By Miguel Suleyman, The Citizen Reporter 
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Posted Saturday, August 31 2013 at 21:48
Posted Saturday, August 31 2013 at 21:48
In Summary
As evidenced in The Citizen on Sunday’s recent 
visits in Tarime and Serengeti districts where the traditional same-sex 
marriage is widely practised, most of Western enthusiasts came to find 
that nyumba ntobhu, which is translated as ‘woman marrying woman’, is 
quite different from West’s lesbianism, which together with gay 
marriage, have been hotly disputed in Africa.
Tarime. Mara Region’s same-sex marriage has drawn the attention and criticism of human and gender rights activists.
As evidenced in The Citizen on Sunday’s recent 
visits in Tarime and Serengeti districts where the traditional same-sex 
marriage is widely practised, most of Western enthusiasts came to find 
that nyumba ntobhu, which is translated as ‘woman marrying woman’, is 
quite different from West’s lesbianism, which together with gay 
marriage, have been hotly disputed in Africa.
“I expected to see a young beauty romancing with 
an older woman the way it is done in the West, but what I have seen it 
here is quite different from what I thought,” Canadian Steve Mulligan 
told The Citizen on Sunday reporter at remote Hekwe, one of the villages
 in that widely observes same-sex marriage in Serengeti District.
Mr Mulligan said he couldn’t believe his ears when
 he found that same-sex marriage was not about romance and sex, rather 
an overwhelming need for children, especially boys, sought to inherit 
family properties and other businesses.
“In most cases when a woman is married to another 
woman, the younger one is expected to take care of the older one in her 
old age and bear her children especially if she is barren,” said Tarime 
resident Waitara Meinganyi, who is also a human rights activist.
Explaining further on the practice, 63-year-old 
Agnes Robi, who lives with Sophia Bhoke Alex,25, the culture of woman 
marrying woman is initially practised as an option for barren women.
“I decided to marry Sophia after finding all my 
six children who were girls got married. She has given me one baby girl 
already while we are still praying for her to get a baby boy who would 
take over this compound when I die,” she said.
Correcting wrong notion that any younger woman is 
free to have sexual relations with any man of her choice as long as she 
bears children for her, Robi said that was untrue.
“The system enables us to claim the children born 
by the other woman so long one pays a bride price to her parents. I paid
 six heads of cattle to get her,” she said.
To Australian Connie Huntington, the same-sex marriage looked too discriminative and dangerous to young girls.
“I think the system doesn’t give the girl her 
rights to decide on whom she wants to live with since her marriage is 
decided by elders,” said Ms Huntington at Kegonga Village in Tarime 
after visiting a woman who was living with two wives.
However, the biggest concerns on the practice, in 
both Tarime and Serengeti districts was that young men claimed they were
 being denied opportunities to marry young women because the latter 
continued to be loose knowing that they could choose to be married by 
older women.
“Most young women now prefer the same-sex claiming young Kuria 
are harsh and violent,” said Sophia when responding to a question 
whether her marriage was voluntary or forced.
As viewed by Meinganyi, nyumba ntobhu system will 
lose its stronghold if men turn away from violence and start treating 
their wives well.
source: The citizen
source: The citizen