Equality: The women of Tuareg are respected members of the society, who own the homes and the animals |
For centuries the nomadic Tuareg tribe in Africa have crossed the Sahara
desert, sometimes being led by the blind who used their heightened sense of
smell and taste to pick a safe path across the ever-shifting sands.
Their men became known as the 'blue
men of the Sahara' because the dye from their distinctive indigo scarves rub
off onto their faces giving them a mysterious air. The Tuareg evoke images of a
long forgotten and romantic age.
But behind the ancient way of life
is a culture so progressive it would even make some people in liberal western
cultures blush. Women are allowed to have multiple sexual partners outside of
marriage, keep all their property on divorce and are so revered by their
sons-in-law that the young men wouldn't dare eat in the same room.
What is even more surprising is that
even though the tribe has embraced Islam they have firmly held onto some of the
customs that would not be acceptable to the wider Muslim world.
It is the men, and not the women,
who cover their faces, for example.
Photographer Henrietta Butler, who
has been fascinated by the Tuareg since she first followed them through the
desert in 2001, once asked why this was.
Mysterious: A Tuareg man in a traditional indigo veil, which likely to leave his face with a blue mark across his skin |
The explanation was simple.
'The women are beautiful. We would
like to see their faces.'
But this is certainly not the only
place the Tuareg, related to the Berbers of North Africa, differ from the Muslim
world of the Middle East, and even other parts of their own continent.
Before a woman marries, she is free
to take as many lovers as she wants.
'They turn a blind eye,' explained
Butler. 'The young girls have the same great freedoms as the boys.'
For years, the men of the Tuareg
have been able to ride to a young woman's tent, and sneak into the side
entrance - while his well-trained camel stands quietly and waits.
There, they will spend the night
together - while the family, who all live in the tent, politely pretend not to
notice.
Should the woman choose to welcome a
different man into her tent the next day, so be it.
However, there is also a code of
practice which none would dare break. Privacy is all important for this
centuries old tribe of nomads, who once crossed the desert bringing dates, salt
and saffron south, and slaves and gold north.
The idea of breaking the rules of
courtship would be mortifying; as a result, the man is always gone before
sunrise.
'The Tuareg are utterly discreet.
Everything is done with utmost discretion and respect,' said Butler.
The relaxed customs around sexual
partners has resulted in the girls getting married later than they may
otherwise do, with the age of 20 not being uncommon.
Although, before then, they will
have been wooed with poetry written by the men, who spend hours carefully
crafting the words which they hope will win their beloved over.
But it is not a one-way street: the
women are just as capable of putting pen to paper, using their own alphabet,
taught to them by their mothers.
'The women also make poetry
eulogising the men,' says Butler. 'There is high romance and idolatry.'
Unlike in so many other cultures,
women lose none of their power once they marry either.
Any visitor who goes to a camp would
be vastly underestimating the power of the women in the tent if they believe
their sole duty is to make the food and look after children.
In fact, she owns the home and the
animals. And the animals are an invaluable resource to the Tuareg in the middle
of the Sahara.
Journalist Peter Gwin recalled an
elderly nomad once telling him: 'Animals are everything to a Tuareg. We drink
their milk, we eat their meat, we use their skin, we trade them. When the
animals die, the Tuareg dies.'
Many marriages end in divorce among
the Tuareg. And when it happens, it is the wife who keeps both the animals and
the tent. And it is she who normally decides that she’s had enough.
It is unlikely there will be any
quibbling over who gets what. Pre-nuptial agreements are the norm.
In practice, this often means a man
is forced to return home to his mother, possibly with just his camel and
nothing else.
His wife, meanwhile, will keep
possession of everything she brought to the marriage and that includes the
children.
The mother's camp, Butler explains,
is the root of the community, the home everyone returns to - and this
arrangement ensures it stays that way.
And there is no shame in divorce.
Families will often throw their daughters a divorce party, to let other men know
they are available once more.
But this is not a matriarchal
society, where the women are in charge.
Butler explains it is still the men
'who sit and talk politics'. But even here, the women can be deferred to. They
are often consulted for their views by their sons or husbands, and are quietly
pulling the strings behind the scenes.
However, Tuareg society is
matri-lineal, which means the families trace their lines through the women,
rather than the men, right the way back to their first queen.
So, Butler explained:
'Traditionally, the man would belong to the woman's group, rather than the
other way around.'
The preference for the women's line
goes as far as man leaving his possessions to his sister's son as it 'is
considered a stronger link to your family than to your own son'.
In other words, it can be guaranteed
that your sister's child belongs to your sister, rather than a man's son, who
cannot be absolutely guaranteed to share his genes.
But there is one tradition which is
certainly far more unusual: it is highly rude for a man to eat in front of a
woman who he cannot have sexual relations with, or any of his elders.
In front of his mother-in-law it is
especially shameful.
'I didn't realise this until the I
was having dinner with a Tuareg woman, who had brought her son-in-law as her
travelling companion,' Butler recalled.
'We were all sitting down to dinner,
and the man has his back turned. She said the poor man was completely horrified
because he has to eat with his mother-in-law.'
Owner: A nomadic Tuareg woman in front of her tent, with young with young children sit inside. The mother's tent is the heart of the family |
But it is unlikely he would have
ever complained about it, or felt sorry from himself. The very idea is
horrendous to the Tuareg.
'You would shame yourself. The
Tuareg will go to great lengths to maintain personal dignity. They will
suffer,' said Butler.
'If they are not offered water, they
won't ask for it - even if they are thirsty.'
Perhaps for this reason, the Tuareg
welcome is legendary. They never forget to offer water, and travellers who
appear on the horizon will always be
'treated like a king'.
Yet could all of this be under
threat? In recent years, the Tuareg - who have been arguing, and fighting, for
independence for decades - have aligned themselves with extremist Islamist
groups, as they try to further their cause.
Those partnerships have since
crumbled, but now the Tuareg living in south-western Libya face a new threat -
that of ISIS - while those living in Mali, Niger and northern Nigeria now have
to contend with the rise of Boko Haram.
And then there is the general,
cultural shift: Butler has noticed more of the women taking up the hijab.
And while she has been assured the
women are wearing it for a fashion statement, rather than for religious
reasons, she cannot be sure.
'It makes me very sad - you can see
the regression,' Butler said.
Her fears are not alone. Andy
Morgan, who managed Tuareg rockers Tinariwen, noted in 2013 some Tuareg
considered the 'culture to be backward and irrelevant in the modern world, a
folksy throw-back kept alive by meddling Western anthropologists'.
He continued: 'They would prefer
their people to adopt Arabic, the language of the Quran and of the wider Muslim
community... They deem certain other aspects of Tuareg culture, especially
music and dance, to be licentious and ungodly and they object to the relative
freedom and social power that Tuareg women enjoy.'
But there is hope this proud tribe,
which has survived for more than 1,000 years, will hold fast to the traditions
which make them so very different from all others.
After all, they believe their
culture is preferable to anything they have yet to come across.
'They think they are superior to
other races,'
Butler said. ' They are very proud.
They certainly consider themselves superior to us.
'Perhaps they consider other cultures a bit stupid and, dare I say it,
primitive.
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