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Naeemah Abrahams and the secret to defeating evil - do something

Abrahams

Naeemah Abrahams is the director of the women’s health research team at the South African Medical Research Council, a unit that she helped to set up in the late 1980s. 

Abrahams started her career as a nurse in the hospitals of Cape Town, where she saw how often women showed up battered and bruised — a phenomenon that went mostly unmentioned by her colleagues.

She dedicated her career to assembling and analysing these numbers in order to change the lives of the people behind them. In the process, she’s helped to turn the tide of gender-based violence in South Africa.

Before Naeemah Abrahams’s name was attached to more than 90 public health research publications in prestigious academic journals, she worked as a nurse.

She saw things in the hospitals of Cape Town that stiffened her resolve for justice. 

There was a certain disdain for the disenfranchised built into the public health system of 1980s South Africa. She was often left in tears: “I felt like I was not allowed to care.” 

Her difficulties as a nurse were compounded by the expectation that she would grow inured to people’s pain, that she too would soon practice the contempt that had been inscribed into the system.

She remembers watching patients who came to the hospital drunk be treated with open disdain by healthcare workers, who sent them to the back of the line or left them to queue outside in the cold. It weighed heavily on her. 

“I realised I didn’t want to be part of a system that tells me that I shouldn’t care about a person because he’s drunk, or because he’s Black,” she says. “I thought, I can’t continue to be a nurse in this system — I’m going to be changed by it.” 

So, Abrahams took a break from working in health facilities for a year to pursue a qualification in community health and then returned to work at the Red Cross Children’s Hospital. There, at last, she was allowed to show compassion. She felt like she could indeed care. 

By 1989, Cape Town was poised delicately between hope and despair. 

The apartheid regime was in its final days. Rumours of political assassinations and detentions were rife. But the promise of change was stubborn. 

Abrahams had already been in trouble for her political activism — as a result, municipalities refused to hire her. 

For years, the message from the “underground” from the structures of the banned African National Congress in exile, was for people to equip themselves with knowledge about epidemiology to ensure that the new state that would be built had a ready bank of expertise. It was from there that she was inspired to take a position as a fieldworker working under the tutelage of a surgeon at the South African Medical Research Council (SAMRC) in Cape Town. 

She hated it.

‘Women get beaten up sometimes. It just happens’

In the background of Abrahams’s home in Pinelands many, many years later, there are the tell-tale sounds of a household slowly waking up to a mid-December morning. Abrahams is a mother of two, married to someone she describes as “much cleverer” than her, and she’s devoted to her family. 

Naeemah Abrahams (centre) at the Johnson & Johnson Awards where she received a prize for scoring the top marks in the country for paediatric nursing.

She’s deeply appreciative of the people who have helped her chart a successful course into epidemiology — it’s all more than she ever thought she would want, more than she dared to imagine she could be. She had thought she just wanted to be a nurse — and even that was quite a feat for a woman from a working class family in Cape Town. 

Sitting in an armchair in the living room now, looking out the glass doors to the small garden beyond, Abrahams breathes deeply. She appears perfectly at ease, content. 

But she shudders slightly as the memory of her first job at the SAMRC passes over her. 

The job was meant to allow her to be able to do something about the unjust way things were. All the talk was about the new state that would have to be built soon. And healthcare would be integral to that. 

Her supervisor, however, was obsessed with guns. 

He would begin every morning regaling her with stories about his gun collection. There was no escape. In the trauma units where she worked, she was surrounded by the lingering effects of gun violence. 

“My hate for guns started there.” 

Years later, Abrahams would publish papers that show guns play a significant role in violence against women in South Africa, particularly in the killing of intimate partners. 

It was there in and among the victims of gun violence, in her first job as a researcher, that she began taking note of the evidence of violence against women. To most others, it was unremarkable — a phenomenon that was not questioned.

Women get beaten up sometimes. And sometimes, they ended up in the hospital. It just happened and the implications were not widely considered to be worthy of deep reflection, especially by epidemiologists. 

“There was this woman with a blue eye that I encountered in the trauma units that nobody enquired about,”  she recalls.

Abrahams is pensive — almost as though she’s once more weighed down by that memory. 

But she trudged through that job — she never grew to like it — until Salim Abdool Karim, who also worked at the SAMRC at the time, encouraged her to apply for another position. 

She wasn’t sure she was suited to the job at all. But she applied anyway. And she got it.

‘Violence, violence everywhere’

Things were much better in her new role, where she worked as a junior to gender-based violence researcher Rachel Jewkes. 

At first, the pair had set out to focus on reproductive health and contraception. “We started off with abortion work,” she says. 

But there was a troubling pattern emerging in their conversations with women. 

“Violence. We came across violence everywhere. We go and speak to teens about pregnancy, we came across violence. We got to speak to nurses, we hear about the violence on patients.”

Her master’s thesis involved speaking to men about their abuse. In many ways, it was groundbreaking work. Few people considered talking to perpetrators at all. 

Her journey to finding out from men about how and why they abuse would go on to become the subject of her PhD thesis too. 

In the meanwhile, the SAMRC was building a world class women’s health research centre. 

“I truly believe we became well known as leaders in the field of violence against women globally, having built the field here in South Africa as well”, she says, “although our policymakers don’t always take note of us.” 

Abrahams’s work on intimate partner violence has explored a range of topics like risk factors for perpetrating intimate partner violence; femicide; health sector responses to gender-based violence; sexual assault services; prevention of HIV following a sexual assault; HIV stigma; mental health; and burden of disease studies exploring gender-based violence as a risk factor for health outcomes. 

At the heart of an impressive repertoire, lies a key finding, men can be engaged about their violence. And a key recommendation to help society stem the violence: believe women.

“There is no such thing as gender-based violence research without some kind of activism [built in],” says Abrahams. (Jay Caboz, Bhekisisa)

This is what Abrahams has devoted herself to for more than three decades: assembling and analysing numbers in order to change the lives of the people behind them. She’s now a director of the women’s health team she joined and helped to establish. 

She says: “There is no such thing as gender-based violence research without some kind of activism [built in].”

Progress has often felt achingly slow, Abrahams argues. 

It’s hard sometimes to believe that violence against women in South Africa is falling when the news is still full of stories about women assaulted or killed at the hands of their partners. 

Original article available on the Bhekisisa Website

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