From precolonial times to the early 21st century, the role
and status of women in Nigeria have continuously evolved. However, the image of
a helpless, oppressed, and marginalized group has undermined their proper
study, and little recognition has been granted to the various integral
functions that Nigerian women have performed throughout history.
In the precolonial period, women played a major role in
social and economic activities. Division of labour was along gender lines, and
women controlled such occupations as food processing, mat weaving, pottery
making, and cooking. Moreover, land was communally owned, and women had access
to it through their husbands or parents. Although a man was the head of the
household in a patrilineal system, older women had control of the labour of
younger family members.
Women were also central to trade. Among the Yoruba, they
were the major figures in long-distance trade, with enormous opportunities for
accumulating wealth and acquiring titles. The most successful among them rose
to the prestigious chieftaincy title of iyalode, a position of great privilege
and power.
In politics, women were not as docile or powerless as
contemporary literature tends to portray them. The basic unit of political
organization was the family, and in the common matrifocal arrangement, which
allowed a woman to gain considerable authority over her children, a woman and
her offspring could form a major bloc in the household. Power and privileges in
a household were also based on age and gender, thereby allowing senior women to
have a voice on many issues. Because the private and public arenas were
intertwined, a woman’s ability to control resources and people in a household
was at the same time an exercise in public power. She could use food production
to gain respect. She could control her children and influence men through this
power. She could evoke the power of the spirit or gods in her favour. Or she
could simply withdraw and use the kitchen as her own personal domicile for interaction
with her colleagues, friends, and children.
Beyond the household level, power was generally dominated by
men, but in many areas specific titles were given to women. The queen mother, a
powerful title among the Edo and Yoruba, could be bestowed upon the king’s
mother or a free woman of considerable stature. In her own palace, the queen
mother presided over meetings, with subordinate titleholders in her support.
Yoruba and Hausa legends describe periods when women were either the actual
kings or heroines. Such women as Moremi of Ile-Ife and Amina of Zaria are
notable legendary figures, as are the powerful queens in the Ondo and Daura
histories.
The most serious threat to the influence and privileges of
women occurred during the 20th century, when patriarchy combined with colonial
changes to alter gender relations. As male chiefs collaborated with the British
colonial administration in collecting taxes and governing, the position of
female chiefs declined in importance. When the economy became increasingly
geared toward the production of cash crops for export, Nigerian men and
European firms dominated the distribution of rubber, cocoa, groundnuts
(peanuts), and palm oil. Women, pushed to the background, were forced to shift
to the production of subsistence crops. A previous land-tenure system that had
prevented land alienation gave way to land commercialization, favouring those
with access to money gained from the sale of cash crops. Western-style
education also favoured boys over girls and thus largely excluded women from
many of the new occupations introduced by colonialism.
The most powerful agency of change for the modern woman has
been Nigeria’s formal education system, from which a large number of elite
women have emerged. Intelligent, educated, and confident, they can be found in
all leading occupations; they now challenge many aspects of patriarchy and are
gradually organizing to ensure that the political arena expands sufficiently to
accommodate them.
Written by Toyin O. Falola
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