Becoming a widow in Nigeria is often followed by a fall into
extreme poverty – a situation usually aggravated by widespread practice of
property grabbing and sometimes, physical abuse. Consequently, they are
subjected to food insecurity due to poverty or unemployment, failure to find
basic and school necessities for their children, lack of shelter, difficulty in
accessing working capital for small-scale businesses, and victimization by
harmful cultural practices.
In many traditional settings, the death of a husband can put women
at the risk of social segregation and the loss of the security and social
status their partners would have provided. They are immediately banished to the
fringe of society and suffer different forms of stigma and discrimination.
For any nation or society interested in fostering progressive
development, it is important that citizens create a social climate conducive
for collective achievement. Apart from the need to adopt a friendly culture
that dignifies victims and recognizes their pain, widows need support systems
that provide opportunities to reintegrate into society after the loss of their
spouses.
If we are going to achieve this, everyone needs to understand that
widows are extremely disadvantaged. In a country where culture and tradition
are used as tool to oppress disadvantaged women, we have a collective
responsibility to overcome these barriers with practical solutions to alleviate
their poverty and helplessness. Either as a corporate imperative or individual
responsibility, actions and decisions have to be taken to rehabilitate widows
disenfranchised by poverty and unemployment.
Consider Lipton’s ‘Reason To Smile’, an initiative by Unilever
Plc.’s leading tea brand which is aimed at supporting 1,000 Nigerian widows
with necessary care packs and seed fund to start a business. Expected to be
executed in states across Nigeria, the Lipton ‘Reasons to Smile’ campaign is
also giving all concerned Nigerians the opportunity to get involved with one
Lipton pack at a time, give widows a reason to smile and lighten their burden.
In many Nigerian communities where a lot of women are housewives, fully dependent on their husbands, it
becomes a great challenge when such families lose their breadwinner and find it
difficult to cater for themselves and their children. These women need to be
given a helping hand – a lifeline to create a better future for themselves and
their communities in general.
The challenges that widows in our communities and cities
experience daily affects everyone. They are our mothers, sisters, friends,
neighbours and more. They remain one of the most marginalized persons, a
depressing reality that has dealt a blow to compassion and decorum in our
society. The least we can do is to care for them and also provide them with
opportunities for solutions – which is the objective of the Lipton brand.
Widows need be celebrated and encouraged. They are an integral
part of our society and deserve as much respect and dignity as anyone else. As
women and mothers, they are active members of the Nigerian society who
contribute to national development. We cannot allow them to be victimized and
subjected to untold hardships just because they lost a loved one, Lipton is
saying we have the power to lighten their burden and put smiles on their faces.
For more information, check out https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NoQ2awQiVfc&feature=youtu.be.
For updates on Lipton ‘Reasons to Smile’ campaign, follow @LiptonNg on Twitter
and LiptonNigeria on Facebook and Instagram.
No comments:
Post a Comment