. African Books Collective. 9789996045233.
  2. Web site: Dr. Fulata Moyo - Thursdays in Black, extended interview. 18 November 2014. 1 February 2022. Gör inte skillnad på människor.
  3. Web site: NoXcuses for Violence against Women: WCC programme executive Fulata Moyo. World Council of Churches.
  4. Web site: Fulata L. Moyo. Berkley Center for Religion, Peace & World Affairs, Georgetown University.
  5. Web site: Dr. Fulata Moyo. Harvard University. 2022-02-01. 2022-02-02. https://web.archive.org/web/20220202023429/https://hfh.fas.harvard.edu/people/fulata-moyo. dead.
  6. Web site: Fulata Moyo. Ecclesio.com.
  7. Web site: Fulata L. Moyo, Malawi – Mediator. Peace and Pluralism.
  8. Web site: A Discussion with Fulata L. Moyo, World Council of Churches. Georgetown University. 20 May 2016. 1 February 2022.
  9. Web site: WCC former staff appointed to expert panel. World Council of Churches. 31 July 2018. 1 February 2022.
  10. Web site: Moyo, Fulata L.. WorldCat Identities. 1 February 2022.
  11. Web site: Human Rights Defender: Fulata Moyo. The Carter Center.
  12. Book: AfricaPraying : a handbook on HIV-AIDS sensitive sermon guidelines and liturgy. WorldCat Identities. 61740466.
  13. Web site: Human Rights Defender: Fulata Moyo . 2024-04-24 . The Carter Center . en-US.
  14. Book: Moyo, Fulata Lusungu. Navigating Healing: A Narrative Theology of Eschatological Hopes Healing. 243–256. African Women, Religion, and Health: Essays in Honor of Mercy Amba Ewudziwa Oduyoye. Isabel Apawo Phiri. Sarojini Nadar. Wipf and Stock. 2012.