Re: ugnet_: TRUTH ON AGE and MARRIAGE

2003-07-20 Thread Mitayo Potosi
Pictures of newly-wed comrades Wambui and  Peter Mbugua.

http://www.nationaudio.com/News/DailyNation/19072003/index.html

http://www.nationaudio.com/News/DailyNation/Today/

Mitayo Potosi


From: "Mitayo Potosi" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
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Subject: Re: ugnet_: TRUTH ON AGE and MARRIAGE
Date: Sun, 20 Jul 2003 17:49:34 +
In Uganda too we should reflect on our irrational ageism.

We have put a bar on the age for eligibility to stand for the Presidency of 
Uganda (72).

We have put a bar on the age for eligibility for Chancellor of Makerere 
University (70 ? ) ; ( I was shocked and saddened that a World Icon like 
Mzee Prof Ssenteza-Kajubi is barred ).

Even in the Federalist Constitutional Proposals, they have put in some 
arbitrary age limits.  I asked one of the authors the rational of these 
limits and even he himself agreed that there is none.

We have to abandon the oppressive aspects of  our culture and embrace 
enlightenment.

We wish Compatriot and Freedom fighter Mrs Wambui and her new husband  Mr 
Peter Mbugua happy times and lots of fun.

Congratulations.

Mitayo Potosi



From: Owor Kipenji <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Reply-To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
CC: [EMAIL PROTECTED], [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: ugnet_: TRUTH ON AGE and MARRIAGE
Date: Sun, 20 Jul 2003 02:02:39 +0100 (BST)
Editorial

Sunday, July 20, 2003
-
Truth on age and marriageMrs Wambui Otieno, former Mau Mau fighter - and 
most times just a fighter - has bucked the trend, rebelled against the 
common values about age and marriage.
She has done so not just by taking a husband 42 years her junior, but 
being thoroughly pleased with herself when the social norms suggest that 
she should be hanging her head in mortification. But this is not just the 
story of a 67-year-old lonely widow reaching out in search of affection 
and attention.
It is a mirror to society and its values about age, sex and marriage. In 
our African traditions, a 67-year-old woman is supposed to have retired 
not only from work but from life. Hers is a sad, in the case of widows, 
lonely game of waiting for death; a dependent and basically useless 
existence.
But these are the values of a young population, a society made up of young 
people whose outlook in life is basically ageist: That it is only the 
young, energetic and beautiful who have a right to happiness and life.
As Kenyans discuss and pass judgment on Wambui and her young husband, 
their eye must stray to the clock: Our population must age, there will 
increasingly be more affluent and liberal people in their 60s and 70s. 
These are independent people who want to retire from neither work nor 
life.
Equally, society is hypocritically sexist. When an elderly man marries a 
young girl, the eyebrow is only ironically raised. In truth, the man is 
the object of his agemates' secret admiration and the younger men's 
jealousy, but rarely is the union regarded as repulsive or unnatural. Is 
it really sustainable to have one rule for men and another for women?
At the end of the day, everyone is entitled to their own views. Just like 
Wambui and her husband have a right to live their lives in a fashion of 
their own choosing.
Comments\Views about this article

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Re: ugnet_: TRUTH ON AGE and MARRIAGE

2003-07-20 Thread Mitayo Potosi
In Uganda too we should reflect on our irrational ageism.

We have put a bar on the age for eligibility to stand for the Presidency of 
Uganda (72).

We have put a bar on the age for eligibility for Chancellor of Makerere 
University (70 ? ) ; ( I was shocked and saddened that a World Icon like 
Mzee Prof Ssenteza-Kajubi is barred ).

Even in the Federalist Constitutional Proposals, they have put in some 
arbitrary age limits.  I asked one of the authors the rational of these 
limits and even he himself agreed that there is none.

We have to abandon the oppressive aspects of  our culture and embrace 
enlightenment.

We wish Compatriot and Freedom fighter Mrs Wambui and her new husband  Mr 
Peter Mbugua happy times and lots of fun.

Congratulations.

Mitayo Potosi



From: Owor Kipenji <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Reply-To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
CC: [EMAIL PROTECTED], [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: ugnet_: TRUTH ON AGE and MARRIAGE
Date: Sun, 20 Jul 2003 02:02:39 +0100 (BST)
Editorial

Sunday, July 20, 2003
-
Truth on age and marriageMrs Wambui Otieno, former Mau Mau fighter - and 
most times just a fighter - has bucked the trend, rebelled against the 
common values about age and marriage.
She has done so not just by taking a husband 42 years her junior, but being 
thoroughly pleased with herself when the social norms suggest that she 
should be hanging her head in mortification. But this is not just the story 
of a 67-year-old lonely widow reaching out in search of affection and 
attention.
It is a mirror to society and its values about age, sex and marriage. In 
our African traditions, a 67-year-old woman is supposed to have retired not 
only from work but from life. Hers is a sad, in the case of widows, lonely 
game of waiting for death; a dependent and basically useless existence.
But these are the values of a young population, a society made up of young 
people whose outlook in life is basically ageist: That it is only the 
young, energetic and beautiful who have a right to happiness and life.
As Kenyans discuss and pass judgment on Wambui and her young husband, their 
eye must stray to the clock: Our population must age, there will 
increasingly be more affluent and liberal people in their 60s and 70s. 
These are independent people who want to retire from neither work nor life.
Equally, society is hypocritically sexist. When an elderly man marries a 
young girl, the eyebrow is only ironically raised. In truth, the man is the 
object of his agemates' secret admiration and the younger men's jealousy, 
but rarely is the union regarded as repulsive or unnatural. Is it really 
sustainable to have one rule for men and another for women?
At the end of the day, everyone is entitled to their own views. Just like 
Wambui and her husband have a right to live their lives in a fashion of 
their own choosing.
Comments\Views about this article

-
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ugnet_: TRUTH ON AGE and MARRIAGE

2003-07-19 Thread Owor Kipenji




Editorial  Sunday, July 20, 2003  



Truth on age and marriageMrs Wambui Otieno, former Mau Mau fighter - and most times just a fighter - has bucked the trend, rebelled against the common values about age and marriage. 
She has done so not just by taking a husband 42 years her junior, but being thoroughly pleased with herself when the social norms suggest that she should be hanging her head in mortification. But this is not just the story of a 67-year-old lonely widow reaching out in search of affection and attention.  
It is a mirror to society and its values about age, sex and marriage. In our African traditions, a 67-year-old woman is supposed to have retired not only from work but from life. Hers is a sad, in the case of widows, lonely game of waiting for death; a dependent and basically useless existence. 
But these are the values of a young population, a society made up of young people whose outlook in life is basically ageist: That it is only the young, energetic and beautiful who have a right to happiness and life. 
As Kenyans discuss and pass judgment on Wambui and her young husband, their eye must stray to the clock: Our population must age, there will increasingly be more affluent and liberal people in their 60s and 70s. These are independent people who want to retire from neither work nor life.  
Equally, society is hypocritically sexist. When an elderly man marries a young girl, the eyebrow is only ironically raised. In truth, the man is the object of his agemates' secret admiration and the younger men's jealousy, but rarely is the union regarded as repulsive or unnatural. Is it really sustainable to have one rule for men and another for women? 
At the end of the day, everyone is entitled to their own views. Just like Wambui and her husband have a right to live their lives in a fashion of their own choosing.  
Comments\Views about this article




 



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