Showing posts with label politics. Show all posts
Showing posts with label politics. Show all posts

Monday, April 27, 2020

Taking the heat: Kitchen Politics



There has been a lot of arguments over why a woman should invite her would be daughter in-law to the kitchen when she visits for the first time. Different people have their varying perspectives on the subject.

However, I cannot help but remember some of the things my late grandmother told me as a kid as regards the kind of politics played in kitchen, and I realized why a mother would invite a ‘stranger’ in her kitchen. Though her era is gone and the dynamics of culture transmission have taken their toll on that aspect of our life as a people, kitchen politics has not completely changed.

As a kid, my grandmother made me understand that intrinsically, women did not invite their brides to be to the kitchen to test them. It was basically a huge sign of acceptance. There was absolutely nothing to test because she and her entire family had known almost every detail about a bride to be before she set foot in her would be husband‘s home. This used to be a standard marriage procedure in Igbo culture which was achieved via the practice of iju ese where families ask questions or perform divinations to gain insight into the worldview and practices of the families their sons or daughters would get related by marriage.

She said that the politics of the kitchen was all about control.

Women rarely shared their kitchen with people they neither trusted nor liked and because their kitchen and its immediate surroundings was a no fly zone for men, it was one of the safest places for women to make or mar; the success or failure of a man or even an entire family can be decided in the kitchen. They did everything within their power to keep the men away from the kitchen.

Now, the acceptance of a daughter in-law to be in the form of bringing her to the kitchen transmutes to sessions of knowledge acquisition for the young girl which either improves on or reiterates what she has already learnt about the politics of the fireplace from her own mother. Such knowledge serves certain purposes such as.

  1. Reminding the bride to be that the women who effectively managed their kitchen were warriors who safeguarded their families. There were zero margins for error because if by error or mistake, an enemy gains access to the kitchen and poisons the food, an entire family is wiped out. They keenly watched what their families ate and made sure they had healthy and uncontaminated food. They forbade their children from eating from families and people who did not have healthy habits.

  1. Limiting the culinary knowledge of the man to the barest minimum and shaming him to shreds if he showed more than a passing interest in learning kitchen affairs even as a boy. They reported such a man who is interested in the kitchen to his fellow men that he was becoming effeminate and most definitely, they will join in shaming such a man as not fit to be among them. Failure to keep the man in check was tantamount to losing control.

The men would toil from dawn to dusk at their farms to provide the much needed food but the most loved hands were the ones that cooked the food in the kitchen and served. Children knew who fed them whenever they were hungry and nobody needed to ask where their loyalty anchored. Children can forgive you for taunting their father but only God can forgive you when you taunt their mothers? Imagine the pride of the man who is served food that was a little bigger and had more pieces of meat than the ones served the rest of his fellow men. The power that came from the man appreciating that food and the gesture against the background of his interaction with his fellow men would be evident when she needed a favour.

My grandmother made me understand that the kitchen department was the only place the men dared not ask questions about how the money they provided for food was spent. The tough or brave ones who dared to ask for accounts got robust explanations and often ended up coughing out more money to pay off debts the wives owed imaginary ogiri and ukpaka sellers at the market. A woman could even save as much as she wanted.

For her, the sweat and heat of the fireplace was a little sacrifice they had to make, which was inconsequential compared to the power and control that came from managing the kitchen effectively.

That was an era. It is now a new era. Times and tides have changed.


Emeka Amakeze




Wednesday, April 22, 2020

Line Of Sight



Despite all our efforts, they still want us to disunite


Our blood is their delight as my country  they blight

Bringing fight unwanted to force us to take to flight

Unusual fright is in the land but there is none to indict

No light to brighten our paths for none there is the knight

The peace promised is but a sleight of hand in our sight

For our plight is to vote that our wealth be their right

Deafening disquiet of a once powerful home-land in delight

The height of their insensitivity pushes us to self-ignite

Our collective might as a people no more gives us respite

Not with morale as tight as wood eaten inside by termite

I recite our anthem and I realise that nothing is now alright

Our name is bigger than Elephant but we're cowered like ant

Is this the rite of passage for this giant of Africa spite?

Smite this evil in our land that we shall once again be great

But how could this ever be if you and I don’t make it right





Tuesday, October 25, 2016

Line Of Sight


Despite all our efforts, they still want us to disunite

Our blood is their delight as my Nigeria they blight

Bringing fight unwanted to force us to take to flight

Unusual fright is in the land but there is none to indict

No light to brighten our paths for none there is the knight

The peace promised is but a sleight of hand in our sight

For our plight is to vote that our wealth be their right

Deafening disquiet of a once powerful home-land in delight

The height of their insensitivity pushes us to self-ignite

Our collective might as a people no more gives us respite

Not with morale as tight as wood eaten inside by termite

I recite our anthem and I realise that nothing is now alright

Our name is bigger than Elephant but we're cowered like ant

Blight rite of passage for this giant of Africa spite

Smite this evil in our land that we shall once again be great

But how could this ever be if you and I don’t make it right

                     an Emeka Amakeze poetic expression

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