Forging harmony when cultures clash
08/08/2007
BY LISA PRUE
WORLD-HERALD STAFF WRITER
When Femi Awodele's American friends learned his wife was in medical school, they congratulated him.
Femi makes snacks for Fiyin, 3, left, and Ibukun, 8. "That's great," they said. "She will make a lot of money."
But Femi Awodele didn't feel so great. In fact, in Awodele's native Nigeria it would be embarrassing for his wife, Ola, to make more money than he.
In Nigeria, men are unquestionably the head of the household. They provide for the financial needs of the family, while women take care of the home and children with help from a nanny and a maid. Indeed, in some parts of the country women still are considered property, and men are allowed to have more than one wife.
The situation is just one example of the cultural differences between traditional African and Western societies that can cause stress in the lives of immigrants. Now Femi Awodele has written a book, "Peculiar Conflicts: African Marriages in Western Cultures," to help other couples adjust to American ways.
Women in the United States exercise more independence than women in Africa, and that is a difference that would prove a challenge for the Awodeles, who were married in 1992.
"It was a roller coaster," says Ola Awodele, who is a family practice physician at the Alegent Health Maple Hills Clinic. "I wasn't aware of how much (the money issue) bugged him."
Says Femi, "Psychologically, it was tough for me."
Ola, who was born in West Virginia and lived there for seven years before her family moved back to Nigeria, was more familiar with western society than her husband.
The Awodeles say they are lucky. Their marriage survived the changes, but many do not.
"Men try to continue in that traditional role once they move to a western culture," says Femi. "But the wife is pushing for more independence, more of a partnership from the marriage."
The Awodeles (pronounced OWW-wo-deli) moved to Omaha in 2000. That year Femi founded Christian Couples Fellowship International, a nonprofit marriage ministry.
Ola with patient Terry Morris. Through the marriage ministry and his book, Femi hopes to reach out to struggling African couples. There are at least 100 African couples living in the metro area, he said.
"Femi and Ola inspire others," says Ope Banwo. "They've made a tremendous impact in the Nigerian community here."
Banwo, a Nigerian pastor now living in Omaha, said the Awodeles prove that African couples can adjust to life in a western culture without divorcing.
Part of the problem is that African couples don't talk about their troubles, Banwo said. Even in their native countries, couples don't air their differences.
"If a man does, he is seen as not having control of his family," said Banwo, "and if the wife talks about it, she is considered a traitor to the marriage."
The Awodeles are helping to change that perception.
Ola often joins Femi when he speaks at marriage seminars.
"That is a big boost for the African couple," said Banwo. "They are encouraged."
Femi says his Christian faith has helped him accept the changes in his marriage.
He is comfortable with the fact that his wife makes more money than he makes; he loves taking his children back and forth to school; and he relishes his marriage ministry, which allows him to work out of the couple's northwest Omaha home.
There still are times, Femi said, when he is uncomfortable, such as showing affection to his wife in public, including in front of their own children.
Femi says he also changes his behavior when his parents visit from Nigeria, taking on a more dominant role out of respect for them and to protect his wife from scrutiny.
"African couples begin to question their marriage once they move to a western culture," says Femi, "but they can adapt."
Article reprinted with permission of Omaha World-Herald.