South African women married to Nigerian men have narrated the discrimination they face for marrying men outside their country. Seeing the disaffection their kinsmen show them after finding love in the hands of Nigerian men, the women decided to form an association, the United Nigerian Wives in South Africa (UNWISA) club about two years ago where they give support and succor to each other. 42 year old Lindwela Uche who serves as the chairwoman of the group told AFP that they saw the xenophobic attacks coming and alerted their husbands but they did not take their warning seriously
โWe saw this thing coming and thatโs why we formed this association. If only they (the authorities) had listened to usโฆ they would have known that thereโs a fire burning slowly and they would have seen how to tackle it.โshe saidOne of the members of the association,โLufunu Orji who is married to a Nigerian resource consultant, Ogbonnaya Orji, says being married to a foreigner is very challenging
โBeing married to a foreigner is very challenging. You often spend your time defending yourself and then you defend your foreign husband for being himself. Just before I got wed to my husband, I lost two very best friends of mine. They thought I was out of my mindโ she said
Another member of the group who gave her name as Uche, said her 13-year-old daughter returned from school a while ago, complaining that her teacher had told her โnot to bring that Nigerian mentality hereโ after she and classmates were noisy in class. โWe need to be protected, we need our children to be protectedโฆ and our husbands to be treated with dignity,โ Uche said 37 year old Thelma Okoro, says the attitude towards them โare negative everywhere we go,โ. According to her, wearing traditional Nigerian dress on the street can attract bad comments. She spoke of how her eight-year-old daughter gets mocked by schoolmates over her name โNgoziโ which means โblessingโ in Igbo but literally translates to โdangerโ in Zulu.