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Verbum et Ecclesia

On-line version ISSN 2074-7705
Print version ISSN 1609-9982

Verbum Eccles. (Online) vol.39 n.1 Pretoria  2018

http://dx.doi.org/10.4102/ve.v39i1.1861 

ORIGINAL RESEARCH

 

A literary figure or patriarchal reality? Reflections on the 'ēšet hayil in light of depictions of womanhood from selected Yorùbá and Sotho proverbs

 

 

Madipoane Masenya

Department of Biblical and Ancient Studies, University of South Africa, South Africa

Correspondence

 

 


ABSTRACT

In varying Jewish and African contexts (cf. the Yorùbá and Sotho in the present essay), the 'ēšet hayil is regarded as a historical figure who should serve as a model for women both young and old. As an organic scholar within an African context, I am both fascinated and also challenged by how biblical notions of gender and womanhood, as portrayed in the paean on the 'ēšet hayil in Proverbs 31:10-31, seem to be at variance with notions of gender and womanhood as depicted in some Yorùbá and Sotho proverbs. Noting the emphasis in Proverbs 31:10-31 on the positive image of the 'ēšet hayil as the ideal wife, this article shows that overall, in the African proverbs, the woman is depicted positively as a mother, though many proverbs (cf. especially the Yorùbá proverbs) cast the woman as a wife in a negative light. It is argued that the epitome of womanhood, which in Proverbs 31:10-31 is the ideal wife, appears to stand in tension with the image of a good mother and of a bad wife observed in some of the African proverbs. This article therefore focuses on the kind of gender- and family-conscious hermeneutic that may be envisioned when Proverbs 31:10-31 is read in the Yorùbá and Sotho contexts.
INTRADISCIPLINARY AND/OR INTERDISCIPLINARY IMPLICATIONS: The research carried out in this article entails Old Testament Studies, Gender Studies and African Languages. Sotho and Yorùbá proverbs on womanhood are used as a hermeneutical lens to interrogate the text of Proverbs 31:10-31, resulting in fresh insights on womanhood. The resultant output makes a needed contribution in challenging patriarchal ideologies and contexts.


 

 

Who can find a virtuous wife,

For her worth is far more precious than rubies (Pr 31:10, MEV)

To die without getting married and without children is to be completely cut off from the human community to become an outcast and to lose all links with mankind [sic]. Everybody therefore must get married and bear children: that is the greatest hope of the individual for himself [sic] and of the community for the individual (Mbiti 1989:131).

 

Introduction

At face value, the paean in praise of the 'ēšet hayil in Proverbs 31:10-31 may appear to give some pointers to an ideal family set-up in the context of its production (cf. Yehud). However, the theme of family relationships cannot be restricted to the post-exilic era because the concept of 'family' is as old as Israel herself. Claudia Camp (1985:187) could thus argue that present-day readers of the book of Proverbs are not compelled to date the Proverbs poems of 1-9 and 31 in the post-exilic era because there is a possibility that older works were used anew in the latter context.1 Even more importantly for the present investigation, within the various contexts of the reception of this poem, including the Yorùbá and Sotho African contexts, the female figure presented by the poem is usually regarded as a historical figure who should serve for many an African woman as a model to be emulated. Even in present-day Jewish contexts, argues Fox (2009), 'when recited to a wife and mother [as in contemporary Jewish practice], it [the enconium] expresses gratitude for her achievements and contributions to the family' (p. 905; texts in brackets are the author's).

What seems to be at the core of the paean on the 'ēšet hayil are notions of what it means or what it must mean to qualify as a married woman of substance. The text's focus is not on any woman. It is on a woman who has been found by a man, that is, a heterosexually married woman. The paean appears to prescribe the qualities of worthy womanhood from the viewpoint of its (male) composer(s): 'Proverbs 31:10-31 contains the poem on the capable wife that praises her from a male perspective' (Sakenveld 2009a:872). What typifies a virtuous woman, this 'good [thing]', which in the view of the poet is difficult to find? However, whatever it is that the poem seeks to convey about worthy womanhood appears, to an extent, to be at variance with what worthy womanhood is, or should entail, as evidenced from selected Yorùbá and Sotho proverbs.

While it is acknowledged that there are differences between the Israelite and African sapiential traditions with regard to time, culture, language and geographical location, to name but four, research has also recognised some points of resemblance between the worldview embedded in some of the proverbs in the book of Proverbs (including the worldview that embeds the paean being investigated here) and the one underlying many African proverbs (Burden & Bosman 1982:84; Kimilike 2006; Masenya 1989). The resemblances between the proverbs of the preceding cultures could be accounted for based on the assumption that both the Israelite and African peoples share a common optimistic outlook on reality.

The main question that is being addressed in this article is as follows: Given the apparent tensions between the images of womanhood as they are portrayed in selected Yorùbá and Sotho proverbs and such images as they appear in the book of Proverbs, epitomised in the ode in praise of the 'ēšet hayil, and also given the kind of impact that the Christian scriptures continue to wield in varying African contexts, what kind of hermeneutic may emerge if the proverbs from these different contexts are brought together? Would the ensuing gender- and family-conscious hermeneutic assist interested African women to navigate the perceived tensions within these traditions with success?

In the following paragraphs, a brief overview of selected proverbs from the Yorùbá and Sotho contexts is presented. The African proverbial material will then serve as a hermeneutical lens to engage the figure of the 'ēšet hayil as she is featured in Proverbs 31:10-31.

 

Glimpsing ideal womanhood in African contexts

Òris˙à bí ìyá kò sí. Ìyá là bá má a bo˙. (Yorùbá proverb)   [There is no deity like mother. A mother is worthy of being worshipped.]

Ìyá ni wúrà, baba ni díngí.    [Mother is gold. Father is a mirror.]

Mmago ngwana o swara thipa ka bogaleng. (Sotho proverb)    [A child's mother holds the knife by its cutting edge.]

Women as mothers in selected Sotho proverbs

Go tswala ke go feka maano(Rakoma 1971).  [To give birth is to devise plans.]

The tenor of this proverb reveals that it is worthwhile to have one's own children as it is simply assumed that they will take care of one's needs during old age.

A ba tswalwe ba ate gobane mo-na-le-pelo ga a tsebjwe (Rakoma 1971).   [Let them be birthed and let them increase for the one with a long heart is not known.]

Its tenor is: women should bear as many children as possible as some of these may grow up to be good adults who would be able to take care of the needs of their parents among others.

Mmago ngwana o swara thipa ka bogaleng.  [A mother holds the knife by its cutting edge.]

The proverb reveals that a mother will go out of her way, even taking risks at times, for the safety and welfare of her children.

Although the role of a woman as a good mother is celebrated in the preceding proverbs, other proverbs recognise the existence of bad mothers, as in the following examples:

Images of a bad mother in some Sotho proverbs

Lefotwana ge e se la gago, o hloba le gaela.   [If a birdling does not belong to you, you remove its feathers even if it cries bitterly.]

Motho ge e se mmago, le ka metse a ka go tšhela (Rakoma 1971).  [If a human being is not your own mother she or he can even run (hot) water over you.]

Some Yorùbá proverbs also celebrate women as mothers. To this we now turn.

Women as mothers in Yorùbá proverbs

Yorùbá culture, just like the Akan culture, places the welfare of children and the home above everything else (cf. Labeodan 2015). According to Akintunde (2006), the preceding attribute was exhibited in the past as well as within contemporary African society. Nothing else takes precedence (p. 158). Hence, there is the proverb, 'when one mother or child lies dying, one does not pursue disputes' (Oduyoye 1995:60).

The portrayal of women as good and as bad mothers appears to be more glaring in the Yorùbá proverbs than in the Northern Sotho proverbs.

Images of a good mother

Òris˙à bí ìyá kò sí. Ìyá là bá má a bo˙.  [There is no deity like mother. A mother is worthy of being worshipped.]

Ìyá ni wúrà, baba ni díngí.   [Mother is gold. Father is a mirror.]

Hence the expression, 'No orisa is as sacred as the mother'. (All fetishes and all witchcraft are inferior to the woman-mother; she is the strongest; cf. Schipper 1991:85, as quoted by Olojede 2012:197).

Àgbàká labiyam ńgbàjá mọ́ m- rẹ̀.   [It is completely and securely that a mother with a baby strapped to her back supports the child with a strip of cloth.]

The proverb's tenor reveals that one must be thorough in discharging one's responsibilities.

Abiyam kì í rìn kó ṣánwọ́ ahá.   [A nursing mother does not venture away from home without a cup.]

Its tenor reveals that a mother must be prepared to nurse her baby.

As already noted, some Yorùbá proverbs feature portraits of a bad mother, as in the following examples.

Images of a bad mother

Obìnrin bímo˙ fún ni kò pé kó má pa ni; obìnrin kò bímo˙ fún ni kò pé kó má pa ni.   [That a woman has had one's child does not mean she cannot kill one; that a woman has not had one's child does not mean she may not kill one.]

Broadly applied, the proverb displays suspicion about women as it reveals that intimacy cannot protect one (man) against a woman.

In both the Sotho and Yorùbá cultures, a woman is also celebrated as a wife,2 as will become evident from the following proverbs.

Woman as wife in Sotho proverbs

Images of a good wife

Mosadi ke tšhwene, o lewa mabogo (Rakoma, 1971).  [A woman is a baboon, her hands are eaten.]

The beauty and delight that a woman can cause are revealed by her diligence in fulfilling her (domestic) duties and also taking care of her husband (Masenya [ngwan'a Mphahlele] 2004:133).

Monna ke peu, ga a swarwe manenolo.  [A woman should honour her husband.] (Ziervogel & Mokgokong 1975:856).

Tšhilo le lwala re tšere, le tlo šala le eja lewana.   [The diligent girl is now married.]

Once a girl (kgadi) gets married, her family finds it difficult to cope with household chores, while her in-laws (ba bogadi) become proud and grateful that their domestic chores will be attended to. The expectation of female hard work (also within the context of marriage; cf. proverb 1 above) is revealed in this proverb.

The tenor of the preceding proverbs attach the worthiness of a woman to her marital status, especially a woman's ability to take care of her household's needs, in particular, those of her husband. Her husband's authority over her is unquestionable.

Just like in the role of motherhood, not all wives could be celebrated as good wives, as will become clear from the following proverbs:

Images of a bad wife

Botse re llela boswana, bošwanyana bo a lahletša.  [Beauty we cry for the darker (-skinned) one(s), the lighter (-skinned) lead(s) astray.] Outward (female) appearances can be deceptive.

Se bone thola boreledi, teng ga yona go a baba.  [Do not be deceived by the smoothness of a thola (a beautiful smooth yellow fruit), it is bitter inside.] External (female) appearances can be deceptive.

Tšhwenegatšana o matepe o gana ge o bitšwa ke boroto.   [Female baboon, you are spoiled as you refuse the summons from a male baboon.]

We now turn to the Yorùbá proverbs on the image of a woman as a wife.

Images of a good wife in Yorùbá proverbs

In charge of cooking and kitchen affairs:

Áwàrí lobínrin ńwá nńkan b.  [Seeking-until-finding is how a woman seeks ingredients for a stew.]

The dutiful person (wife) does not permit difficulties to keep her from accomplishing her duty.

b tí baálé kìí j, ìyáálé ilé kìí sèé.   [The soup that the husband does not eat, the wife does not cook.]

À ńsọ̀rọ̀ elégédé, obìnrín ḿbèrè ohun tí à ńs, a ní ọ̀rọ̀ kùnrin ni; bí a bá kó elégédé j, ta ni yó sè é?   [We are discussing pumpkins; a woman asks what we are discussing, and we respond that it is men's talk; after we have gathered the pumpkins, who will cook them?]

Bí obìnrin ò bá j'owú, b r kìí dùn.   [If a woman is not jealous, her soup cannot be tasty.]

The preceding proverb is another marriage- and polygamy-themed proverb that notes a potential merit in polygamy because of its inherent competitive nature.

bẹ̀ tí baálé kì í j, ìyálé ilé kì í sè é.   [The sort of stew that the man of the house will not eat, the woman of the house should not cook.]

One should not do what one knows one's comrades hate.

Images of a bad wife

Being inherently wicked or evildoers or witches

Kàkà kí ó sànl'ára ìyá àj, ó figbogbo m bí obìnrin; y ńńgorí y.   [Instead of mother-witch's condition to improve, all the children she bears turn out to be female; birds beget more birds (a reference to witches 'flying' at night).]

Despite all efforts the fortunes of a person continue to be bad.

Obìnrin bím fún ni kò pé kó má pa ni; obìnrin kò bím fún ni kò pé kó má pa ni.   [That a woman has had one's child does not mean she cannot kill one; that a woman has not had one's child does not mean she may not kill one.]

Intimacy is no protection against a woman.

kùnrin tí kò kú, obìnrin r ni kò tíì páá.   [If a man is not yet dead, it is because his woman is yet to kill him.]

It p l'nu ó di wárápá, egbo p l's ó di jakut; bi obìnrin báá p n'ile k àj nii dà.   [When saliva stays long in the mouth, it becomes epilepsy; when a sore stays long on the leg, it becomes putrid. If a woman stays long in her husband's house, she becomes a witch.]

Bad wives and the penalties

Abused (bad) women?

Ìyàwó e ọ̀ràn kan tán; k ẹ̀-ẹ́ e ọ̀ràn-an nkò-j-mọ́.   [The wife has done the unpardonable; her husband has adopted an I-will-not-eat-any-longer attitude.]

The preceding proverb is said in the context of people who have caused unpardonable offence.

Ìpàṣán tí a fi na ìyálé ḿb láàjà fún ìyàwó.  [The whip used on the senior wife is resting on the rafters waiting for the new wife.]

One should not assume that the misfortune that befell those who went before one would pass one over.

It is worth noting that unlike in the Sotho collection, quite a few proverbs abound on women as bad wives within the Yorùbá proverbial collection.

Having glimpsed the depictions of womanhood from the preceding Sotho and Yorùbá proverbs, we now turn to the poem in praise of the 'ēšet hayil as reflected in Proverbs 31:10-31.

The 'ēšet hayil in light of depictions of womanhood from some Yorùbá and Sotho proverbs

As already noted, the focus of this investigation is on the kind of gender- and family-conscious hermeneutic that may be envisioned when Proverbs 31:10-31 is read in the Yorùbá and Sotho contexts.

In the Sotho proverbs (cf. also the Yorùbá proverbs), womanhood is first and foremost linked to heterosexual marriage. Like in the Hebrew Bible, the words for 'woman' and 'wife' are captured by the same word (cf. mosadi). A mosadi (read: a wife, a married woman) is celebrated as a communal wife (cf. also in the Yorùbá context, Olojede 2012:198). The 'ēšet hayil basically belongs in her husband's household, though the household is referred to as hers. An African woman is a wife and a nurturer of her husband (cf. the expression mmago nna (literally, 'the mother of myself'), fondly said by a husband to his wife. In both African contexts, a married woman (wife) is also celebrated for using her reproductive capacities effectively. A woman is thus celebrated as a mother. Although the sex of a specific baby is not mentioned in the (listed) proverbs, the birth of sons causes more joy in our patriarchal, patrilineal African contexts. The birth of girls may also be celebrated to some extent given the important role that they will later play, especially as paternal sisters and the proceeds that would accrue from the bride price.

The received interpretations of biblical texts, including the text of Proverbs 31:10-31 (both in churches and academia) are not always helpful. On the one hand, academia to a greater extent tends to detach biblical texts from the harsh sociopolitical and socio-economic realities on the ground. On the other hand, churches interpret the paean mostly in a literalist, taxing way, for example, the ēšet hayil is hardly, if at all, presented as a literary figure. The 'ēšet hayil is regarded as a historical figure from whom African women who sit in the pews should take their cue. Although present-day gender-conscious scholars may take issue with such literalist readings of female texts in the Christian scriptures, the readings may not be totally devoid of significance as they may bring the following helpful elements about the 'ēšet hayil to light.

As an attainable ideal?

  • The 'ēšet hayil manages the affairs of her household (including ensuring the welfare of all household members - husband, children and servants) with efficiency.

  • She is assertive, independent and has a sense of self-love.

  • The 'ēšet hayil is committed to her relationship with her husband and thus seems to delight in enhancing his prestige and his name.

  • She is a perfect model of industry.

  • She has a sense of justice as her hands are extended to the poor and needy.

  • She dispenses words of wisdom from her mouth.

  • Her life centres on the fear of the Lord.

  • She is a businesswoman.

  • The 'ēšet hayil is also an unattainable ideal. Could she fit in smoothly with the category of a mere literary figure?

  • She is presented as an overworked human being. In everyday life, stress cannot be sustainable as it could also be fatal.

  • She is an elite woman. The kind of resources that the 'ēšet hayil possesses are far beyond the reach of many African women, many of whom may not even be on the level of her skilled servants.

  • Her nuclear (monogamous) family is at variance with those African families that are polygynous.

  • Connected to the preceding observation, other types of families and partnerships will feel excluded from the ideal provided by Proverbs 31:10-31: single-parented families; children-parented families and families constituted by the members of the LGBTQI community, among others.

The 'ēšet hayil via African proverbs: A gender- and family-conscious biblical hermeneutic?

Selected Sotho and Yorùbá proverbs will be used to re-read the 'ēšet hayil in light of the definitions gleaned from African texts.

Woman as mother

Mmago ngwana o swara thipa ka bogaleng. (Northern Sotho)   [A mother holds the knife by its cutting edge.]

A mother will go out of her way, even taking risks at times, for the safety and welfare of her children.

Áwàrí lobínrin ńwá nńkan b. (Yorùbá)  [Seeking-until-finding is how a woman seeks ingredients for stew.]

The dutiful person does not permit difficulties to keep her from accomplishing her duty.

The preceding African proverbs reveal the duties of a woman as one who holds the family together by ascertaining with all her loyalty and commitment that the family functions smoothly and efficiently. Women are the ones who work harder to ensure that the household's welfare is catered for, especially as it pertains to the needs of children. A woman as a mother of all in the household is expected to make sure that the activities of the house run smoothly (cf. the Northern Sotho proverb). Like the 'ēšet hayil, an African woman can be the actual doer of household chores. She could also enlist the assistance of older children, other wives or a domestic help, depending on her socio-economic status. Her commitment to the smooth running of the household would not be deterred by the difficulties she may encounter along the way (cf. the Yorùbá proverb). Some of the proverbs, though, especially the Yorùbá ones, seem to foreground the care that should first and foremost go to her husband, perhaps even more than to her children.

Commentators have noted the efficient management of a complex household as one of the distinguishing qualities of the 'ēšet hayil. The 'ēšet hayil's experience through the years has enabled her to master the skill of managing a household and thus qualified her to be among the wise women, for as Sakenveld (2009a) argued:

[f]irst, wisdom was practical rather than theoretical - knowing how to do something. A king was wise because he knew how to govern well and a woman was wise because she knew how to manage a household. (p. 657)

African wives and mothers who displayed these skills would be identified as the ones who understood the teachings they had received from the initiation schools and what the elderly women would have taught them about womanhood when they got married.

The ode to the 'ēšet hayil stresses what she does for the household and its members, that is, her husband (vv. 11-12; 28-29), her maidservants (v. 15), the poor and the needy (v. 20), herself (v. 22) and her sons and her husband (vv. 28-29). In the latter verses, she is not depicted as doing something for them, but they 'do' something to her, not by their hands, but by their mouths.

An industrious woman

Unlike many an African woman, as part of the management of her complex household, the 'ēšet hayil, an elite woman as previously noted, straddles the space between the private sphere of the home, which is depicted as hers, and the public sphere, not of political life but of business life. Although the Woman of Worth is not pictured as inhabiting the city gates, thus taking an active part in the political affairs of that male sphere, her influence is felt at the gates, where her husband receives the honour on account of her industry. She thus displays the qualities of worthy womanhood.

African women in both the Sotho and Yorùbá proverbs and the 'ēšet hayil are portrayed as industrious.

Mosadi ke tšhwene, o lewa mabogo. (Sotho proverb)  [A woman is a baboon, her hands are eaten.]

The beauty and delight that a woman can cause are revealed by her diligence in fulfilling her (domestic) duties and also taking care of her husband (Masenya [ngwan'a Mphahlele] 2004:133).

Tšhilo le lwala re tšere, le tlo šala le eja lewana. (Sotho)   [The diligent girl is now married.]

Once a girl (kgadi) is married, her family finds it difficult to cope with household chores, while her in-laws (ba bogadi) become proud and grateful that their domestic chores will be attended to. The mentality of female hard work (also within the context of marriage; cf. proverb 1 above) is also revealed in this proverb.

Mma o tlile tlala o a (n)ya. (Sotho)  [Mother has come, hunger will be in real trouble.]

b tí baálé kìí j, ìyáálé ilé kìí sèé. (Yorùbá)  [The soup that the husband does not eat, the wife does not cook.]

bẹ̀ tí baálé kì í j, ìyálé ilé kì í sè é.  [The sort of stew the man of the house will not eat, the woman of the house should not cook.]

One should not do what one knows one's comrades hate.

The first Sotho proverb, mosadi ke tšhwene, o lewa mabogo [a woman is a baboon, her hands are eaten (passive)] likens a hardworking woman to a baboon, possibly because a baboon is classified in this culture as industrious animals. It is important to note that the efficient management of a household cannot be separated from the use of a woman's hands. Also, although the hands of a married woman are to be eaten by all in the household, a husband, according to the proverb's tenor, has to receive a bigger share of the consumption, including the satisfaction of his sexual desires as well. Interestingly, a (male) counterpart of the proverb reveals precisely the preceding function, though not necessarily performed within his household! Monna ke tšhwene, o ja ka matsogo a mabedi. [A man is a baboon, he eats (active) with two hands.] The tenor of this proverb is that even if he has a wife, a married man may have sexual encounters with other women extra-maritally. The proverb about a diligent girl being married also points to the excitement of the recipient (husband's) family, as the new additional hands would mark the arrival of plenty. The children in the family can then sing: Mma o tlile, tlala o a (n)ya [Mother has come, hunger you are in real trouble].

From the Yorùbá proverbs, it is also clear that the husband, more than all the other family members, is the one to enjoy the fruits of his wife's domestic labour (read: kitchen chores).

The 'ēšet hayil does not eat the bread of idleness (v. 27). The better part of the poem is dotted by action, her actions: 'brings', 'rises', 'puts her hand', 'her palms extended', 'makes' and so on. Like the proverbial baboon, the 'ēšet hayil's hands are eaten by all the members of her household, that is, husband (vv. 11-12), maidservants (v. 15), herself (v. 22), her sons (and husband) (vv. 28-29), including even those who are not members of her household, that is, the poor and the needy (v. 20). From the preceding qualities, could she qualify as a good wife and a good mother as well? As per Murphy (1998):

The husband's trust in her is manifested by the relative absence of any significant mention of him in the poem, except for his lounging at the city gate, v. 23, and praising her, vv. 28-29. (p. 246)

The answer to the question on whether the 'ēšet hayil is a good wife is thus positive. Why? Proverbs 31:10-31 is a poem in praise of a wife of substance. It thus makes sense that among the members who would naturally have formed part of the 'ēšet hayil's nuclear household, that is, her husband and her children (read: sons), her husband would have been the one to be foregrounded. The paean is a man's praise to a woman of substance. It also follows that as the description of the 'ēšet hayil is cast in a poem, she could not, unlike in the case of the portrait of a woman in many Yorùbá proverbs, have been portrayed negatively as a bad wife or a bad mother. The sages have already given readers portraits of her counterparts in earlier chapters (cf. Woman Folly and Woman Stranger).

As for the 'ēšet hayil's reproductive capacities (cf. her role as a mother), the poem does not specify the number of sons who rise up and call her happy. From the poem's mood though, as well the importance of the re-establishment of the new Jewish community in Yehud, it is possible that a wife of substance would have been the one who had many (male) children. The challenge would only be how she would navigate sharing her hands and palms between adults (husband and maidservants) and children of different age categories. As a mother, she takes care of the needs of her children in the household, also teaching them the Torah with wisdom (v. 26). The quality of the 'ēšet hayil as a mother who bears and nurtures many children is covert compared to its counterpart in African proverbs (cf. Sotho proverbs in particular).

 

Conclusion

The 'ēšet hayil is portrayed as working very hard to make sure that the lives of other human beings, especially those who belong to her household, are taken care of. What is clear, though, is her solitary life in terms of her connectedness and relationships with other human beings, including her husband. She seems married to her many tasks. She would not quite fit the African ethos of botho or ubuntu [humanness or kindness], in which a human being (like herself) becomes one because of other human beings. While she basically displays botho to others, including those who desperately need it (cf. the poor and the needy), she cannot seem to receive the botho from others, or does she? Her portrait, unlike the depictions of bad and good mothers in several African proverbs, is viewed only in a good light: 'She does him good and not evil all the days of her life' (Pr 31:12).

She is a rich woman, a member of the haves, a quality disconnected to the realities of many an African woman. Yet, despite all these points of disconnect between her portrait and those reflected in selected Sotho and Yorùbá proverbs, the 'ēšet hayil is supposed to be celebrated as a model to be emulated by women, especially those for whom the Christian Bible remains normative. Such women appear to be stuck between present-day images of womanhood and traditional images re-inscribed by the discourses of the African renaissance, decoloniality and fundamentalist biblical hermeneutics. The following pertinent question thus remains: In light of the preceding points of disconnect between some of the salient features of the 'ēšet hayil and depictions of womanhood from some African proverbs, how may (African) biblical scholars, especially organic ones, enable an accessible, woman-friendly, family-conscious biblical hermeneutic for those who are desperately in need thereof? Would the ensuing gender- and family-conscious hermeneutic assist interested African women to navigate the perceived tensions within these traditions with success? This article has hopefully enabled the reader to gain a glimpse into the kind of gender- and family-conscious hermeneutic that may be envisioned when Proverbs 31:10-31 is read in the Yorùbá and Sotho contexts.

 

Acknowledgements

Competing interests

The author declares no competing interests with regard to the writing of this article.

 

References

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Correspondence:
Madipoane Masenya
masenmj@unisa.ac.za

Received: 26 Mar. 2018
Accepted: 20 July 2018
Published: 15 Oct. 2018

 

 

1 . For the purposes of the present article, it will suffice to date the redaction or compilation of Proverbs 31:10-31 in line with the general dating of the whole book in the post-exilic period. This does not necessarily entail that the material contained in this poem is exclusively post-exilic. In view of the older nature of family wisdom, on which the poem and some parts of the book focus, the possibility cannot be ruled out that we are dealing with pre-exilic material in this paean (cf. Camp 1985:187; Lyons 1987:237).
2 . The language of marriage proverbs indicates that a wife only reflects the stage of the marriage and a man's competence as a husband
Society demands that she stays married, because a woman has no dignity outside marriage. (Oduyoye 1995:68; italics are the author's).

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