The fight for women’s rights is far from over, but we salute your contributions
A tribute By Kula Fofana
Thursday, December 13, 2018, was a blow to the Liberian and African Women’s Movement. A powerful voice succumbed to the inevitable call of death. If such a call came with a warning, we would’ve vehemently protested as the fight for women’s empowerment is far from over.
Such is the inevitability of the end of life as it is said, one by one we must all leave this earthly abode. If the measure of a person is reflected in the circle of his/her friends, then Aunty Ruth, as she is affectionately called, is outsized. She effortlessly connects with every generation and saw no class.
I became aware of the name Madam Ruth Caesar during the 2005 elections when she contested to become Senator of Montserrado County. Then a high school student running for student council president myself, I became interested in women leaders and those at the time running for public offices. Liberia had finally won her hard-earned peace and the 2005 elections was an opportunity to turn a page for democratic rule.
The voices of women had been resoundingly loud during the quest for peace. Women such as Leymah Gbowee, Madam Asatu Bah-Kenneth, Etweta Cooper, Ruth Caesar, and many others were mobilizing locally and internationally to ensure an agreement was reached in Accra to end the brutality.
Reminded that the fight was far from over and the need for women’s political participation, reinforced by Thomas Sankara’s call that there is no true social revolution without the liberation of women, the likes of Madam Caesar, Gloria Scott, Madam Sirleaf, and others were set to change the course of history.
More women would participate, even though the ‘glass ceiling’ is half-cracked, gender equality, women’s economic empowerment, women’s political participation, violence against women and girls would become part of Liberia’s social justice and everyday jargons.
Ever since then, Aunty Ruth and I have had many encounters within the women’s movement in Liberia. Myself as the then head of the Paramount Young Women’s Initiative, later at the Ministry of Gender and until my last service at the Ministry of Youth & Sports. Those encounters were pleasant, respectful and jovial. We’ve appeared on radio together, at national, local and community engagements, marches and many more, making the case for women.
My last fond memory of Aunty Ruth was at a function organized by UN Women in 2016. We both shared the same table. I am always fond of the wealth and depth of knowledge these selfless women brought to discourses. A moment with them is an opportunity to benefit from their wisdom. At the meeting and before everyone had settled in, she told me she wanted to be a ‘Haja’ for the day and I would teach her how to wear her headscarf. I obliged. A selfie was imminent.
For many years Madam Caesar has been active in advocacy for Liberia and the Mano River basin. She served as a voice for peace, justice and women’s rights. The lifelong activist is well known for her calmness yet fierce demeanour in the deliverance of her ideas on transformational change and justice for women.
As a founding member of the Mano River Women’s Peace Network (MARWOPNET), an organization working to promotes peace, security, justice, and women’s rights, Madam Caesar worked with her counterparts in Liberia, Guinea & Sierra Leone to ensure a safer sub-region free from violent conflicts.
Notably, between 2000-2003, the passionate and erudite servant was actively engaged within the region attending and organizing meetings, sending letters and memos, and engaging heads of states and governments, development partners to intervene and end the hostilities in Liberia.
Some of those meetings included with Kofi Annan, former UN Secretary-General, Dr. Mohammed Ibn Chambas, UN Special Envoy, Lansana Conte, former Guinean President, Tejan Kabbah, former Sierra Leonean President, and many others.
Liberia suffered the Ebola epidemic in 2014. As many Liberians were eager to leave the country, Aunty Ruth and others worked very hard to curb the epidemic. Mobilizing women to use unorthodox safety protocols to care for their loved ones was a strategy they devised. She will later recount her experience at the Inclusive Security Conference in the United States of America in 2015 saying, “We worked with women on the frontline and devise simple implements due to the lack of medical equipment and supplies. We used plastic bags on the feet and hands. We did not have faucets for water but we used bamboo to serve water to patients. It was more than a health issue. It was a peace issue for women.”
She was an ardent devotee to grassroots mobilization and women voices. During the 2011 and 2017 elections, she was a regular voice encouraging women in the trenches to remain engaged in the process and young people to remain peaceful.
A fight far from over? You will be missed
The struggle for women’s inclusive participation is far from over. With all the successes, the situation remains critical. It’s 2018. In a country where women account for almost half the population, they represent less than 20% percent in their national government. The security sector representation remains low, violence against women and girls is on the increase. The Domestic Violence and Women’s Political Representation bills still linger in the national legislature.
Mother Ruth, as you take your rest and disembark the bus, the voices left behind will continue the journey where you left off.
Intergenerational Dialogue needed
There is a much needed or somehow long belated inter-generational dialogue with women leaders. It has been a long and tedious journey for women since the beginning of Liberia’s formation. As one generation of women leaders ages on, there is a need for dialogue, mentorship and togetherness.
The war on women’s bodies, voices and spaces cannot be fought singlehandedly or by a few. Women leaders must work ‘side by side’ even in disagreement.
Aunty Ruth was a unifying force for women in and out of her generation. As she prepares for a final resting place, we must reflect on how far we have come, celebrate the successes and chart a new and collective course.
To the family of our dear patriot, mother and women’s rights activist, take heart. It is indeed a great loss. Mother and Aunty Ruth was yours personally and biologically, but she lived a selfless life for a cause bigger than herself. She worked to prepare a country for generations unborn. She will be missed dearly, but her struggles, voice, and memories live in our hearts. Take solace in her memories.
Take your rest dear powerful one. We will remember your calmness, your majestic walk, and ever smiling aura. Tell Mother Mary Brownell and others the struggle continuous unrelentingly.
Rest In Power Aunty Ruth.
“The brave die never, though they sleep in dust: Their courage nerves a thousand living men [women].” Minot Judson Savage
Kula Fofana is an activist and a student of Violence Conflict & Development at the University of London School of Oriental and African Studies (SOAS). Her interest includes transitional justice, public service, local voices, politics, identities, gender, governance, intersectionality etc. Connect with her on Twitter @KulaFofana