FREEDOM IN AFRICA

UNTIL RECENTLY, women in most parts of Africa have not been really free. They have been considered inferior. In rural areas, they have been Number Two, except in childbearing and cooking and working in the fields. It has been hard for us to get a proper education and find jobs.

However, nothing has helped me more to survive the prejudice against women in our country than a passage in Science and Health that describes the escape of the children of Israel from captivity in Egypt. Despite their terrible fears, they walked through the wilderness, "anticipating the promised joy." Then comes the best part: "... so shall the spiritual idea guide all right desires in their passage from sense to Soul, from a material sense of existence to the spiritual, up to the glory prepared for them who love God" (p. 566). For me, that is real freedom!

At one time, as a single mother with four children under 12 years of age, I felt anything but free. Then I remembered how my father had taught me to pray, and what he had said about Christian Science practitioners who love to help those who come to them for healing. So I spoke to a practitioner, but was not very happy with what he said. He wanted me to forgive everybody—even the men who had treated me as inferior and didn't have a proper job for me. This I just couldn't do. How could I love the people who were so mean to me?

Enjoy 1 free Sentinel article or audio program each month, including content from 1898 to today.

NEXT IN THIS ISSUE
Article
FREE FROM LIMITATIONS
February 2, 2009
Contents

We'd love to hear from you!

Easily submit your testimonies, articles, and poems online.

Submit