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Magda Rakita

Photographer + Filmmaker
      
God Made Woman Then He Jerked
Location: Cambridge, UK
Nationality: Polish/British
Biography: Magda Rakita is a documentary photographer based in Cambridge, UK. She works with the media and NGO’s worldwide; her personal projects focus on health and social issues that affect women, children and the older generation. In 2013, Magda... MORE
Public Story
God Made Woman Then He Jerked
Copyright Magda Rakita 2024
Updated Sep 2016
Location Monrovia Liberia
Topics Abuse, Activism, Adolescence, Children, Crime, Energy, Feminism, Freedom, Gender, Human Rights, Multimedia, Oppression, Peace, Photography, Poverty, Prostitution, Rape, School/College, Teens, Violence, Women's Rights, Youth
"God made woman then he jerked", reads a mural on the streets of Monrovia, Liberia, a country mostly remembered for its fourteen-year civil war and, more recently, Ebola epidemic.

As Liberia celebrated its 10th anniversary of peace in summer 2013, and with a woman occupying its highest political office, I was keen to explore the lived experience of a post-war generation of girls growing up among a war-scarred population. While I specifically focused on girls living in West Point, one of Monrovia's townships, it is important to bear in mind that the problems they face are typical for the majority of urban dwellers. Only 8% of Monrovians have access to piped water and 1% to the electricity grid. Using generators makes the cost of electricity one of the most expensive in the world according to the UN.

Despite the presence of some high-profile female figures in Liberian politics, the everyday realities and opportunities are very different for the majority of women. Relatively few girls are able to attend school as they find it difficult to reconcile their obligations towards their families with the demands of schooling. Many struggles to afford the obligatory school uniforms and registration fees despite education being (at least in theory) free. Sexual and gender-based violence remain major concerns, including in Liberia's educational system, and it is not uncommon for students to be subject to sexual harassment when it comes to exchanging favours for grades. In 2013, all 25,000 candidates failed the entrance exam to the University of Liberia, prompting President Sirleaf to brand national education system as "a mess".

Since my initial trip, I was fortunate to return few more times to Liberia and I hope this project might help shed light on the disproportionate burden of the aftermath of its civil war on women "“ one that, paradoxically, was fuelled by the very inequalities it now helps perpetuate. I would tell of their resilience and determination, as evident in the lives of these young girls as they fight to improve their prospects for the future often with help of organisations like More Than Me (https://morethanme.org/) which provides scholarships for young girls from West Point and Think Liberia (http://thinkliberia.com/) which works with young victims of sexual and gender-based violence. To understand the lived experience, and hopes, of a new generation of women, is more critical today than ever before.



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