Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
Published byPatricia Holt Modified over 9 years ago
1
St. Thomas Parish 18 August 2013 Lebo Ramafoko, Soul City CEO
2
South Africa has a rich history of activism by women The march in 1956 had 20000 women representing 100 000’s of women Helen Joseph, Lillian Ngoyi, Frances Baard, Fatima Moosa Post –independence we are hailed in the world as a country with the most women representatives in high positions of power in govt and in parastatals
3
While politically we may have done well with regards to women emancipation, it has not benefited all women and it has not resulted in a better life for all. ◦ HIV mainly affects women ◦ Women are affected 30 times more by unemployment ◦ The majority of households are headed by women ◦ 44% of children under 17 live with a mother only while 20% of children life with a father only
4
◦ 25 % of men report to have raped a woman ◦ 50% of women report to have suffered some form of gender based violence ◦ Many women are suffering from high levels of stress. ◦
5
Economic – using ability to acquire basic needs or poverty line Social – lacking subsistence freedoms to lead life one has reason to value (Bloom and Canning, 2003; Simonen,2005) This freedom has two facets: opportunity and security. ◦ Opportunity requires education and a range of political and economic freedoms ◦ Security is the consequence of effective use of those freedoms
6
Apart from economic measures, poverty is also characterised by vulnerability, deprivation, exclusion and powerlessness It affects the environment that individuals find themselves in and their ability to navigate that environment
7
Women make up just over 50% of our population Majority of children are growing up in poor households more likely with a mother struggling (financially, emotionally and physically) to just keep them alive Most worrying is that the poor/ most vulnerable are often voiceless and not visible We have an ignorant middle class who blame the poor for their situation
8
Poverty in SA is NOT ahistorical ◦ Migrant Labour ◦ Poor education ◦ Poor employment prospects ◦ Poor infrastructure ◦ Mo Ibrahim, at the 11 th Nelson Mandela Annual Lecture says that 20 years post democracy South Africa is the most unequal society in the world ◦ He further says while Africa has a young population, leaders are old and male (Mugabe/Obama)
9
Development and spirituality are intertwined We are more than flesh and our needs are more than material. The challenge is how do we play a crucial and transformative role in our communities? Is the church part of the problem or part of the solution? ◦ Christianity/The Church is not apolitical in SA ◦ The church has not always emulated its own teachings
10
The gospel of Jesus Christ was transformative and disruptive ◦ Christ questioned the status quo ◦ His teachings were most powerful when they questioned the absurdity of the status quo. ◦ Christ’s teachings always addressed the three (3) levels at which the church can play a transformative role Met individual needs (fed the hungry, healed the sick, raised the dead) Christ created a community (the church) and trained transformative and activist leaders (disciples) Christ never left the keepers of the law off the hook
11
Parenting – how do we create space where children can be parented in our church and the difference that it can have on their lives The church as a teaching institution The church as voice for the voiceless The church as our moral conscience.
Similar presentations
© 2025 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.