De Abubakar Mutoka Balibanga
The nature and severity of acts of gender-based violence (GBV) is alarming in Tanzania like in many other countries in the world. With 70% of its population below 35 years old, efforts to address GBV in Tanzania must focus on young people. terre des hommes schweiz uses youth participation, solution-focused and psychosocial approaches in the country to empower young people from excluded and vulnerable groups to engage in actions to prevent and respond to GBV in local communities. What can we learn from their approaches?
Forty percent of women in Tanzania have experienced physical violence from the age of 15 onwards, 22% of whom are young girls aged from 15-19. Eleven percent of young girls aged from 15-19 experience sexual violence. Young women who have been abused by a partner are ten times more likely to be HIV positive than those who have not been abused. The statistics about GBV are alarming, confirming that violence is a daily reality for women and girls in Tanzania, and that addressing it must be a key developmental goal.
GBV is highly intertwined by a culture of silence, prejudice, and myths about femininity that portrays women and girls as objects that are owned by men, tools for reproduction, and second-order creatures that should submit wholeheartedly to men. In Tanzania, many cultural norms still dictate that women are inferior to men; like children they can‘t make sound decisions, they must be controlled...by men! Norms also depict boys as superior to girls, so they should be given all opportunities: education, inheritance, land, jobs, leadership, status, respect, etc.! In a relationship, the woman is expected to literally serve the man.
Experts in the field of GBV agree that “GBV disproportionately affects women and girls from excluded or vulnerable populations” (UNFPA et. al. 2013: Breaking the silence on violence against indigenous girls, adolescents and young women). Consequently, effective programming must pay special attention to these groups of women while considerations are taken to (inter-)cultural and gender perspectives. The definition of excluded and vulnerable groups in this field is diverse, but in most developing countries a special focus needs to be put on reaching out to young people since they constitute a much larger section of the population. In Tanzania 70.6% of the population are under the age of 35, more than half of these are adolescents, and only about 30% are above the age of 35.
Due to various biological, social, cultural and political factors, young people form an extremely exposed and vulnerable group. Cultural norms and harmful practices against girls expose them to extreme acts of gender-based violence. For instance, in many traditional communities an adolescent girl is no longer a child when she drops out or finishes primary school and cannot go to secondary school; when she gets pregnant, or is married or “taken” by a man; or when she completes her initiation rite or undergoes female genital mutilation (FGM) practice. This is enforced by the Law of Marriage Act (2002) which recognizes that a “14 years girl can be married with parental/guardian’s consent”, even though the Constitution of the country states that a child is a person below 18. In reality, these girls are biologically children, but socially and culturally adults, a situation that exposes them to some of the worst forms of GBV.
Another excluded and vulnerable group are out of school youth. This is a very diverse group and may include adolescents living in a relationship, single teen mothers, adolescents engaged in domestic or sex work, idle youth confined to the streets and struggling with addictions and a large number of others engaged in street-bound informal jobs. The Tanzania Youth Policy 2007 recognizes that these specific groups of young people need special attention, protection and focus (The United Republic of Tanzania. (2016): National Plan of Action to End Violence Against Women and Children in Tanzania 2017/18 – 2021/2022).
GBV increases women and girls’ vulnerability, disempowers them to participate socially, economically and politically, and leaves the survivors with long lasting traumas. Evidence shows that GBV affects every aspect of well-being, including personal agency and self-actualization, educational achievement, livelihood, employment prospects and physical and emotional welfare. Effective GBV programs must address factors that limit women‘s power and abilities; they must turn the patterns of discriminatory cultures upside down (Gennari, F; et. al. (2014): Violence Against Women and Girls (VAWG)).
Projects that address GBV must counter this disempowerment with empowerment. In order to achieve this, we need approaches that enable the youth to understand power dynamics at relational and societal levels that underlie violence, to explore and strengthen their personal values and identities, experience personal strengths and activism, and build movement and voice to respond to the cycles of violence. terre des hommes schweiz partner projects develop these competences through three major pillars illustrated below:
Youth participation ensures that “Young people actively influence the development of their environment due to their participation and co-determination in social processes; and that [they] assume responsibility for their projects and their environment” (terre des hommes schweiz. Concept Youth Participation: Strategic Priority with regard to Content of terre des hommes schweiz. 2013). Participatory processes are key to promoting self-confidence, competences and building a positive identity.
Solution-focused approach (SFA) and life-skills education help young people to discover and build on their strengths, rather than their problems, in achieving what they dream for. Through SFA and life-skills young people are provided with the tools they need to confront life with positivity and hope. Strength-based and life-skills based working awakens the power within young people and ultimately inspires them “to take positive actions in their lives and communities“. The effect of this is the rise of personal and collective activism, whereby young people actively take action in their private lives and in collaboration with others in their communities in response to injustice (The GBV Prevention Network/Raising Voices. (2012): Get Moving! Facilitator’s Guide. Kampala. 2nd Ed.).
Psychosocial support helps in breaking the lifelong cycle of violence to which young people are exposed. From childhood to adulthood, we pass through stages of being exposed or at risk, to being survivor to (possibly) becoming perpetrator later in life. Excluded and vulnerable youth have experienced violence in their lives in various ways and most are silent survivors (UNFPA. 2010: Building Survivor Centered Response Services: Participant Manual. Pakistan). terre des hommes schweiz supports partner organizations to address this situation and help them to get their power back and use it positively, by helping the youth to explore and develop personal values and identities, build confidence and hope, restore energy and personal agency. Beside information, the youth also receive counseling and services that enable them to make their own decisions (The United Republic of Tanzania. (2016): National Plan of Action to End Violence Against Women and Children in Tanzania 2017/18 – 2021/2022).
terre des hommes schweiz country strategy in Tanzania recognizes that:
Projects supported by terre des hommes schweiz in Tanzania recognize and reach out to a diverse group of youth and community stakeholders with diverse needs. The youth learn to recognize situations (when, where, with whom) where someone is trying to use power over them (control), and to experience positive power within themselves and with others to respond appropriately when in violent situations. Empowerment projects help young people and communities to experience a different, positive and dignifying model of relationships: Husband – Wife relationship; Parent – Child relationship; Teacher – Student relationship; Leader – Citizen relationship; and other interpersonal relationships.
It is less about WHAT you Do with them...
It is more about HOW you Do it with them!
Partners implement approaches by focusing their interventions on 3 levels:
1) Participatory Processes: This implies that projects
2) Solution-Focused mindset and facilitation: This implies that terre des hommes schweiz partners in Tanzania:
3) Life-Skills Based Curricula: This implies that projects
From survivor to activist
“Violence at home was the reason of my downfall in life and at school. It caused me to fall pregnant and miss out on my education. I felt confused and desperate. I couldn’t talk to anyone about this before. In fact, I have never understood why it all happened to our mother, to me and to us!”
“I am very happy and really grateful to be member of this peer club. Not only I have learned to deal with my situation better, but also I know where I can go for help. I feel more energized and want to stand on my feet, to fight against gender based violence in the community, for my future and the future of other youth.” Testimony from a peer club member (F,17) at Ilagala village, Kig
Early project results indicate that empowered youth gain confidence, assertiveness, belief in oneself; they speak out and sensitize peers, and are daring in nurturing a dream for their lives. Every liberated woman in the world who stood up to challenge violence in her life and community boasts of those qualities; yet patriarchal societies define them as ’masculine’. Empowered, young people become change agents! The Cycle changes from Survivor/Perpetrator to Activist. To achieve this, terre des hommes schweiz partner projects in Tanzania empower young people and communities with information, help them regain hope and re-build their self-esteem and self-effectiveness (power within), and then build movement (through peer groups) for local advocacy.
Preventing & Responding to GBV really demands: