#BeingFemaleInNigeria Is The Hashtag You Need To See
Being a Nigerian woman who lives outside of Nigeria, trying to understand the complexities and diversity of Nigerian women’s experiences who live in the country is both easy and difficult. Easy because Nigerians tend to retain aspects of culture even when they grow up away from the country – it’s a dominant national identity in many ways. But it’s difficult because you can’t claim something that is not yours – and the experience of being a Nigerian woman in Nigeria is not the same as one who is in Diaspora.
Nigerian women have taken to Twitter to express their frustration with the sexism that is sometimes cultural, sometimes adopted from the historical relationship with colonization. Either way, it that shows sexism is a global phenomenon. But it is also culturally and nationally specific in particular ways that are dependent on space and time. Indeed, while the tweets are most reprieve for the many women who share their experiences – which are diverse – they are too an education for all of us.
https://twitter.com/KhaleesiNU/status/615933381294075904
I should succeed but keep in mind that I cannot be more successful than the man in my life #BeingFemaleInNigeria
— Jaruma Magazine (@jarumamagazine) June 30, 2015
https://twitter.com/damola_ososanya/status/615930264104124416
When she gets raped| why did you dress like that? When she gets beaten by her husband? | What did you do to him? #BeingFemaleInNigeria
— JJ. Omojuwa (@Omojuwa) June 30, 2015
#BeingFemaleInNigeria not being "allowed" to move out until you're married because "respectable women" don't live alone.
— Ọmọbọlájì (@bolajisophia) June 30, 2015
Guys can be aggressive. It's allowed. But a furious woman lacks home training no matter what upset her.#beingfemaleinNigeria
— Chikesurum (@TheKayy_) June 30, 2015
https://twitter.com/ebuka_akara/status/615927050487132160
Having to bear the Trauma of your rape alone because your rapist is a highly respected family member #BeingFemaleInNigeria
— Eche Enziga 🅰️🌶 (@Echecrates) June 30, 2015
#BeingFemaleInNigeria your brothers can go out anytime they like, but as a girl you have to give two weeks prior notice n be home by 4pm. 😩
— Sisi Zolanski ⚡ (@Isab33lla) June 30, 2015
#beingfemaleinnigeria in case you don't know, immigration requests a consent letter from husband to get a passport for kids.
— Sope Williams (@drsope) June 30, 2015
https://twitter.com/Bint_Moshood/status/615954921096130560
No Lagos landlord will rent their property to you unless you come with the man 'that owns you' otherwise you're ashewo #BeingFemaleInNigeria
— Molara Wood 🍉 (@molarawood) June 30, 2015
[Note: “Ashewo” is a Yoruba word that has come to be used in national vernacular that means “prostitute literally. But is used to call women “loose” or a as synonym for slut.]
#BeingFemaleInNigeria getting dragged out of church and insulted because either your head or shoulders aren't covered
— TRANS HOODOO FUND (@transhoodoofund) June 30, 2015
Can I talk about how many strange men on the street feel entitled enough to my body to touch me when I walk past them? #beingfemaleinNigeria
— Virginal Horoscope🏳️🌈🌈 (@IjeomaOgood) June 30, 2015
https://twitter.com/Boluu_D/status/615939947099521024
https://twitter.com/_larike/status/615905154429267968
#BeingFemaleinNigeria When someone says you're smart, 90% of the time it's not a compliment.
— S. (@saratu) June 30, 2015
https://twitter.com/KhaleesiNU/status/615911679331803136
https://twitter.com/KhaleesiNU/status/615910754164805633
https://twitter.com/SomiEkhasomhi/status/615909782839558144
https://twitter.com/KingUcheOdoh/status/615934994540707840
[Note: “Oga” can have many meanings depending on context, but in this case means, “boss,”]
https://twitter.com/kooloosaw/status/615914144802435072
#BeingFemaleInNigeria Do not try to get a PhD, you will definitely scare men, a first degree is fine, a PhD means you KNOW TOO MUCH…..
— Mercy (@AbangMercy) June 30, 2015
#BeingFemaleInNigeria we are taught to be submissive, accepting, forgiving, painfully respectful. God forbid we mistakenly voice our opinion
— Aku 🍬🍬🍬 (@akusweets) June 30, 2015
#BeingFemaleInNigeria From my dad: "Ignore what the society says you should be, be smart, outspoken, whatever you want to do, get it done"
— Mercy (@AbangMercy) June 30, 2015
What we’ve learned here is that Nigerian women are expected to be smart but not too smart. Because being too smart would mean that you’ll likely “end up alone.” That is not unique to Nigeria. We’ve also learned that domestic abuse is a huge problem – and that the burden falls on the women to “prevent” it by not “provoking the man they’re with. I think that it is not unique to Nigeria but the way it manifests itself in Nigeria is specific to the country. We’ve learned that there are cultural expectations for morality that mostly have more expectations from women than men. The list goes on; sometimes uniquely cultural, sometimes globally relatable.
Culture is a hard thing to break. But it is not impossible. Indeed as I recall, Chimamanda Adichie said once in a speech, “Culture does not make people; people make culture.” I love Adichie, I consider her one of the best writers of our time but the cultural student and scholar in me disagrees with this. As human experiences have evolved, I contend that the relationship between culture and people is circular; they create each other. People are partial products of their culture, and indeed they participate in it and are therefore also creators. Indeed Nigeria needs people who change the culture as much as it needs a culture that will change the people.
#WhatItsLikeToBeFemaleInNigeria is trending. Let’s hope that it is not just a mere trend that will pass in time. But perhaps the start of a much-needed cultural revolution for many a woman In Nigeria.