It is said that one night that
Michelle and Barack Obama went out for dinner, the owner of the restaurant they
attended asked their bodyguard to let him meet the first lady. He acceded and
they talked for a while; when the man left, Barack asked her who he was and why
he wanted to talk to her. She told him that the owner had been her boyfriend
when she was young. The president found it very funny; <<Then -he
claimed- if you had married him instead of me, you would be this restaurant's
owner nowadays!>>. Michelle rapidly answered: <<No honey, if I had
married that man, he would be president of the USA nowadays>>.
This anecdote suddenly became
famous, triggering a huge number of debates online and leading lots of headlines,
accompanied with phrases such as "The other side of the G-8 Summit"
or "Michelle Obama, the president-maker". Nevertheless, the most
significant one to me was, "Behind every great man there is a great
woman".
This expression is
deceptive: although it seems to put women at the same level as men and empower
them, what it really does is to push them into the background, one step behind
the male collective. It literally means that women's place, as human beings, is
behind men, not next to them as equals.
Before being the
first lady, Michelle was also deep into politics, leading the Planning and
Development Department in the government of Chicago, but she had to abandon her
political career so that her husband could develop himself professionally. It
is hard to believe that Barack was actually her intern when they met, and he
has reached a higher position than her. Michelle Obama's story is the same as many
women’s: the story of women with vision, talent and vocation for the government
of human societies who can't reach their goals.
These women are victims of a stupid
discrimination caused by the fact that they have virtues which are applauded in
men: a man who has initiative he is a leader, but a woman who has it is bossy;
if a man takes measures against something he has character, but if a woman does
it she is on her period. Any woman who stands out in the world of politics is
attacked (physically or verbally) because of incoherent gender roles.
I'll talk about
numbers now, due to the fact that it is the only way to make unaware people see
that sexism EXISTS and make them analyze their surroundings. According to
studies made by UN Women (http://www.unwomen.org/en), we
can only find 13 countries out of 200 whose government is led by women, and
there are only 11 who are actual presidents. We can also say that, although the
number of women in parliaments has been doubled, they just constitute a 22%.
Another surprising fact is that the country where there are more female members
in this institution isn't in Europe but in Africa: I'm talking about Rwanda
where women have obtained the 63'8% of the seats. That is a proof that us,
the Europeans, are not as advanced in this subject as we think we are.
There aren't any laws in democratic
countries that ban female participation in politics, but the reality is that
when we take a look at the upper managers in any discipline, they are headed by
men. ELLE magazine decided to do something in that regard initiating
the More Women campaign, headed by a great video (click
here to watch it: http://www.elle.es/lo-mas-elle/ocio/mas-mujeres-elle-uk). "There's
room for more of us at the top" proclaims the British edition
with the hashtags #MoreWomen and #ELLEFeminism.
Marina León Jiménez,collaborator of the Aequitas25 group