No products in the cart.

Contacts

Kampala, Uganda

info@evolvemenafrica.org

+256 702 219655

 

Tag: Guide Man

Uncategorized

The Silent Pillar: Fatherhood and Its Impact on African Child Development

The Silent Pillar: Fatherhood and Its Impact on African Child Development

In many African societies, the father has traditionally been the pillar of the household—the provider, the protector, and the moral compass. Yet today, across the continent, we are witnessing a troubling shift: the rise of absentee fatherhood. Whether due to economic migration, broken relationships, cultural norms, or personal neglect, the absence of fathers is leaving a profound imprint on the development of both girls and boys.

A father’s presence goes far beyond putting food on the table. He shapes identity, instils discipline, and models emotional strength. In African cultures where extended families often step in, the father’s unique influence remains irreplaceable.

For the boy child, the father is often the first mirror of manhood. He teaches what it means to be responsible, respectful, and resilient. Without this model, many boys grow up confused about masculinity and overcompensate with negative behaviors such as aggression or emotional withdrawal. For the girl child, the father sets the standard for how she should be treated by men. His love and affirmation build her self-worth. In his absence, she may seek validation elsewhere, sometimes in relationships that exploit her vulnerability.

Some fathers leave in search of work and never return.

From the bustling cities of Kenya, Uganda, and Tanzania to the rural villages of the same countries, absentee fatherhood is becoming alarmingly common. Some fathers leave in search of work and never return. Others are physically present but emotionally unavailable. In some cases, cultural norms have normalized fatherly detachment, where parenting is seen as the mother’s domain.

This trend is not just a family issue; it’s a societal one. According to UNICEF:

  • Close to half of Africa’s population is under 18, and the continent is projected to have 1 billion children by 2055, making it the largest child population globally.
  • Over 300 million births projected through 2030 will not be attended by skilled health personnel, a gap often exacerbated by absent fathers who are not involved in maternal or child health decisions.
  • Under-five mortality rates in Africa have declined by 58% since 1990, yet over half of the world’s under-five deaths still occur on the continent—many linked to poverty and lack of parental support.

The absence of a father can leave a girl emotionally exposed. Without paternal affirmation, she may struggle with self-worth, feeling unloved or unworthy of attention; develop poor boundaries, having difficulty recognizing unhealthy relationships; and experience a lack of confidence, leading to hesitation to pursue leadership or assert herself. In some cases, this void contributes to early pregnancies, transactional relationships, or dependency on older men for financial support.

For boys, the absence of a father often leads to identity confusion. Without a role model, they may seek belonging in gangs or peer groups that glorify violence or rebellion, struggle with emotional regulation, having never seen a man express vulnerability, and repeat the cycle by becoming absentee fathers themselves.

In the past, many African fathers were shaped by a culture that equated masculinity with silence and provision. They worked hard, paid school fees, and ensured food was on the table but rarely spoke about emotions, dreams, or fears. That model, while rooted in survival and tradition, is no longer enough.

Today’s world demands more. The modern African child is growing up in a digital, fast-paced, emotionally complex environment. They need fathers who are not just present in the home but active in the heart.

We cannot afford to be like our fathers, sitting quietly in the corner, playing the role of provider only. That silence, once seen as strength, now risks becoming a void—a void where guidance should be, where affirmation should be, where love should be.

Modern fatherhood means:

  • Listening actively to your child’s thoughts and fears.
  • Affirming their identity, especially in a world full of confusion.
  • Participating in daily routines—from homework to storytelling.
  • Modelling emotional intelligence, not just financial responsibility.

This shift is not about abandoning tradition; it is about enriching it. It is about evolving with time so our children can thrive in theirs.

The solution is not just about urging fathers to “be there.” It is about redefining fatherhood as active, emotional, and intentional by:

  • Community mentorship: Where biological fathers are absent, male mentors can step in—uncles, teachers, coaches.
  • Cultural re-education: Challenging outdated norms that equate fatherhood with financial provision alone.
  • Policy support: Governments and NGOs must invest in programs that support responsible fatherhood and family cohesion.

To every African father reading this: remember your presence matters. Your words matter. Your hugs matter. You are not just raising children; you are shaping nations.

Let us not allow economic hardship, cultural silence, or personal wounds to rob our children of the fathers they deserve. Let us rise, not just as providers, but as nurturers, guides, and protectors.

Because when a father stands tall, his children walk taller.


By  Mohamed Shariff <alahdaly69@gmail.com> 

Life

A One Minute Guide to A Happier Life

A One-Minute Guide to a Happier Life

“Every day it gets a little easier… But you gotta do it every day — that’s the hard part. But it does get easier.”
— Baboon Jogger (BoJack Horseman, TV series)

One of my favorite authors is Charles Bukowski. He was an alcoholic, a womanizer, and a gambler. He was unafraid to write about both the beauty and darkness within himself and the world around him. If you asked him for the recipe to a happy life, he’d say, “Find what you love and let it kill you.”

Bukowski spent most of his life broke, jumping from job to job, and eventually landed at a post office. But he stayed consistent with one thing: writing. He wrote for 30 years before he got his major break. It was a meager deal, but when accepting it, he wrote, “I have one of two choices—stay in the post office and go crazy… or stay out here and play at writer and starve. I have decided to starve.”

So should you be a hedonistic drunk? Maybe. I’m kidding! The thing Bukowski understood well is that you can’t achieve happiness, peace, or a better life without suffering, pain, and sacrifice—all the nasty things we might want to hide under our sofas.

To be happier and more at peace with yourself, you have to make choices about the things that will consume you. This is a trial-by-fire process, a constant “man at work” journey. You won’t get it right the first time, or even the hundredth time.

One day you’ll realize you’re exactly where you wanted to be because you changed. Maybe you’ll realize that living a happier life requires you not to always love what you do.


@EzraTheFellowTraveller