By: Poelano Malema
Polyandry is the new buzz word in South Africa. Many people have expressed their division over the subject.
Marriage counsellor Thabo Maatjie says both polygyny and polyandry are not good for the family unit.
Polygyny has been in existence for centuries. Shows like ‘Uthando NeSthembu’ have attracted millions of viewers and given South Africans a glimpse into what goes on in a polygamous marriage.
Maatjie says women get themselves into polygamous relationships for several reasons.
“Being in a polygamous marriage is a calculated choice which some women make based on benefits or preference. The benefits are that one gets a sense of belonging (being married) and dependence (financial and physical security).”
However, the marriage counsellor says people need to be aware that polygyny is in most cases centered around the man’s needs.
“In actual fact polygamy benefits the man more than women. It is about him, his needs and desires, his legacy and lineage, how he can flaunt his physical and financial abilities using the women as a vehicle to achieve some,” says the marriage counsellor.
“In polygamous marriage the women belong to the man while their need for companionship depends on his time-table,” says the counsellor.
He adds that polygamy causes division in many families.
“In many polygamous marriages around us including on shows like ‘Uthando NeSthembu’ and the Zulu monarchy, we have witnessed the dysfunctions it has imposed in families, where there is no harmony or true relationship between the wives, and in some it has caused division amongst the children, dealing with legacies has become a nightmare evidently.”
The topic of polyandry sparked major debate in parliament and online after the Department of Home Affairs gazetted a new green paper for the Marriage Act.
In the new act, the government is proposing a recognition of polyandry, where a woman can marry more than one husband.
READ: ‘If men are trash, why exactly would women want more of it?’ – Manyi on Polyandry
For many South Africans, they feel the act would bring equality, as currently, only men are allowed to have more than one spouse.
But Maatjie says the issue is deeper than equality.
“Polyandry is in fact some form of retaliation towards polygyny, a reflection of societal dysfunction that will create more harm to the core values of a family set-up,” says the counsellor.
“Many are only limiting it to women having the ability to do what men can do, but less attention is given to what family stands for. Many are looking at it from financial and physical benefits, but the issue of morals and values is lost,” he adds.
Maatjie adds that society needs to look at the complexity of polyandry.
“It will also be a one-sided thing where the woman will be the beneficiary, however, the process of a woman acquiring men will expose the fact that this will not work. Firstly, in polygyny, the man pays dowry to the women, will the same apply in polyandry where the woman pays dowry for the men?” he asks.
Apart from the issue of dowry, he says families will need to look at whether they will live in separate houses or one big house where the wife will have all her husband living under one room.
READ: Does paying ilobolo mean you are married
“In modern polygamy, every woman has her own house or room with her children (I’ve always wondered why the man cannot just have them in one room and perform his duties with all of them at the same time, but reality is that it won’t work and it reflects a dysfunctional and immoral family set-up), will polyandry work the same where the woman builds houses for all the men and she chooses who to be with when and how? Will it work for her if they all live under one roof in one bed?” says the counsellor.
He adds that people supporting polyandry need to look at how it will affect the children.
Martha Ntini, a woman who grew up in a family where her parents were in a polygamous marriage, says she does not advocate for polygyny or polyandry.
Martha says her father had four wives and had more than 20 children.
She says as children, they struggled to get things because her father couldn’t afford to feed all of them. She also says the women were the ones who struggled with the raising of their kids.
READ: Kaya 959 men weigh in on polyandry being legal in SA
Not only that, but she says one of the most frustrating thing was watching her mother’s voice being taken away.
She also says the wives had no say in the marriage.
“A man with many wives doesn’t want to be told anything. He is the one who has the final say and makes all the rules. You can’t even advise him,” she says.
Martha says only children whose moms had jobs could afford certain things, because the man would not buy many of the things the children needed because he couldn’t afford to buy for so many children.
Martha says they couldn’t further their studies because her father couldn’t afford to take all of them to institutions of higher learning.
Martha says she even used to tell herself that if all men are into polygamy, she would rather not get married and would not advise any other women to be in a polygamous marriage.
Image courtesy of Pexels.
Written by: Poelano
Kaya 959 takes back Sundays with A Touch of Soul, the only show bringing you soul and RnB music that touches your mind, body and spirit. The Best T in the City, T-bose takes you back to a time when music was made to last. A Touch of Soul is the perfect wind-down to your weekend. Sundays 14h00 to 18h00.
closeThe Jazz Standard with Brenda Sisane. Sunday's 12:00-15:00.
closeWITH XOLA DLWATI: SATURDAYS 12:00 -15:00 Spade of Hearts is a fuse of love and soulful sounds, pulling at your heartstrings. Tune in for songs that will take you down memory lane. It is the sound that once dominated your playlist. It airs Sundays 12:00 – 15:00.
closeThe World Show is informative, expansive, and largely pan-African. This is a musical journey that bridges generations and genres, travelling across continents and timelines, with in-depth interviews and features. ‘The World Show’ is a four-hour global journey through sound – featuring the freshest tracks from home and afar.
closeReal. Familiar. Memorable. Kaya 959 brings you the music you know and love from our playlist. Uninterrupted. Thursdays 20h00 to 21h00
closeHe has held it down in the world of mid-morning radio with the best music, riveting topics, brilliant mixes and interesting guests. Every weekday, The Best T proves why he is the BEST by connecting to you like only your bro or favourite uncle could. He lets his listeners dictate the songs they want to hear in the ever-popular Top 10 at 10, and his Three Teaspoons never run out. Catch The Best T in the City Mondays to Fridays from 09h00 to 12h00.
closeFeel good about feeling good! That's exactly what The Feel-Good show is about. An escape from the negativity that surrounds us, indulging you in good feels. Pass it on to one and all. Spread the good feeling around Gauteng with Andy Maqondwana.
close© 2024 Kaya 959 | On The Street On The Air
THIS PRIVACY STATEMENT FORMS PART OF KAYA 959’S TERMS OF USE POLICY. IF YOU DO NOT AGREE WITH ANY TERM OF THIS PRIVACY STATEMENT, YOU MUST CEASE YOUR ACCESS OF THIS WEBSITE IMMEDIATELY.
POPIA Act – To promote the protection of personal information processed by public and private bodies; to introduce certain conditions so as to establish minimum requirements for the processing of personal information; to provide for the establishment of an Information Regulator to exercise certain powers and to perform certain duties and functions in terms of this Act and the Promotion of Access to Information Act, 2000; to provide for the issuing of codes of conduct; to provide for the rights of persons regarding unsolicited electronic communications and automated decision making; to regulate the flow of personal information across the borders of the Republic; and to provide for matters connected therewith.
RECOGNISING THAT—
AND BEARING IN MIND THAT—
AND IN ORDER TO—
1.1.“Personal Information” means information relating to an identifiable, living, natural person and where it is applicable, identifiable, existing juristic person, including all information as defined in the Protection of Personal Information Act 4 of 2013.
1.2 Parliament assented to POPIA on 19 November 2013. The commencement date of section 1, Part A of Chapter 5, section 112 and section 113 was 11 April 2014. The commencement date of the other sections was 1 July 2020 (with the exception of section 110 and 114(4). The President of South Africa has proclaimed the POPI commencement date to be 1 July 2020.
1.3. “Processing” means the creation, generation, communication, storage, destruction of personal information as more fully defined in the Protection of Personal Information Act 4 of 2013.
1.4. “You” or the “user” means any person who accesses and browses this website for any purpose.
1.4. “Website” means the website of the KAYA 959 at URL www.kaya959.co.za or such other URL as KAYA 959 may choose from time to time.
2.1. KAYA 959 respects your privacy. This privacy policy statement sets out KAYA 959’s information gathering and dissemination practices in respect of the Website.
2.2. This Privacy Policy governs the processing of personal information provided to KAYA 959 through your use of the Website.
2.3. Please note that, due to legal and other developments, KAYA 959 may amend these terms and conditions from time to time.
3.1. By providing your personal information to KAYA 959 you acknowledge that it has been collected directly from you and consent to its processing by KAYA 959.
3.2. Where you submit Personal Information (such as name, address, telephone number and email address) via the website (e.g. through completing any online form) the following principles are observed in the processing of that information:
3.2.1. KAYA 959 will only collect personal information for a purpose consistent with the purpose for which it is required. The specific purpose for which information is
collected will be apparent from the context in which it is requested.
3.2.2. KAYA 959 will only process personal information in a manner that is adequate, relevant and not excessive in the context of the purpose for which it is processed.
3.2.3. Personal information will only be processed for a purpose compatible with that for which it was collected, unless you have agreed to an alternative purpose in writing or KAYA 959 is permitted in terms of national legislation of general application dealing primarily with the protection of personal information.
3.2.4. KAYA 959 will keep records of all personal Information collected and the specific purpose for which it was collected for a period of 1 (one) year from the date on which it was last used.
3.2.5. KAYA 959 will not disclose any personal information relating to you to any third party unless your prior written agreement is obtained or KAYA 959 is required to do so by law.
3.2.6. If personal information is released with your consent KAYA 959 will retain a record of the information released, the third party to which it was released, the reason for the release and the date of release, for a period of 1 (one) year from the date on which it was last used.
3.2.7. KAYA 959 will destroy or delete any personal information that is no longer needed by KAYA 959 for the purpose it was initially collected, or subsequently processed.
3.3. Note that, as permitted by the Electronic Communications and Transactions Act 25 of 2002, KAYA 959 may use personal information collected to compile profiles for statistical purposes. No information contained in the profiles or statistics will be able to be linked to any specific user.
4.1. KAYA 959 may use standard technology to collect information about the use of this website. This technology is not able to identify individual users but simply allows KAYA 959 to collect statistics.
4.2. KAYA 959 may utilise temporary or session cookies to keep track of users’ browsing habits. A cookie is a small file that is placed on your hard drive in order to keep a record of your interaction with this website and facilitate user convenience.
4.2.1. Cookies by themselves will not be used to identify users personally but may be used to compile identified statistics relating to use of services offered or to provide KAYA 959 with feedback on the performance of this website.
4.2.2. The following classes of information may be collected in respect of users who have enabled cookies:
4.2.2.1. The browser software used;
4.2.2.2. IP address;
4.2.2.3. Date and time of activities while visiting the website;
4.2.2.4. URLs of internal pages visited; and
4.2.2.5. referrers.
4.3. If you do not wish cookies to be employed to customize your interaction with this website it is possible to alter the manner in which your browser handles cookies. Please note that, if this is done, certain services on this website may not be available.
5.1. KAYA 959 takes reasonable measures to ensure the security and integrity of information submitted to or collected by this website, but cannot under any circumstances be held liable for any loss or other damage sustained by you as a result of unlawful access to or dissemination of any personal information by a third party.
6.1. KAYA 959 has no control over and accepts no responsibility for the privacy practices of any third party websites to which hyperlinks may have been provided and KAYA 959 strongly recommends that you review the privacy policy of any website you visit before using it further.
7.1. If you have any queries about this privacy policy please contact us by emailing [email protected]