Umoja, Kenya Explained

Umoja
Settlement Type:Village
Nickname:Village without men.
Pushpin Map:Kenya
Pushpin Relief:yes
Coordinates:0.6333°N 75°W
Subdivision Name:County
Subdivision Type1:Sambaru County
Established Title:Founded
Established Date:1990
Government Type:Matriarchal village
Website:https://www.umojawomen.or.ke

Umoja Uaso ("unity" in Swahili, the Uaso Nyiro is a nearby river)[1] is a village in Kenya. The village, founded in 1990,[2] is an all-female matriarch village located near the town of Archers Post in Samburu County, 380km (240miles) from the capital, Nairobi. It was founded by Rebecca Lolosoli, a Samburu woman, as a sanctuary for homeless survivors of violence against women, and young girls running from forced marriages or female genital mutilation. The women of the Samburu people do not agree with violence and the traditional subordinate position of women.

They run a primary school, cultural center and camping site for tourists visiting the adjacent Samburu National Reserve. They create and sell jewellery to benefit the village.

History

Samburu women have a subordinate position in their society.[3] They are not allowed to own land or other types of property, such as livestock. Women themselves are considered property of their husbands. They can be subject to female genital mutilation, forced marriage with the elders, rape, and domestic violence.

In 2003, Amnesty International reported credible evidence of numerous rapes of Kenyan women by members of the British Army for decades.[4] A case was brought up against the British military for the rapes of over 1,400 Samburu women. The case was "cleared".[5] [6] These women were abandoned by their husbands because they were considered to be "defiled."[7] Other men drove the women out of their houses fearing they would now contract sexually transmitted diseases from their raped wives.[8]

After many women found themselves without homes, they created Umoja.[9] Rebecca Lolosoli is one of the founders of Umoja,[10] and came up with the idea of creating a village for women when she was recovering after being beaten for speaking out against female genital mutilation.[11] Eventually fifteen women came together to found the original village in 1990.

In response, some men established their own, eventually unsuccessful villages nearby. The men tried to set up a rival craft business or would try to dissuade tourists from stopping at Umoja.[12] The women eventually bought the land the men were occupying.

The villagers first started out by selling vegetables they bought from others, since they did not know how to farm themselves. This was not very successful, and the village turned to selling traditional crafts to tourists. The Kenya Wildlife Services took notice and helped the women learn from successful groups in areas such as the Maasai Mara, in order to improve Umoja's business. The women also had help from Kenya's Heritage and Social Services and the Ministry of Culture.[13]

After Lolosoli visited the United Nations in 2005, men in the neighboring village filed a court case against her, hoping to shut down the village.[14] In 2009, Lolosoli's former husband attacked the village, threatening her life.[15] For a time, the women fled the village for their safety.

The women of the village currently own the land itself. As of 2021, the village's application for a community title over a tract of grazing land is undergoing government consideration.

Geography and demographics

Umoja is located in north-central Kenya in Samburu County, near Archers Post. The village is made up of manyata huts built from a mixture of earth and cow dung on an abandoned grassland.[16] The houses are surrounded by a fence of thorns[17] and barbed wire.

The people of the village have an objective to "improve the livelihoods of women due to rampant poverty and counter the problem of women being abandoned by their families."[18] The village also takes in runaways or girls who have been thrown out of their households, and raises orphans, abandoned children and children with HIV. The village has also provided asylum for women fleeing violence from the Turkana District.[19]

Residents in the community must all wear the traditional clothing and beadwork of the Samburu people. Female genital mutilation is outlawed in the village.

Population

Men are permitted to visit the village, but not allowed to live in Umoja. As of 2015, one man visited the village daily to do work tending to livestock. Boys raised in the village are asked to leave when they reach age eighteen.[20] Only men who were raised as children in Umoja may sleep in the village.

The village also takes in orphans, runaways, and abandoned children. In 2005, there were 30 women and 50 children living in Umoja. As of 2015, there were 47 women and 200 children living in the village.

Economy

Residents of Umoja are engaged in traditional Samburu crafts which they sell at the Umoja Waso Women's Cultural Center. Crafts include colorful beads, a home-brewed low-alcohol beer analogue and more. The items are also available on a website.[21] The women also run a campsite for tourists visiting the nearby Samburu National Reserve. Every woman donates ten percent of her earnings to the village as a tax to support the school and other needs.

The village suffered lack of income in 2020 due to the COVID-19 pandemic.

Education

In traditional society, children are engaged in tending livestock, but in Umoja, all children can get an education.[22] There is a primary school that can accommodate 50 children. The village has also been able to open a nursery school.[23]

Residents of the village go to other villages to promote women's rights and in order to campaign against female circumcision.[24]

Government

The women of the village gather under the "tree of speech" to make decisions for the town. Lolosoli serves as the chairperson of the village. All women in the village have equal status to one another.

See also

External links

0.6333°N 75°W

Notes and References

  1. Fall 2005. A Village of One's Own. Herizons. 19. 2. 11. subscription . EBSCOhost.
  2. News: The Village Without Men. Kosog. Simone. 27 October 2012. Toronto Star. 21 August 2017. subscription . EBSCOhost.
  3. Lolosoli. Rebecca. Armstrong. Lisa. October 2006. It Takes a Village. Essence. 37. 6. 165. subscription . EBSCOhost.
  4. Web site: UK: Decades of Impunity: Serious Allegations of Rape of Kenyan Women by UK Army Personnel . Amnesty International . 24 April 2023 . English . July 2, 2003 .
  5. mag. Satya. 2007. interview with Rebecca Lolosoli.
  6. News: Noor Ali . British soldiers cleared of Kenya rapes . 24 April 2023 . Reuters . January 20, 2007 . Archer's Post, Kenya . English.
  7. Friedlin. Jennifer. March 2005. Kenya: A Village of Sisters. Marie Claire. 12. 3. 92. subscription . EBSCOhost.
  8. News: From Broken Lives, Kenyan Women Build Place of Unity. Lacey. Marc. 2004-12-07. The New York Times. 2017-08-22. en-US. 0362-4331.
  9. News: A Place Where Women Rule. Wax. Emily. 2005-07-09. The Washington Post. 2017-08-21. 1. en-US. 0190-8286.
  10. December 2009. Violence Against Women in Kenya. Sister Namibia. 21. 4. 44. subscription . EBSCOhost.
  11. News: Kirui . Dominic . March 23, 2021 . How an Extraordinary Women-Only Village Is Inspiring Land Equality in Rural Kenya . Global Citizen .
  12. News: Thriving women-only village is attacked by jealous locals. Pflanz. Mike. 16 July 2005. The Telegraph. 2017-08-22. en.
  13. News: In Kenya's Umoja Village, a sisterhood preserves the past, prepares the future. Dyer. Ervin. 9 September 2016. NBC News. 2017-08-22. en.
  14. News: A Place Where Women Rule. Wax. Emily. 2005-07-09. The Washington Post. 2017-08-21. 2. en-US. 0190-8286.
  15. News: Gunman Attacks Women's Village in Kenya. Schell. Brittany. 22 August 2009. New America Media. 21 August 2017. https://web.archive.org/web/20130521131839/http://news.newamericamedia.org/news/view_article.html?article_id=e16449266cba9902b5f1ea0ce3643ceb. 21 May 2013.
  16. July 2005. All-Women Village Thrives. Off Our Backs. 35. 7. 4–5. subscription . EBSCOhost.
  17. News: The village where men are banned. Bindel. Julie. 2015-08-16. The Guardian. 2017-08-21. en-GB. 0261-3077.
  18. Web site: Interview with Rebecca Lolosoli. June 2007. Satya Mag. 2017-08-21.
  19. News: All-female Kenyan village houses abused women. 12 April 2012. Al Arabiya News. 21 August 2017.
  20. News: Karimi . Faith . January 30, 2019 . She grew up in a community where women rule and men are banned . CNN .
  21. Web site: Umoja Jewellery - Traditional beaded Kenyan jewellery . 2023-03-17 . Umoja Jewellery . en-US.
  22. Web site: Where Men Now Fear to Tread Inter Press Service. Rubenstein. Hannah. 4 April 2012. Inter Press Service. 2017-08-22.
  23. Web site: Women in the World: Rebecca Lolosoli, Kenya. 2011-03-06. The Daily Beast. 2017-08-22.
  24. News: A Village Women Can Call Their Own. Crilly. Rob. 11 November 2005. Irish Times. 21 August 2017. subscription . EBSCOhost.