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NEWS & LETTERS, November 2004

Ecofeminist embodies Kenya's many struggles

Detroit--Dr. Wangari Maathai, founder of Kenya’s Green Belt Movement which involves thousands of women reforesting their country, added a number of new "firsts" to the many achievements of her 64 years when she was awarded the 2004 Nobel Peace Prize.

Not only is Dr. Maathai the first woman in Africa to win the prize; she is the first recipient whose work directly addresses the environment and environmental justice. After decades of persecution by the dictatorial Daniel Arap Moi regime, Dr. Maathai was elected to parliament in 2002 by 98% of the vote and was subsequently appointed Assistant Minister for the Environment, Natural Resources and Wildlife.

For the first time the Nobel committee, citing Dr. Maathai as "an example and a source of inspiration for everyone in Africa fighting for sustainable development, democracy and peace," acknowledged that it had "expanded the term peace to encompass environmental questions...peace on earth depends on our ability to secure our living environment." Professor Ole Danbolt Mjoes, for the committee, said "Maathai stands at the front of the fight to promote ecologically viable social, economic and cultural development in Kenya and Africa…she has taken a holistic approach to sustainable development and embraces...women’s rights in particular."

ECO-SOCIAL STRUGGLES

Dr. Maathai has fiercely defended women and poor people against the abuses of government and corporate interests, as when in 1996, she spoke out against an international agricultural research organization which blamed poor farmers in the Third World for deforestation: "It is very common for people making such conclusions to blame poor people. Poor people are the victims, not the cause. In Kenya at the moment, we are fighting to protect the remaining very few indigenous forests from some of the richest people in the country." In 1999 she was among the Green Belt members beaten and arrested by the Moi administration when they successfully protested the clearing of a forest near Nairobi for a luxury housing development.

She founded the Green Belt Movement in 1976 to enable poor women to plant trees on their farms and on school and church compounds. Almost 30 million trees later, the organization, comprised mostly of women, combats the effects of deforestation while producing sustainable wood for cooking fires. Most recently (October 9) Dr. Maathai urged U.S. voters to make a choice against the war in Iraq and in favor of the Kyoto Protocol on climate change.

KENYAN WOMEN IN REVOLT

Remarkable as her achievement is, Dr. Maathai comes from a rich tradition of Kenyan women fighting for freedom. Their struggles have been chronicled by News and Letters Committees since our beginning. The book PEAOPLE OF KENYA SPEAK FOR THEMSELVES (1955) by Mbiyu Koinange describes Njeri, an illiterate woman who organized hundreds of women to save pennies until they could build a dormitory for the girls at the Kenya Teachers’ College. She later organized the African Women’s League, numbering 10,000 members, and by 1955 was imprisoned with 9,000 other Kenyan women.

More recently, Charity Ngilu was defeated by the corrupt incumbent president of Kenya, Daniel arap Moi in her 1998 bid to become the first woman president in sub-Saharan Africa. Ngilu had been urged to run by working women in her neighborhood because of her battles for clean water and clinics for the poor. (See NEWS & LETTERS, January-February 1998.)

Their struggle continues with Wangari Maathai’s achievements today.

--Susan Van Gelder

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